The interview with CEO Stewart Vanderwilt aired this morning on the Colorado Matters program. Here's a transcript: Colorado Public Radio’s CEO explains why the company is laying off 15 people | Colorado Public Radio - it seemed slightly awkward, no surprise there, and didn't broach the subject of the KRCC acquisition, which surprised me a little bit. (Edit to clarify: Colorado College still owns KRCC; CPR is operating it.) The interviewer, Ryan Warner, did bring up CPR's purchase of a new headquarters building. Vanderwilt responded that most of the purchase was covered by a donor, but the organization still faces renovation expenses, and expenses that will be incurred in consolidating the organization's two Denver locations.
What caught my attention in particular was this exchange:
For added context, I would have like to have heard absolute numbers as well as the proportion of decline, but that 40% figure stands out nonetheless. Vanderwilt didn't explicitly state a second factor, but I believe the following is what he was referring to:
What caught my attention in particular was this exchange:
Warner: What economic, maybe even social forces, led to the current climate? Help us understand why CPR is in the red, not the black.
Vanderwilt: There's a couple of things. One, we were on a consistent growth path that pretty much stopped in 2023. The dynamics impacting CPR are impacting other media organizations, in some cases, more severely. One of them specifically is sponsorship that comes from national organizations. We saw a 40% drop in the amount of sponsorship that comes to CPR from, like, a nationwide bank or an airline.
Those types of sponsors, mostly placed through an arm of NPR, have really pulled back. There's so much pressure in the corporate world to deliver an instantaneous return. Those sponsor dollars are shifting very much direct-to-audience– so the ad that pops up on your Facebook feed or Instagram, and moving away from more traditional media, such as public radio.
For added context, I would have like to have heard absolute numbers as well as the proportion of decline, but that 40% figure stands out nonetheless. Vanderwilt didn't explicitly state a second factor, but I believe the following is what he was referring to:
Most of the CPR cuts came in its dedicated podcast operation, which will now be merged into the news operation, and its two music stations, KVOD (classical) and KVOQ (Indie 102.3).Warner: How are ratings? Are people listening to public radio like they used to?
Vanderwilt: They're not. Radio in general is being challenged by a shift to on-demand listening and other sources. CPR's ratings have been at a peak before, probably in about 2020. CPR is the most-listened-to news station in Denver, and that's a really important place to be.
Warner: But the pie is smaller.
Vanderwilt: But the pie is getting somewhat smaller.
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