spinofflive
(image: Archi Banal)
(image: Archi Banal)

MediaSeptember 21, 2023

NZ media is in a major slump. Will a National-Act government make it worse?

(image: Archi Banal)
(image: Archi Banal)

A prolonged downturn in the advertising market. Layoffs at all major operators. Just around the corner, the spending cuts of a National-Act government. How might all this play out for an embattled New Zealand media?

The stories are persistent, and not pretty. For weeks, news giant Stuff suffered through rounds of redundancies. Warner Brothers Discovery, owners of Three, shut its early news bulletin and started restructuring away roles after a mammoth $35m paper loss. Radio and outdoor advertising company MediaWorks abruptly shut its high-profile Today FM brand earlier this year, and has been reprimanded for failing to file its year-end accounts. Just this week, RNZ reported that TVNZ is instituting major cuts, an hour before the NZ Herald reported the loss of multiple senior editorial staff.

What unites all these businesses is that the vast majority of their revenue comes from advertising, and the advertising market has been incredibly soft so far this year. Notoriously, along with travel, advertising is the first discretionary spending where business is cut during hard times. After years of inflation crimping margins, many businesses have reduced or even paused advertising spend, leading to job losses not just at mass media companies, but also at related industries like creative and media ad agencies, and production houses – some of which are already suffering through the impact of the prolonged actor and writer strikes in the US.

The media is always scrutinising itself – that’s the whole point of this story – but after the pandemic distorted the true picture of revenues, normal service is resuming, and once again the media business looks deeply troubled. 

Government-funded ‘Unite Against Covid-19’ advertising, 2020 (Clemenger BBDO)

One unexpected bright spot in recent years? The government has become a much more active ad buyer. “The only thing that has kept the market in growth is government spending,” says Steve Tindall, chief investment officer at ad agency Group M. He describes its ad purchasing as “a firehose” at its peak.

He says this culture grew out of the enormous “Unite Against Covid-19” campaign, a much-awarded piece of work credited with helping New Zealand execute its elimination strategy. It eventually gave way to a major vaccination campaign, which also had a clear purpose to it. Yet Tindall and others working in advertising say the success of those campaigns led to a mission creep, with mass market advertising or communications seen as a valid path for a larger array of government communications strategies.

A number of these would have been unlikely to be considered for spending prior to 2020. Historically it was about getting someone to do something, such as quit smoking or wear a seatbelt. Lately though, he says it’s about “showing the government is doing something”, citing campaigns by Kāinga Ora promoting its role in communities or Waka Kotahi’s $15m spend on its “vision zero” ambition for ending road deaths.

Waka Kotahi’s ‘Road to Zero’ campaign (FCB NZ)

Collectively the expanded remit of its advertising budgets led to a major increase in the scale and scope of government participation in the ad market. According to figures supplied by Group M, from a baseline of $71m in 2019, government expenditure on advertising grew to $93m in 2020, before peaking at $116m and $117m in the Covid-impacted years of 2021 and 2022 respectively. Yet despite the pandemic being declared over, government advertising spend has remained elevated, with $50m spent in the first half of 2023 – a slight increase over the previous six months, implying over $100m in spending in 2023.

Major campaigns have emerged from new agencies like Te Whatu Ora, and old institutions like the army. Corrections created ads to reimagine the role of a prison officer, and kept airing them despite an Advertising Standards Authority critique of what it perceived as “white saviour” narratives. The Ministry of Social Development used Vice New Zealand – which shut its doors in 2019 – to teach young people about safe relationships

This was not just visible on screens but in agency headcount. One former media executive points to the growth of media agencies in Wellington, despite the relative paucity of major businesses headquartered there.

The ‘Let Your Body Go to Work’ campaign from Te Whatu Ora and Te Aka Whai Ora (Clemenger BBDO)

Will the state stay on screen?

The scope of government advertising has not gone unnoticed by the opposition. Polling suggests National and Act are on course to win the election on October 14, so their intentions around advertising are being watched closely by both advertising-funded media, and those who place and make the ads. 

The signs are troubling for those reliant on that income. National’s “back pocket boost” tax manifesto has a bullet-pointed list of areas tagged for savings – first on its list is “reducing advertising and public relations spending”. Simeon Brown is MP for Pakuranga and National’s spokesperson for the public service. He says National has been “highly critical of the increase in government ad spending in recent years – particularly the type of advertising”. He cites the Waka Kotahi “vision zero” ads as being about the announcement of a goal, rather than making a contribution to it.

Unsurprisingly, Act would also favour a reduction in advertising. Its leader and finance spokesperson David Seymour says “the short answer is yes”. He continues, “we’d simply ask the question ‘if we weren’t already doing this today, would we start doing this tomorrow?’” 

When asked about how much the spend could plausibly drop by, both Brown and Seymour nominate the 2019 figure as a more appropriate baseline than 2022. Adjusting for inflation would take it to $85m, but Seymour would not stop there. “That assumes that all 2019 government advertising spending was worthwhile. So I can imagine halving it from there.” Brown goes further, saying he would look for a “50% reduction at least”. 

This implies a 2024 government advertising spend of around $40m per year, which suggests $60m leaving the New Zealand advertising market. Set against the total market, which sat at around $3.5bn in 2022, that seems small. However other advertisers have already significantly tightened belts, with Group M figures showing overall spend reducing by over $100m from H1 2022 to H1 2023. 

While not all of that heads to local media businesses, a significant proportion does, with one senior industry source saying the government is over-reliant on television for advertising due to the fact ministers continue to scrutinise the 6pm news so much. 

How will it impact advertising in practice?

TVNZ was recently scrutinised after Substacker Philip Crump, operating under the pseudonym Thomas Cranmer, revealed a $300,000 integration campaign from the EECA’s Gen Less brand. TVNZ+ has lately run ad breaks in which the government is the only client, through advertisers like the Electoral Commission, Corrections and Waka Kotahi, and government agencies are bigger spenders on Whakaata Māori. Despite this, a TVNZ spokesperson claims a reduction on spending would not have a profound impact on their bottom line.

Government department spending (including agencies) does not make up a material proportion of our advertising revenue,” they wrote. “While we don’t want to see any advertising spend reduced, National/Act’s intentions aren’t a specific concern for us. My understanding is that global social media platforms are a more significant beneficiary of this type of advertising.”

A Warner Brother Discovery spokesperson was more forthright. “In a country the size of New Zealand, government advertising is crucial to the sustainability of the media sector and is just one of the ways that they can support local media players,” they wrote in a statement supplied to The Spinoff. They went on to echo TVNZ’s interest in the volume of advertising spent on platforms like YouTube and Instagram. “Equally as important is the split between local and international spend by Government departments – they should focus their spend on local businesses, because any offshore spend disappears to international players.”

That is perhaps the bigger story lurking behind this – yet data to verify the split between government advertising on tech platforms versus local media partners is hard to obtain. The Spinoff has a current appeal before the Ombudsman seeking a breakdown by platform of the $100m-plus “Unite Against Covid-19” campaign, which the department of prime minister and cabinet has persistently refused, citing commercial sensitivity. 

Access to that split would help illustrate a small part of the bigger story of legacy media over the past 20 years. Both globally and locally, it is one of steady decline, rounds of redundancies which never really seem to end. Even as newspapers, TV and radio have created large audiences for digital operations, they are faced with furious competition from a plethora of technology giants which offer sophisticated, data-driven advertising – everything from Trade Me to Google to Uber to Amazon to Meta. They have a seemingly inexorable structural advantage, in that local media pay staff to produce content, while the platforms have their audiences make it for free. This was in part what the RNZ-TVNZ merger set out to address, along with the Fair Digital News Bargaining bill. The former has been abandoned, and National broadcasting spokesperson Melissa Lee appears cold on the latter, despite essentially unanimous industry support.

It suggests the bad times are likely to persist, and whispers suggest some major ad-funded businesses might not survive a prolonged downturn. Yet Brown says his government would not intervene even if the reduced ad spend prompted further redundancies. “Those are commercial decisions for those businesses.”. It all spells further chill winds heading for a sector already weathering a years-long storm.

Keep going!
The many moods of Todd Scott (Image: Toby Morris)
The many moods of Todd Scott (Image: Toby Morris)

MediaSeptember 18, 2023

A short interview with Todd Scott, the media baron who dreamed of being a citizen cop

The many moods of Todd Scott (Image: Toby Morris)
The many moods of Todd Scott (Image: Toby Morris)

The owner of iconic business title the NBR made news recently for a daring but ill-fated citizen’s arrest. He tells The Spinoff what happened next.

He was out on a routine trip to the supermarket, grabbing some drinks and kai for his journalists, when Todd Scott saw something he could not abide. The NZ Herald reported that the owner of storied business title the National Business Review saw “a massive boof of a man”, as Scott put it, attempting to steal multiple boxes of alcohol. Scott says the would-be thief was drunk and abusive, threatening staff in the Countdown Metro on Albert St, near the NBR’s new offices in midtown. The publisher decided he had to take action.

Scott tackled the man then restrained him while awaiting the arrival of police. “Once I had the guy pinned to the ground, thumb locked, knee on the shoulder with my body weight on him, he was quite compliant,” he told Stuff. Scott claimed he was performing a citizen’s arrest, a legal manoeuvre with a narrow basis in the Crimes Act, and one police largely discourage the public from attempting. 

The incident was newsworthy in and of itself due to Scott’s role within news media, but that escalated after police said they could not attend the scene, and asked Scott to let the offender go – even suggesting that he himself might be vulnerable to arrest for his actions. Scott was flabbergasted, and says he is convinced that there needs to be legal reform to allow more ability for people like him to take the law into their own hands. 

It’s just the latest brush with fame for Scott, who operates the NBR according to his own sometimes mercurial instincts and eschews some of the typical business strategies associated with the news media. He has abandoned all advertising, ended the beloved print publication, and briefly shut the office too, around the time he sold his mansion and moved into a motorhome. He recently made headlines when he ended all opinion writing within the NBR, dropping high profile columnists like Duncan Garner. 

Scott has at times talked of huge ambition, expressing a desire to buy Stuff, while also hosing down speculation that the NBR was in talks to be acquired by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. In January of this year, he confirmed to Stuff that he had agreed to sell a stake in the company, but as of today he is still listed as the sole shareholder in the NBR. Which is to say he continues to be the most intriguing and sui generis operator in the local media scene. He now lives in Fiji, and when The Spinoff called he was at Auckland Airport on his way back home, “relaxing in the lounge before heading back to my third world country, leaving behind a lawless country”, as he put it.

The following interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

Duncan Greive: What has been the response to the incident?

Todd Scott: I bumped into a couple of policemen over the weekend. I asked, what do you think of that guy from the other day with that foiled citizen’s arrest? One of them said, “yeah, I’m aware of that – actually, you look like that guy.” I told them I was that guy. Then I asked a question. “How would you guys feel if after I was told by the police to let the drunken thug go, he then went on to commit a serious assault?” The policeman said, “never, ever doubt yourself”. He said, “no one has ever been sued for acting in the way you did.” Then he thanked me and he shook my hand.

What has been the response to that, whether it’s from people you know, or from members of the public?

The most important one was my wife, who’s bloody furious, understandably. But actually it’s been quite gratifying – the feedback’s been very positive. I’ve actually had a number of conversations with a few politicians. I didn’t do it for attention. I didn’t even think about it. Had I thought about it, I probably wouldn’t have done it. It was just instinct. It was just the look of disdain, anger, resentment, entitlement on his face. This guy was just a nasty thug. 

Were you disappointed at the outcome, at having to let him go?

I think it’s definitely time for the Crimes Act to be looked at. I mean, just at a basic level, I believe that registered security officers should be licensed to restrain criminals. I also think the reality is people now know – as a result of this incident, by the way – that you can walk into any retail store, you can remove whatever you like, and no one will place a hand on you. That’s a fact. In New Zealand today, you can walk into any retail stop, shop, take whatever you want, and not a single person will put a hand on you. They might get a photograph of you, then you might get a tap on the shoulder from the cops in 12 months’ time, when they’re not swinging on swings at the park.

Switching tack, how are things going at the NBR?

Really well. We were prepared for Covid without knowing Covid was coming along. But Covid was the gift that gave us our business model, in terms of allowing us to do away with the distraction of print and focus solely online. It’s just gone from strength to strength.

You’ve seen the rise of a pretty well-resourced and well-run challenger in BusinessDesk. Has that impacted the NBR at all?

No, I welcome the competition. I don’t think anybody would argue that the NBR doesn’t have the best business journalists in the country*. I don’t quite understand the business model. I don’t understand why the Herald and BusinessDesk don’t just team up together and do a better job of business news. But they’re essentially playing into our hands, running the two different businesses in silos.  

There was a story a little while back, suggesting that there was a potential News Corp sale, and a Stuff report of investment into the NBR. What’s the status of all that?

Now, there’s a lot of rumours and speculation over a period of time. I’ve never been in negotiations with News Corp. I did go through three lots of due diligence [around an investment]. But I’m happy where things landed, and I have no intention of exiting the business in the foreseeable future. It’s in fine shape. I’m not interested in selling.

You also made the decision to move away from opinion. What motivated that? 

I think if you look at the New Zealand media landscape, there’s just so much opinion out there, and I really don’t think people care. I mean, they might enjoy reading a particular columnist because they like their style. But the reality is that the NBR provides business news and analysis that allows our audience to make their own informed decisions. So it was a bit of a no brainer. It was just a refocus of the resources of the newsroom. As a result of that we’ve actually had the budget to be able to employ a couple of new hires.

How did the opinion staff take the news?

I think internally it was probably a bit of a relief, because it meant that it wasn’t a responsibility that they needed to be beholden to every month. As for the columnists themselves, I mean, Duncan Garner’s a mate of mine, Martin Devlin’s a mate of mine. It might have been hard, but they’re both big boys and they’ve been around a long time. They understand.

‘Media is under threat. Help save The Spinoff with an ongoing commitment to support our work.’
Duncan Greive
— Founder

You’ve been living in Fiji for more than two years now, how’s life?

It’s great. Fiji is considered a third world country, but I’d rather live there than a lawless society like New Zealand. It’s disgraceful that I feel so much safer walking the streets of Fiji – any street in Fiji – than I do in New Zealand. 

How’s running the business remotely going?

To be fair, it’s more on Jackie, my wife and life partner. We’ve been together 35 years and  married 30 years in December. God bless the woman. She’s the CFO of the company. So she’s actually, to be honest, busier than I am. I mean, I’m across the website, I read everything, I’ve watched everything, I’m across the strategy and all that sort of stuff. But she’s the CFO, and has a lot more responsibility than I do. So I take care of the house cleaning responsibilities and the gardening. So I have a pretty balanced lifestyle, which is wonderful.

When reached for comment, BusinessDesk founder and editor Pattrick Smellie declined to engage with Scott’s comments around the relative quality of BusinessDesk’s journalists. Smellie said he was too busy “loitering outside vape shops hoping to one-up Todd by single-handedly stopping a ram raid”.

Follow Duncan Greive’s NZ media podcast The Fold on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.