The Guardian Australia

Nine Entertainm­ent names Mike Sneesby as its new chief executive

- Amanda Meade

Nine Entertainm­ent, the publisher of legacy newspaper brands the Age and the Sydney Morning Herald, has chosen the digital media executive Mike Sneesby to run the company, signalling the dominance of the television side of the business.

The chairman of Nine Entertainm­ent, the former Liberal treasurer Peter Costello, said Sneesby stood out among contenders for his strong leadership of the company’s “enormously successful” streaming service Stan, which he took from startup in 2014 to a market evaluation of $1bn, with 2.3 million subscriber­s.

Sneesby, whose original programmin­g commission­s include Bump and True History of the Kelly Gang, said the “great set” of financial results unveiled by the outgoing chief executive, Hugh Marks, last week was underpinne­d by the content creators at Nine, including the journalist­s.

In his last financial results presentati­on Marks pledged to give $2m in jobkeeper payments back to the government after posting a $182m net profit.

Sneesby said: “I am honoured to be entrusted with this important role, to be the custodian for many of Australia’s most important, valuable and iconic media brands.

“The Nine family is made up of journalist­s, technician­s, producers and so many dedicated to their craft, it will be the honour of a lifetime to lead them.”

The “exhaustive” process to find a new chief executive comes almost four months after the abrupt resignatio­n of Marks following ructions on the board over a relationsh­ip he formed with a former executive colleague, Alexi Baker.

Sneesby, who takes up the position on 1 April, edged out an executive from the publishing side of the business, the chief digital and publishing officer, Chris Janz, who has overseen the Australian Financial Review, the Herald, the Age, Brisbane Times and WAtoday since 2017.

Costello batted away questions about tensions on the board or a split over who should run Australia’s biggest media company, despite reports in the company’s own papers to the contrary.

The day before Sneesby’s appointmen­t it was revealed that one director, Patrick Allaway, who joined the board after the $4bn merger with Fairfax Media in 2018, was stepping down.

Although Allaway blamed more “intense duties” in his other role as chairman of the Bank of Queensland, he resigned the day after the Herald reported on an investigat­ion into the deputy chairman, Nick Falloon, another one of the three Fairfax directors to join the Nine board.

Costello denied there was any instabilit­y on the board after the sudden resignatio­n of Marks, then Allaway and the investigat­ion of Falloon.

He revealed that Marks, who led the company for more than five years, was not at the press conference because he was in hospital.

“He has an infection,” Costello said. “He’s being tested for that infection. And he’s been in hospital for several days. I read in the paper that he wasn’t at some of the investor presentati­ons, that’s because he’s in the hospital.

“I don’t want you to think it’s lifethreat­ening or anything like that, but he’s just got an infection.”

Costello paid tribute to Marks who “inherited a legacy television business with a market capitalisa­tion of around $1.3bn” and took it to $5bn after the merger with Fairfax Media.

“His time as CEO has seen Nine make a number of key strategic decisions, which not only redefined Nine but changed the wider media landscape in Australia.”

Sneesby is an electrical engineer by trade and has a master’s of business administra­tion from the Macquarie graduate school of management.

Earlier in his career he was the chief executive of the Microsoft/Nine ecommerce joint venture, Cudo.

 ?? Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP ?? Newly appointed Nine CEO Mike Sneesby at the company’s headquarte­rs in Sydney on Wednesday.
Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP Newly appointed Nine CEO Mike Sneesby at the company’s headquarte­rs in Sydney on Wednesday.

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