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Ron James out at San Diego News Network

March 27, 2009 - 2:28 pm

Just a week into the life of the San Diego News Network, its chief visionary and creative force, Ron James, seems to be gone. I’m still trying to gather details, but I called James. He confirmed that he was no longer in the office. I asked if he still worked for SDNN.

“I’m not sure. I need to talk to my attorney,” he said, and declined to provide any more details.

Associate publisher Barbara Bry also declined to provide details, but did say this:

“We appreciate his vision and his drive to get us where we are today. We value him as a shareholder with the company. We are unable to discuss specifics.”

The San Diego News Network is a news website launched officially on Monday. Learn more about James and SDNN’s business model from my earlier story.

UPDATE: SDNN says in a press release sent out just a minute ago that James is no longer the publisher and executive editor, and that Bry will serve as interim executive editor while the organization conducts a national search for a permanent replacement.

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32 Comments leave one →
  1. Gayle Falkenthal permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 2:46 pm 2:46 pm

    This is an astonishing turn of events. Congratulations to Eric Wolff and CityBeat for incredibly good and timely reporting. Who says no one is covering news on Friday afternoon?

  2. Xhris permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 2:50 pm 2:50 pm

    I find this interesting; and disturbing. Ron was the vision guy.

  3. msanii permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 3:10 pm 3:10 pm

    What could you do in four days to get you kicked out of your own creation? C’est bizarre!

  4. Michael Mantell permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 3:22 pm 3:22 pm

    Ahh, the joys of life in the media…it usually takes longer than four days, but it always happens. Luv ya babe, turns into luv’d ya babe so fast and frequently in the wonderful world of media life.

  5. March 27, 2009 - 3:51 pm 3:51 pm

    The first thing that popped into my head was that the launch was late…was overhyped as March 18th, and didn’t happen until the week afterwards…could that be partly to blame?

  6. Seantgla permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 4:40 pm 4:40 pm

    Seems like there wasn’t enough room for Barbara and Ron. Too bad for SDNN that Barbara won. Here comes a competitor to Voice.

  7. reading closely permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 5:36 pm 5:36 pm

    LBOE – great get. keep digging and tell us why.

  8. Bilbo Scaggins permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 5:37 pm 5:37 pm

    Maybe Ron will start another company now.

  9. John And Ken permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 8:34 pm 8:34 pm

    Ron James has a MO of “start up cost”.
    If Bry never knew this fact it’s gross.

    The scary part is how James was infatuated with a former KPBS staffer. Ron James has told staffers “he was doing it all for her”.

  10. Little Suzi on the up permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 9:09 pm 9:09 pm

    do tell John and Ken

    not fair to leave us wondering what that means

  11. donietpwez permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 9:12 pm 9:12 pm

    do tell John and Ken

    not fair to leave us wondering what that means

  12. Gayle Falkenthal permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 10:43 pm 10:43 pm

    I have a low regard and high BS threshhold for libelous accusations made behind the cloak of anonymity. “John and Ken,” are you willing to verify and source this information, and reveal exactly who you are? If not, this information holds no weight with me.

  13. Kathryn permalink
    March 27, 2009 - 11:38 pm 11:38 pm

    Not long ago, I read that 50 percent of founders of companies are kicked out within the first year after accepting venture capital. So Ron is in good company. I hope Ron lands on his feet.

  14. matt permalink
    March 28, 2009 - 11:12 am 11:12 am

    interesting. bye bye sdnn.

  15. Former co-worker of Ron permalink
    March 28, 2009 - 8:42 pm 8:42 pm

    As a former co-worker of Ron, all I can say is that it’s a smart move by SDNN! He is high cost and low return. Now he can retire to mange his coy pond and wine collection.

  16. another co-worker of ron's permalink
    March 29, 2009 - 4:15 am 4:15 am

    Ron was obsessed with that woman. The truth is the best defense.

  17. another co-worker of ron's permalink
    March 29, 2009 - 4:20 am 4:20 am

    Signing On Again in San Diego: SDNN.com Goes Live
    By newzmaven

    Ron James never wished the San Diego Union Tribune ill. The venerable daily – the last of the erstwhile Copley chain – was, after all, where James served as managing editor for the newspaper’s web site, SignOnSanDiego.com for 8 of the last 9 years. But, when he, and the senior SignOn managers were laid off in May of last year, he had a decision to make:
    • Should he apply to other news organizations in a collapsing market for journalistic talent, and possibly leave the community he loved? Or,
    • Should he stay put, exercise his entrepreneurial talent and see whether he could ply his trade as a journalist independently online.

    He chose the latter, and the result of that decision, San Diego News Network, went live March 23 as “Beta 2.9” at SDNN.com. It’s being watched with no little angst by newspaper publishers nationwide.

    Why this entrepreneurial journalistic enterprise should merit such scrutiny boils down to a number of factors.
    • SignOnSanDiego.com, with revenues of $19 million or more in 2008, was dominant in its market. It was also among the most profitable and heavily trafficked online newspaper sites anywhere in the country when the folks who were largely responsible for its success were given their walking papers. Everybody in our business was left to wonder – if an online newspaper site at the top of its game won’t suffice – what will?
    • SDNN is comprised largely of the editorial talent laid off by the San Diego Union-Tribune. So, another point worth pondering is, did the paper sew the seeds of its own demise?
    • SignOn and SDNN now battle for ad dollars in an environment where the traditional publisher has to sustain an expensive printing operation, and the upstart doesn’t. The ensuing battle for local digital supremacy may offer the industry a true apples-to-apples test-tube environment to help evaluate new business models.

    That’s a lot to throw onto James’ shoulders, but he’s got the experience to be a worthy competitor, and seems to have made a lot of the right moves to date. He detailed the work in progress in an exclusive interview March 25.
    First, a bit of background: James has always been an entrepreneur, and has had his own business, The James Gang, with his five brothers for more than three decades. At Time Warner, he pioneered broadband content for Road Runner, and in 1995 he launched San Diego Magazine, along with one of the first local blog networks winning him the first Webby for community. He took his video experience and multimedia storytelling techniques to the San Diego wildfires, and this work was featured and awarded at an NAA CONNECTIONS conference. He was pioneering SignOn Radio, an online radio station, admittedly a little before its time, when the pink slip came.

    “I started looking around for other opportunities,” he said, “but that was difficult in San Diego, because the Union-Tribune was the be-all and end-all in this region.” At the same time, he didn’t want to move. While serving as SignOn’s managing editor, he’d done a survey of “who could compete with us online.” The fact is that what he calls the “big dogs” –CitySearch, Microsoft’s Sidewalk and AOL, all had tried and failed to make much of a dent in local reader awareness.

    In assessing the local competition, it appeared that the TV stations didn’t have a big enough newsroom to challenge the Union-Tribune’s news supremacy, but did have an effective promotional vehicle with their daily broadcasts. There also were an assortment of community dailies who focused on their local towns and delivered what Web-savvy publishers today call “hyperlocal” coverage.

    The question was, could James forge a coalition of enough local media outlets and enterprise reporters economically enough to become profitable? James thought it was doable. He began by getting letters of intent from local media companies to both cross-promote and deliver their reporting to what became the San Diego News Network for a share of the return. He then began recruiting a core staff to cover breaking news, enterprise subjects and other lifestyle areas that are popular online. Within the first week he’d secured San Diego Magazine, Channel 6, three radio stations and several community and ethnic newspapers. “Many of them knew they needed to be online, but they couldn’t compete on their own,” he said. (A full list of current partners is here.)

    James, looking to fund the venture, reached out to Neil Senturia and Barbara Bry, well-known local entrepreneurs who had an entrepreneurial show on James’ local online radio station. Senturia, now the CEO, Bry and Kevin Hall forged a partnership with James and spearheaded a capital raising effort where investors contributed between $50,000 and $100,000 each. Together, they raised on the order of $1 million to launch the company.

    James now has a staff of 9 full-time journalists focusing on breaking and enterprise news locally, and acting as editors for the different sections. Staffing the lifestyle sections was easy – “we got the best people out there. With the newspaper in a death spiral, they were cutting back on travel, food, gardening and science. These were all people who really love journalism and wanted the opportunity to get back into the business. “I told them that this would be journalism without the BS. Now they’re loving life, covering what they want to cover, how they want to cover it.” There are also 4 full time sales staff, with plans to enlarge this team to 9 by the end of next month.

    Aside from the small, core staff, most of the section editors and writers are paid with a share of the revenue delivered by page views to their content. A freelancer might choose to be paid a flat fee, say $100 for an article, or can forgo a flat fee, or receive the recurring revenue from ads delivered by their growing audience. Visceral topics like wine, food, gardening, technology and the environment seem to attract talented writers with a love of their subject matter, and a willingness to join “the long tail.”

    The typical ad placement is an IAB-standard big box ad; the writers don’t sell it and have no say in what goes into the ad, so there are no church and state issues, James said. Some 20 percent in commission comes off the top of that ad for the ad sales team, but the writer keeps the other 80%. SDNN derives revenue from other ad placements on the page. “The more quality stories a journalist can generate, the more revenue they’ll make, and it will keep paying regardless of whether it’s three months, six months or 6 years old.”

    The truth is, many of the writers laid off by the Union-Tribune received a year’s severance, so they had the time and the inclination to invest in a new venture that could benefit from their expertise. California law bans non-competes.
    SDNN’s media partners enjoy the same benefits, but each of the 25 plus is contractually obligated to promote SDNN in their own media. There are 15-16 newspapers, four radio stations, TV ads – James says it amounts to “the largest, longest lasting media campaign in media history.” Radio ads began airing about three weeks prior to launch. On launch day, March 20, the site served 177,000 page views.

    There were glitches from the federated nature of the site – while the Word Press blogging platform was ideal to allow category and contributing editors and freelancers to maintain their own publishing spaces, it confounded the publishers’ attempts to maintain a single sign on scheme for users, leading them to have to post an explanation/apology.

    James explains, “The first CMS (content management system) we had was so complex and arcane, it required people with HTML experience to pull it off. We needed something really simple so we abandoned the CMS just weeks before launch.” But in every challenge, there’s a silver lining, or as James puts it, “a chance to turn lemons into lemonade.”
    “Rather than unveiling everything all at once, we’re now having a kind of rollout launch, section by section. You don’t see all the sections we’re going to have, but this gives our visitors a chance to get to know us and meet our staff.” Staff-generated articles carry the SDNN logo, which James intends to be a kind of imprimatur for the quality visitors can expect from his editorial team. Within 6 to 8 weeks, the site will boast over 24 sections and subsections. But the introduction process means there’s always something new for readers to check out.

    James is confident the site will be profitable by year’s end. As for the Union-Trib’s near $20 million mark, that income supported a staff of 70. – “If I could have a staff of 20 people and came anywhere close (to that figure), I’d be in hog heaven,” James laughs.

    Fundamentally, SDNN’s model is still ad-supported, but with a more sophisticated kind of search engine optimization model built in. Ironically, by centering on the very categories Web users find most entertaining and targeted, the opportunity exists to build robust channels that can be more easily matched to their corresponding advertising interests. “We’re getting higher CPMs because every story has its own locale, and its own traffic and revenue generation (infrastructure),” James explained. “Instead of going out and just selling to everyone (in San Diego), we targeted five vertical packages for launch. We sold out in three days.”

    Media partners will share in a pool of revenue that’s apportioned from gross proceeds once the site is profitable. They all know there’s a building process, so they’re willing to be patient. They deliver SDNN all their stories, from which James and his editors are allowed to “cherry pick.” Each has the same ad inventory ratio as SDNN, so they can sell it themselves, use it to promote their other media, or give it back to SDNN to sell for them. Whoever sells the inventory keeps 80% of the revenue generated.

    The beauty of the model is that each of them now feel that they share in a virtual newsroom, with an embarrassment of riches the Tribune decided it could no longer sustain – three former food and wine writers plus one formerly with the Los Angeles Times, just as an example. “We have eight writers in just the food section, and the Union-Tribune now has none. They’re relying now on contributions from writers in other departments.”

    James knows he benefitted from a kind of “Perfect Storm” besetting the newspaper industry, and acknowledges that he’s living out a kind of “morality play. A lot of newspapers got very fat and happy. They can be hidebound and very arrogant,” he said. “They didn’t truly exploit the opportunities on the Internet. And it was always a struggle between the online newsroom and the print newsroom.”

    On a more basic level, there was an unwillingness to acknowledge that people, especially young people, increasingly weren’t buying the newspaper – they were only getting it online. Rather than blaming online for the shift, the prudent thing to do would have been to channel more resources into the online operation, making Web-first publishing the core of the business. Such a thing would have called for “dramatic changes,” he explains. But, “if (SignOn) had put the resources into their own online operation, and beefed it up with our somewhat unusual strategy, they wouldn’t have left the vacuum” that SDNN now fills.

    James acknowledges that, without the disruption caused by the layoffs (especially his own) and the resulting diminishment of the product, it’s hard to see how SDNN could have forged the foundation for success. But he still holds Union-Tribune executive managers responsible for the result. “They had to think outside the box,” and didn’t, he explains. “What was happening was that the online version of the San Diego Union Tribune primarily reflects the newspaper content. The newspaper’s lifestyle sections and business sections continue to shrink, and the online version suffers correspondingly.”

    Unwilling to see the success of the online site as the future, managers instead cut back on the whole business. “In reinventing the wheel, they got rid of the people who’d brought them to the dance,” James said. “They knew we had a successful model, but they didn’t fully appreciate our stature as one of the best Web sites in the industry in our heyday. It’s a bit like the prophet never being followed in his own land. They didn’t understand what they had.”
    In reinventing themselves, the newspaper lost some of their best talent and most diverse voices in the process, James says; “They set themselves up for this… it’s the ultimate unintended consequence. Instead of being creative and figuring out how the Web site could have addressed different interests, they did what they did with Craigslist. They let someone else jump in and get that business.”

    Success for SDNN isn’t assured by any means – “It’s too premature to tell whether this is the ultimate model for regional news and information,” says James, but he adds that the community “response is overwhelmingly positive.” Readers comment that they’re seeing a lot of the names that they miss in the paper, and recognize the quality of the reporting. “There’s always this fear that, if the newspaper disappears, society won’t have a significant journalistic presence – that somehow the disappearance of the newsroom will cause news to disappear,” James says.

    “We may never have newsrooms the size that they were again,” he says matter-of-factly. “But there will be organizations like ourselves that excel at entertainment and investigative journalism in a community. People worried about the quality and type of content they were going to get from us. We tried to demonstrate that we could deliver diversity and depth – some fluffy, some in-depth, always entertaining and informative and very well written.”
    He adds, “I was at the right place at the right time, with a concept that works.” Newspapers, in order to survive, may have to apply many of the same strategies: leverage your partners, respect your talent, dispense with political games and let your writers and editors do what they love to do, and keep your costs down as much as possible.

    Would such an experiment be possible in other communities, perhaps with the participation of the local newspaper? James says, “The answer is ‘yes,’ but it’s not an easy process. It’s not easy putting together a coalition of media companies, and the diverse journalists they comprise, but yes, it’s possible. It’s really the only way you can do it. In most communities you have these local media companies probably doing okay financially, but not doing anything significant online, so it’s a no-brainer for them to want to be a part of something like this.”

    The amalgamation that emerges may well capture the best of all contributors, and blur the lines of traditional and Web media. “We’ll have our own SDNN radio and TV programs within a year,” James vows. He adds, without a touch of bravado, “I didn’t do this just to compete with SignOn and bring them down. I did this because this is what I do well, and I just wanted to stay in San Diego.”

  18. Paco permalink
    March 29, 2009 - 4:34 am 4:34 am

    Is this guy for real?
    He is going to save the internet!!!

  19. Rons Minion permalink
    March 29, 2009 - 4:59 pm 4:59 pm

    The word is that Bry is cutting the cord. I was told I won’t have a job after April 10th.

  20. Eric Wolff permalink
    March 29, 2009 - 5:12 pm 5:12 pm

    Hey Rons Minion – I’d love to talk to you. I can be reached at ericw@sdcitybeat.com, or at 619-281-7526 ext. 112.

  21. Approached reporter permalink
    March 29, 2009 - 6:55 pm 6:55 pm

    This does not surprise me. One of the “editors” at SDNN contacted me about freelancing and seemed to be all of 22 years old with zero experience.

  22. Oh, Please permalink
    March 29, 2009 - 6:57 pm 6:57 pm

    To the detectives at Least Blog on Earth: the very least you could do is report in your great story the real news that is available at blogofsandiego.com. But you have access to Gentleman Jerry,and want to keep it that way, eh? Access means that you don’t report the ugly San Diego truths.

  23. Oh, Please, Oh, Please permalink
    March 30, 2009 - 7:49 am 7:49 am

    It is disingenuous (at best) for Mr. Flannery to imply that only those with SDPD credentials may ask questions at press conferences. I have attended many of them (as has he-he even asked questions), and have not seen anyone asked for credentials.

  24. reading closely permalink
    March 30, 2009 - 9:28 am 9:28 am

    The 4:20 am screed from ‘another co-worker of Ron’s’ is long on apologies and short on facts. To even have a chance at success in this space requires vision and hard work. It’s tough to point to examples where those intersect.

  25. March 30, 2009 - 12:17 pm 12:17 pm

    I just hope that whatever happens, SDNN survives and thrives — along with the rest of the media in San Diego County.

    I’m sorry for Ron James, and anyone out of a job in this environment. But I must point out his estimate of getting into the black by years’ end was greatly overoptimistic. A timetable of 3 to 5 years to profitability is more realistic. If SDNN becomes profitable by year’s end, it will be a minor miracle, as the VC backers must be aware.

  26. quasi-modo permalink
    March 30, 2009 - 12:42 pm 12:42 pm

    If they can achieve that, it will be more than a minor miracle… I’ll bring over some raisin bread so they can turn it into chardonnay.

  27. Chris Hertzog permalink
    March 30, 2009 - 10:57 pm 10:57 pm

    Where’s Ms. Beak when we need her?

  28. April 1, 2009 - 6:04 am 6:04 am

    One piece of advice for San Diego News Network: Get rid of Associated Press. AP is commodity news. SDNN should exclusively focus on local stories. Stuff like “Progress Vital at World Summit” (a thumbsucker AP story with a yawner of a headline) undercuts that local focus.

  29. April 1, 2009 - 5:52 pm 5:52 pm

    Speaking of excellent solutions for local San Diego news, check out a better news aggregate site than sdnn… it’s called http://www.SanDiegoNews.com.

  30. Jake permalink
    April 5, 2009 - 6:44 pm 6:44 pm

    Aggregating content . . .
    Mmmmm . . .

  31. nate permalink
    April 17, 2009 - 1:26 pm 1:26 pm

    So whatever was the reason for Ron James’ quick exit?

  32. ear_to_the_ground permalink
    May 5, 2009 - 5:07 pm 5:07 pm

    Keep your ear to the ground

    sdnn.com is in major trouble

    horror stories circulating

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