In one of the most egregious examples of value destruction in newspaper history, JPI Media (formerly Johnston Press), owners of The Scotsman and a raft of regional titles, is sold for a mere £10m, spread over 3 years. They bought The Scotsman Group alone for £160m in 2005.
The Scotsman had been purchased for £80m 10 years before that. So we (I was Publisher for those 10 years) doubled its value in a decade. Add in another £25m for the magnificent building we constructed (which JP did not buy but rented before moving to much reduced premises).
So after a decade of massive valued added, JPI Media managed to destroy most of it in the following 15 years. The Scottish political and media establishment has been curiously quiet about JPI Media’s appalling record. Perhaps because they were complicit.
Alex Salmond in 2005 encouraged JP to buy The Scotsman.
Just get Andrew Neil out the door and sales will soar, he assured them. In fact, sales went from 75,000 to under 20,000. So the Salmond/JP strategy didn’t go exactly to plan. In fact they wasted a great Scottish institution

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Andrew Neil

Andrew Neil Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @afneil

9 Dec 20
Key quotes from businessman letter to Herald:
“I have never encountered anti-Scottish resentment south of the Border (indeed the number of Scots in top positions in my industry rather suggests the opposite).
What I have rather encountered is a quite genuine sense of bewilderment at an endless enunciation of grievance and inferiority. This isn’t Anglophobia, it is something more. [The SNP wants] to control our own future and decide what sort of country we choose to live in.
Quite right. That’s why we have a Scottish Parliament in charge of the vast bulk of the internal affairs of Scotland, capable of producing a radically different agenda if it should so choose.
Read 4 tweets
25 Sep 20
Important thread (for me!): With heavy heart I announce I will be leaving the BBC. Despite sterling efforts by new DG to come up with other programming opportunities, it could not quite repair damage done when Andrew Neil Show cancelled early summer + Politics Live taken off air
But I leave with no animosity or desire to settle scores. I look back on my 25 years doing live political programmes for the BBC with affection. And gratitude for brilliant colleagues at Millbank, who always made sure I went into the studio fully briefed and equipped for the fray
They were/are the best of the best. If they can make me look good, they can make anybody look good. There could have been a different outcome but for reasons too dull to adumbrate, we’ll leave it there. I wish the BBC and the new DG well. The BBC will always be special to me.
Read 4 tweets
21 Sep 20
The Government's chief medical and scientific officers made it clear that the prospect of 49,000 Covid cases /day by mid-October was not a prediction but an extrapolation. Even so, it's the scary figure they want us to take away from their presentation.
Much of the media has duly obliged. But Whitty/Vallance did not dwell on the presumptions behind that 49,000 stat: that cases are doubling every 7 days; and that they will continue to double every 7 days til mid-October. However ...
On the latest stats, cases are not doubling every 7 days. On Sept 13 there were 3,330 new cases; on Sept 20 there were 3,889. As for doubling every 7 days in the future, that remains to be seen. But government seems to think we're about 2/3 weeks behind France.
Read 5 tweets
13 Sep 20
Now that Bahrain has joined the UAE in recognising Israel, Saudi Arabia cannot be far behind. A sea-change in the geopolitics of the Middle East is underway, leaving the Palestinian leadership isolated.
Consider this from the state-backed Saudi Gazette: "Palestinian politicians have sabotaged negotiations and rejected all peace initiatives for six decades in order to keep the aid funds flowing to their private bank accounts."
Or this: Bahraini activist: “Growing awareness among many in Arab world that Jewish people not foreign colonialists in Land of Israel, but part of this land, and part of our region… it’s a fact, and we can do many things together for prosperity, security and peace for region.”
Read 6 tweets
25 Aug 20
California now generates a third of its electricity from renewables, largely solar and wind. It is also experiencing its first electricity blackouts for two decades. The problem: it is prematurely closing gas and nuke plants that plugged the gap for intermittent wind and solar.
Battery storage is a possible solution. But not yet. California’s biggest facility, a lithium ion battery plant at Escondido, has the capacity to power 24,000 homes for 4 hours. The state has 13m households; a year has 8,760 hours. And a single Escondido costs circa €50m.
California also faces higher electricity prices: since 2011, they have increased 6 times faster than the rest of the US. Ave cost of residential electricity in California last year was 19.2 cents per kilowatt-hour, 47% higher than national ave of about 13 cents per kilowatt-hour.
Read 4 tweets
18 Jul 20
As Guardian, BBC, Mirror + many others announce rafts of redundancies, almost alone in UK media, The Spectator is hiring. Here's why: several years ago we decided future lay in subscriptions -- print, digital or both. We didn't mind which. But to read us you had to subscribe.
The results have been Spectator Spectacular. Subs have soared and so have revenues. A year ago we reached circa 65,000 subs. This month we're over 85,000 and rising faster than ever. We're on target to hit 100,000 by Christmas, perhaps well before.
Subs revenue is steady, strong and surging. It now accounts for over 75% of total revenues, soon to be over 80%. The lockdown crippled events, newsstand + ad revenues. But it was rocket fuel for subs growth. It's why we're handing back furlough money to the taxpayer.
Read 6 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!