DJ TO DOWNSIZE EUROPEAN, ASIAN
PAPERS.
NewsInc • May 16, 2005 • Dow Jones and Company Inc. plans new format for Wall
Street Journal
Jumping on the compact-newspaper bandwagon, Dow Jones said last
week that it would downsize the European and Asian editions of the Wall
Street Journal.
Broadsheet papers throughout Europe and the United Kingdom have
been switching to one of a variety of smaller sizes. U.S. publishers
have so far been reluctant to make any changes, though Gannett Co. Inc.
said in March that it would shift its paper in Lafayette, Ind., to the
smaller format known as the "Berliner."
Dow Jones executives cited projections that the new format would
save the company about $17 million a year, starting in 2006. The
company expects the changeover -- which includes some personnel
restructuring -- to cost between $6 and $8 million. With the Oct. 17
start of the new format, it said that it expected to save about $5
million in 2005.
The company said that there are no current discussions to change
the format of the U.S. editions of the Journal.
The format change comes after a series of bad results (see above),
which have been reflected in the company's stock price, which hit a
52-week low two weeks ago at $31.94, a drop of 24 percent from its
high.
Small is beautiful and the DJ's pictures of the redesign of
the overseas editions make them look a lot flashier than they have
been, and flashier by an order of magnitude than its U.S. counterpart.
But the announcement press release kept referring that a combination of
the redesigned editions and the paper's web site would "better
serve the needs of highly mobile international business leaders."
With all those cost savings, it sounds to me like the overseas editions
are going to be shadows of their former selves.
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