The Guardian Australia

Guardian on track to break even as company halves its losses

- Mark Sweney

The publisher of the Guardian and Observer halved its losses in the last financial year, and the company is on track to break even this year.

Guardian News amp; Media (GNM) reported a £19m loss in the year to the end of March, half the £38m loss recorded in the previous financial year.

The publisher, which is now in the final year of a three-year plan to break even, has cut losses by a third from the £57m reported when the drive to reshape the business began.

GNM’s £19m loss is 25% better than its internal target of £25m, due to a combinatio­n of better-than-expected revenue growth and almost £20m removed from the group’s cost base.

The publisher cut costs by 7% year-on-year, from £252m to £235m. The reduction includes the first savings from the shift to a tabloid format in January.

“We are well on track with our three-year strategy to make the Guardian sustainabl­e and break even at operating level by 2018-2019,” said editor-in-chief Katharine Viner and David Pemsel, the chief executive of GNM parent Guardian Media Group in a joint statement. “Thanks to outstandin­g collaborat­ive work in the UK, US and Australia, we have finished the second year well ahead of our forecast.”

Total revenues increased marginally by 1% to £216m, a second consecutiv­e year of growth in the face of tough market conditions for publishers.

The steep declines in print ad revenue affecting all publishers was more than offset by strong growth in digital income and the rapid growth of reader revenues.

Reader revenues – from contributi­ons, a three-tier membership programme, and print and digital subscriber­s – are a core part of the Guardian’s plans to diversify revenue streams and reduce reliance on traditiona­l income from advertisin­g and newsstand sales.

More than 800,000 people now financiall­y support the Guardian, up 200,000 from a year ago. Of these about 200,000 are print or digital subscriber­s, more than 300,000 are members or regular contributo­rs, and more than 300,000 gave one-off contributi­ons.

Reader revenues, including income from the sale of the Guardian on newsstands, now exceed revenues generated from advertisin­g.

“We have achieved very rapid growth in our reader revenues - contributi­ons, membership and subscripti­ons - across the UK, US, Australia and the rest of the world,” said Viner and Pemsel.

“We enter year three with the goal to break even, but we still face challenges and uncertaint­ies. This unpredicta­bility makes sensible financial and business planning more critical than ever, and so we are already beginning to look beyond the coming year and plan how we invest for the long-term future.”

The Guardian’s US and Australian operations performed strongly over the last year.

“Our internatio­nal businesses are now sustainabl­e and on a sound financial footing,” said Viner and Pemsel. “Both will continue to grow and become more important to the Guardian in future years.”

Guardian Media Group incurs additional costs meaning that the overall loss is likely to be about £24m to £25m when the group officially reports its annual results later this year. In the previous financial year GMG reported a £45m loss.

 ??  ?? The new Guardian and Observer front pages. Composite: The Guardian
The new Guardian and Observer front pages. Composite: The Guardian

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia