The Guardian
topics
Close Box

News From Us:

Our latest report; our new video section; and jobs with paidContent.org and paidContent:UK


Updated: More Layoffs At Clear Channel; Up To 1,000 People This Time

imageRadio behemoth Clear Channel (NYSE: CCU) is laying off more employees today as it struggles with declining ad revenue and a mountain of debt taken on in a buyout by private-equity firm Bain Capital and Thomas Lee Partners. The company may let go as many as 1,000 employees, or more than 6 percent of its staff. (Earlier today, the company had said about 590 people would lose their jobs, but the CEO later said on an internal conference call that the number would be closer to 1,000.) A person familiar with the situation said most of the cuts are occurring in programming and were primarily in small and mid-sized markets. Today’s move follows layoffs of 1,850 employees, or about 9 percent of the workforce, just 3 months ago, mostly across its sales department.

As we’ve reported , Clear Channel began to run into trouble at the end of 2008 after loading up on $17 billion in debt to finance the acquisition by Bain Capital and Thomas Lee Partners. Revenues then declined in the weak economy. Radio industry revenue dropped 9 percent in the fourth quarter, and many believe the sector will have a hard time getting back on its feet even after the economy recovers because of the migration of listeners and advertisers to alternate media like the internet and satellite radio.

Related Stories
Apr 29, 2009 10:22 AM ET
Share

Posted In: Advertising, Entertainment, Media & Publishing

  • matt

    I think Clear Channel, and radio stations in general, have woefully failed to connect with their local base in new and valuable ways - especially on the web and through mobile applications.  Streaming an "iheartradio" application on the iPhone is NOT the kind of value I'm talking about.  They need to give their base new ways to engage around the music that their local stations are playing…then turn that into new sources of revenue.  A revenue model based on advertising over the radio and aside their low traffic web properties ain't going to cut it.

The Economics of Content | paidContent Newsletter

Know something we don’t?

Send Us a News Tip

All tips are anonymous and untraced.

Sponsors

Contributors