Inside the Fight for the Future of The Wall
Street Journal
A special team led by a high-level
manager says Rupert Murdoch’s paper must evolve to survive. But a
rivalry between editor and publisher stands in the way.
As of December 2020, The Journal had 2.46 million digital-only
subscriptions. It aims to double that number by June 2024.
Devin Oktar Yalkin for The New York Times. |
April 10, 2021
The Wall Street Journal is a rarity in 21st-century media: a
newspaper that makes money. A lot of money. But at a time when the U.S.
population is growing more racially diverse, older white men still make up the
largest chunk of its readership, with retirees a close second.
“The No. 1 reason we lose subscribers is they die,” goes a joke
shared by some Journal editors.
Now a special innovation team and a group of nearly 300 newsroom
employees are pushing
for drastic changes at the paper, which has been part of Rupert
Murdoch’s media empire since 2007. They say The Journal, often Mr. Murdoch’s
first read of the day, must move away from subjects of interest to established
business leaders and widen its scope if it wants to succeed in the years to
come. The Journal of the future, they say, must pay more attention to social
media trends and cover racial disparities in health care, for example, as
aggressively as it pursues corporate mergers.
That argument has yet to convince executives in the top ranks of
the company.
The Journal got digital publishing right before anyone else. It
was one of the few news organizations to charge readers for online access
starting in 1996, during the days of dial-up internet. At the time, most other
publications, including The New York Times, bought into the mantra that
“information wants to be free” and ended up paying dearly for what turned out to
be a misguided business strategy.
As thousands of papers across the country folded, The Journal,
with its nearly 1,300-person news staff, made money, thanks to its prescient
digital strategy. While that inoculated The Journal against the ravages wrought
by an array of unlikely newcomers, from Craigslist to Facebook, it also kept the
paper from innovating further.
The editor leading the news organization as it figures out how to
attract new readers without alienating loyal subscribers is Matt Murray, 54, who
got the top job in 2018. He has worked at The Journal for two decades, and his
promotion was welcomed by many in the newsroom. Soon after, he assembled a
strategy team focused on bringing in new digital subscribers. To oversee the
group, Mr. Murray hired Louise Story, a journalist whose career included a
decade at The New York Times.
Here are excerpts
from the study.
She was given a sweeping mandate, marking her as a potential
future leader of the paper. She commands a staff of 150 as chief news strategist
and chief product and technology officer. Her team helped compile a significant
audit of the newsroom’s practices in an effort to boost subscribers and now
plays a key role in the newsroom as audience experts, advising other editors on
internet-search tactics (getting noticed by Google) and social media to help
increase readership.
As the team was completing a report on its findings last summer,
Mr. Murray found himself staring down a newsroom revolt. Soon after the killing
of George Floyd, staff members created a private Slack channel called “Newsroomies,”
where they discussed how The Journal, in their view, was behind
on major stories of the day, including the social justice movement
growing in the aftermath of Mr. Floyd’s death. Participants also complained that
The Journal’s digital presence was not robust enough, and that its conservative opinion
department had published essays that did not meet standards applied
to the reporting staff. The tensions and challenges are similar to what leaders
of other news organizations, including The Times, have heard from their staffs.
In July, Mr. Murray received a draft from Ms. Story’s team, a
209-page blueprint on how The Journal should remake itself called The Content
Review. It noted that “in the past five years, we have had six quarters where we
lost more subscribers than we gained,” and said addressing its slow-growing
audience called for significant changes in everything from the paper’s social
media strategy to the subjects it deemed newsworthy.
The report argued that the paper should attract new readers —
specifically, women, people of color and younger professionals — by focusing
more on topics such as climate change and income inequality. Among its
suggestions: “We also strongly recommend putting muscle behind efforts to
feature more women and people of color in all of our stories.”
The Content Review has not been formally shared with the newsroom
and its recommendations have not been put into effect, but it is influencing how
people work: An impasse over the report has led to a divided newsroom, according
to interviews with 25 current and former staff members. The company, they say,
has avoided making the proposed changes because a brewing power struggle between
Mr. Murray and the new publisher,
Almar Latour, has contributed to a stalemate that threatens the future of The
Journal.
Mr. Murray and Mr. Latour, 50, represent two extremes of the
model Murdoch employee. Mr. Murray is the tactful editor; Mr. Latour is the
brash entrepreneur. The two rose within the organization at roughly the same
time. When the moment came to replace Gerry
Baker as the top editor in 2018, both were seen as contenders.
The two men have never gotten along, according to people with
knowledge of the matter. Or as an executive who knows both well put it, “They
hate each other.” The digital strategy report has only heightened the strain in
their relationship — and, with it, the direction of the crown jewel in the
Murdoch news empire.
Their longstanding professional rivalry comes down to both
personality and approach. Mr. Murray is more deliberative, while Mr. Latour is
quick to act. But the core of their friction is still a mystery, according to
people familiar with them.
Dow Jones, in a statement, disputed that characterization, saying
there was no friction between the editor and publisher. It also cited “record
profits and record subscriptions,” which it attributed to “the wisdom of its
current strategy.” Both Mr. Murray and Mr. Latour declined to be interviewed for
this article.
About a month after the report was submitted, Ms. Story’s
strategy team was concerned that its work might never see the light of day,
three people with knowledge of the matter said, and a draft was leaked to one of
The Journal’s own media reporters, Jeffrey Trachtenberg. He filed a detailed
article on it late last summer.
But the first glimpse that outside readers, and most of the
staff, got of the document wasn’t in The Journal. In October, a pared-down
version of The Content Review was leaked to
BuzzFeed News, which included a link to the document as a sideways scan.
(Staffers, eager to read the report, had to turn their heads 90 degrees.)
The leak angered Mr. Murray, people with knowledge of the matter
said. But he offered an olive branch at the same time. “I’m very proud of the
work being done by the strategy team across the newsroom,” he said, according to
a recording of a meeting obtained by The Times. He added that the report’s
recommendations — “some of which I disagree with” — required debate.
If subsequent debate has led to revisions or an updated strategy,
the staff hasn’t been told. The Journal’s own story by Mr. Trachtenberg on The
Content Review still has not run.
‘A broad cultural fear of change’
News Corp recorded a $1.1 billion loss last year.
Sasha Maslov for
The New York Times. |
The Journal isn’t the only media organization whose
leaders have been challenged by its employees. Editors at The Times,
The Los Angeles Times and Condé Nast have faced tough questions from
staffers on how they have handled race coverage or issues of bias or
problematic editorials.
What’s unusual about the recent events at The Journal is the
public nature of the grievances. The Times, by contrast, is known for how its
internal spats become public.
At The Journal, workplace gripes tend to stay within the family. Mostly.
(None of the people interviewed for this article work at The Times, which has
recruited a sizable number of Journal employees.)
The Content Review didn’t pull any punches. “We have a broad
cultural fear of change and we overweight the possibility of alienating some
readers, compared to our opportunity cost of not changing and growing,” it read.
Change in any news organization is hard. When Mr. Murdoch bought
the paper in 2007, the newsroom was on tenterhooks, worried he would destroy its
culture. That didn’t happen. Instead, he expanded its coverage to compete more
directly with The Times.
But over time, the paper has retrenched. Now it’s more of a chimera; part
punchy Murdoch, part old-school Journal.
News Corp, the parent company of Dow Jones, the publisher of The
Journal, has put pressure on the paper to double the number of subscribers. But
to meet that goal, it must “reach a sustained 100 million monthly unique
visitors” by June 2024, according to the report, noting that its site has never
attracted more than 50 million readers in a given month.
Dow Jones disputed that figure, saying that the site averaged
about 55 million, with a peak of 79 million last March. (The Journal temporarily
gave readers free access to its coverage of the coronavirus pandemic when it hit
the United States more than a year ago.)
Earnings filings show
The Journal had 2.46 million digital-only subscribers at the end of 2020,
including 106,000 who came aboard in the year’s final quarter.
Early last year, as Ms. Story’s team was months away from making
its recommendations, Mr. Murray was sanguine that its eventual report would be
well received by Will Lewis, who was then the Dow Jones chief executive and The
Journal’s publisher, according to several people who worked in the newsroom. But
last spring Mr. Lewis suddenly stepped down. He was replaced in both jobs by Mr.
Latour, who had won praise within the company for his digital
know-how as the publisher of Dow Jones’s Barron’s Group.
Mr. Murray was not happy to learn of Mr. Latour’s appointment,
according to five people with knowledge of the matter. That’s when his attitude
toward the strategy team’s efforts changed, the people said.
They added that Mr. Murray was concerned that the group’s report,
coupled with the staff unrest, would be taken as an indictment of his
leadership, and that Mr. Latour might use its findings against him. The document
called out Mr. Murray in one instance in which it observed that the traffic
goals have “not been articulated well enough in the newsroom,” and added,
“Unless Matt is abandoning that goal, it needs to be announced and explained
robustly.”
Dow Jones disputed that characterization of Mr. Murray’s concern
and said that he and Mr. Latour had gotten along and discussed the team’s work.
Mr. Latour had his own idea of how to goose The Journal’s
readership, one built on more common traffic tactics that he had employed at the
sister titles Barron’s and MarketWatch. A few people on the business side and
some top editors who had seen the analysis by Ms. Story’s team dismissed it as a
“woke” strategy, given its emphasis on appealing to underrepresented readers,
the people said.
In a statement, Ms. Story said she was proud of her team’s work
and their collaborative efforts across the newsroom, which “has led to great
results.”
Leadership tensions stymie progress
Rupert Murdoch in 2019.Credit.
Mary Altaffer/Associated Press. |
News Corp looks like most aging media businesses: It’s
shrinking. It recorded a $1.1 billion loss last year, and news
revenues, with the exception of Dow Jones, continue to fall. Dow Jones
operates The Journal and several other titles such as Barron’s and
MarketWatch, but not News Corp’s Australian and British newspapers,
which haven’t performed as well. (The company also owns a real estate
listings business, TV stations in Australia and the book publisher
HarperCollins.) News Corp recently hired the consulting firm Deloitte
to work on a project to consolidate its many divisions, according to
three people with direct knowledge of the matter. That would mean cost
cuts and could lead to the loss of a significant number of jobs, the
people said.
The Journal’s ambitious subscriber target is very much part of
News Corp’s mission to stem the bleeding and find new areas of growth. But its
editor and publisher, opposite in many ways, appear to have arrived at nearly
opposite conclusions about the best way forward.
Mr. Latour, who grew up in the small village of Welten, the
Netherlands, was known to have clocked more Page 1 stories than almost anyone
else at the paper when he covered the European telecommunications industry. A
graduate of Indiana University of Pennsylvania, he started his journalism career
as an intern at The Washington Times, and exhibited the kind of scrappy drive
prized by Mr. Murdoch.
Mr. Murray, who grew up in Bethesda, Md., is laid-back, amiable
and sometimes awkward, colleagues said. He received his undergraduate and
graduate degrees from Northwestern, is fascinated by the entertainment industry
and is a Talking Heads fan.
Their strained relationship has gotten in the way of progress,
people familiar with the matter say. In a mid-November meeting, people saw that
firsthand when a disagreement flared up between Mr. Murray and Mr. Latour and
one of his lieutenants, Dan Shar, two people with knowledge of the meeting said.
Mr. Shar described his strategy for increasing the number of
monthly readers, a plan that differed significantly from the one laid out by Ms.
Story’s team. At one point, the two people said, an exasperated Mr. Murray
interjected: “But I’m the editor.” Mr. Shar laughed. Mr. Latour kept a straight
face.
A spokesman for Dow Jones said in a statement that meeting
participants did not recall that exchange.
The third character in the ongoing Journal drama is Ms. Story.
She has tried to carefully nudge both Mr. Latour and Mr. Murray toward her
vision, people around her say.
In her decade at The Times, Ms. Story covered the 2008 financial
meltdown and was part of the 12-person group behind the Innovation
Report, a 2014 manifesto that laid out the strategy that has helped
The Times to thrive and the principal reason Mr. Murray hired her to run The
Journal’s audit.
Ms. Story has recently been in discussions about an editor in
chief role at both Reuters and The Washington Post, according to two people with
knowledge of the matter. Ms. Story declined to comment.
What is The Wall Street Journal?
A copy of The Wall Street Journal on a newsstand in New York.
Sasha Maslov for The New York Times. |
One of the key issues outlined in The Content Review
was the need to retain younger readers. For years, The Journal
attracted college students by offering them a reduced price; but once
those offers expired, they quit the publication at a higher rate —
over 70 percent — than any other group, the report said.
To help solve that issue, Ms. Story’s team launched Noted, a
monthly digital magazine designed to appeal to readers under 35.
Noted was also partly the brainchild of Grace Murdoch, one of
Rupert Murdoch’s daughters, who had interned with Ms. Story’s team in summer
2019 while in high school, according to two people familiar with the matter.
“We need to move beyond perceptions and embrace actual data about
younger audiences, and that is what WSJ Noted will be providing,” the report
read. This included “tailoring content” for younger readers; last year, a staff
of 10 reporters, editors and designers were hired to start working on features
about inequality in education, student debt and related topics.
The project ran into trouble once Mr. Murray saw the copy,
according to four people with knowledge of the matter. He line-edited stories
himself, rare for a top Journal editor. An article about a college campus
movement to abolish sororities and fraternities in an effort to combat racism
and homophobia was spiked, according to the people. Mr. Murray objected to terms
such as “trans-phobia,” which was not in the paper’s style guide, referring to
them as “jargon-y woke-isms,” they said. Dow Jones said that Mr. Murray and Ms.
Story decided not to publish that article because other outlets had covered the
topic.
Noted switched gears. Based partly on a suggestion from Mr.
Latour, it focused entirely on practical pieces, such as “how to update your
résumé” or “how to approach a job interview.” Two Noted editors left in the last
week of March, and now there are only four people on its staff.
One goal put forth by The Content Review seemed more attainable
to many inside the paper than conjuring millions of new subscribers overnight: a
greater effort to appeal to readers of color. In a meeting between the strategy
team and high-level editors, Ms. Story spoke about trying to track the racial
diversity of people quoted in Journal coverage. Most of those gathered for the
discussion were white.
Everyone at the meeting said they agreed that The Journal should
include more diverse voices. But how? Should they survey subjects about their
background? A
senior editor expressed concern about such a tack, according to two people who
were briefed on the event, saying he was worried the paper might be sued if it
came out that its reporters were passing over white people to quote Black
people. (The company disputes the characterization of the meeting.)
Such comments illustrate how difficult it will be rewiring the
staff to more modern methods of news gathering.
In a Feb. 22 memo to the staff, Mr. Murray endorsed including a
wider variety of people in The Journal’s coverage, pledging to “properly capture
the diversity of our society and speak to as wide an audience as possible.”
Mr. Latour has also been talking about the need for change. In a
series of companywide meetings that started last summer, he emphasized the
importance of The Journal’s digital transformation, but repeated a phrase that
many took to mean he wanted a continued focus on business leaders and Wall
Street elites. “We need to be digging into the brand,” he said, according to
several staff members.
Mr. Latour never asked for a copy of The Content Review,
according to two people familiar with the matter. It’s still unclear if he’s
read it.
If he has, he would know that one key message contradicts the
very approach he’s favoring: “We can’t think we’ve got a comfy base of digital
subscribers who will be satisfied if we just keep doing what we’re doing.”
Edmund Lee
covers the media industry as it grapples with changes from Silicon Valley.
Before joining The Times he was the managing editor at Vox Media’s Recode. @edmundlee
A version of
this article appears in print on April
11, 2021,
Section BU, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: At The Journal, A
Battle Rages Over the Future.
© 2021 The
New York Times Company