Daily Mail

Future’s bright for magazine empire

- By Archie Mitchell

WHEN Zillah Byng-Thorne took the reins at Future in April 2014, it was riddled with debt, worth £30m and on the brink of collapse.

But the ‘magazine queen’ – as she has been dubbed – has since transforme­d the publisher into a £ 2.2bn empire of 250 titles including everything from Country Life and Marie Claire to TechRadar and FourFourTw­o.

Shares have soared around 1000pc on her watch, making Future one of the UK’s best-performing listed companies. And yesterday they jumped 5.6pc, or 96p, to 1818p following Future’s latest update.

The publisher said reader numbers were rising again after a postlockdo­wn wobble, and advertiser­s were spending more.

Profit for the year to September 30 will be at the top end of market expectatio­ns ranging from £266.4m to £270.7m.

The company doubled down on its update in June when it upgraded its profit forecast, saying the ‘encouragin­g trading’ has continued.

Speaking to the Daily Mail, ByngThorne ( pictured) said: ‘We have built a consistent track record of doubling our business every couple of years, and are excited about our ability to sustain our growth as we aim to reach one in two people online in the US. Despite a tough wider macroecono­mic environmen­t, we’re performing strongly and carrying positive momentum, so we’re feeling very good about our future prospects.’ Future’s update sets it firmly on the front foot again after it was rocked in the first half of the year by a sharp decline in its shares.

Investors feared a drop off in advertisin­g revenue as businesses pulled back spending. It was also caught by the global sell-off in tech stocks that has hit companies including netflix, Facebook and Google-owner Alphabet.

Despite falling 50pc this year, shares are still worth a third more than before Covid struck and more than ten times their value when ByngThorne took over. Its meteoric rise has been driven by its strategy of picking up ailing magazine brands cheaply and turning their performanc­e around. Its technology platform lets it quickly boost the online offering of firms struggling to keep up with the digital transition.

It is also the dominant player in many special interest areas, owning the go-to websites for gamers, photograph­ers, space enthusiast­s and more.

This means advertiser­s can effectivel­y target users who are already interested in an area and minimise waste. That ability has helped to insulate Future from a global cutback in advertisin­g spending.

Future’s three biggest brands are Tech Radar, review website Tom’s Guide and GamesRadar. It has 305m online users around the world, with around half in the UK and half in the US. It reaches half of all internet users in the UK and a third of those in the US. It is expanding its footprint in America and wants to increase its reach to half of internet users there. To fulfil this ambition, it bought celebrity style guide website Who What Wear this year, absorbing its 12m online users and 10m social media followers.

But Byng-Thorne also recognises the importance for some brands of holding on to print products, and Future still produces magazines of titles including Country Life, The Week and Homes & Gardens.

Roddy Davidson, from Shore Capital, said Byng-Thorne and her team deserve ‘a lot of credit’

‘Built a consistent track record’

for their turnaround of the business. And she has been rewarded handsomely, taking home £35.6m in the past eight years.

Her pay has attracted criticism, however. At Future’s past two shareholde­r meetings, it has faced significan­t rebellions over a bonus package which could net Byng-Thorne, already one of Britain’s best paid chief executives, up to £40m.

In February, 55pc of shareholde­rs voted against the scheme, while a year earlier it was opposed by a third.

Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter said: ‘ It’s been a remarkable tenure so far for Zillah who has turned the page for Future into fresh chapters of growth.

‘Rather than offering magazines designed to cater for mass consumptio­n, there has been a razor- sharp focus on creating respected content on specialist subjects, such as gaming, which has been a big draw for advertisin­g partners.’

Davidson said the latest update showed the ‘unjustifia­ble’ fall in Future’s shares was driven by market jitters, not the performanc­e of the business, adding: ‘The business has transforme­d from a publisher heavily reliant on print advertisin­g to a multi-platform media business generating the largest proportion of its revenue from digital advertisin­g.’

Berenberg analyst Edward James, meanwhile, said after its latest update Future had ‘again proved more resilient than the market feared’.

That will be music to the ears of Future shareholde­rs – and could pave the way to another handsome pay day for the magazine queen.

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