New CNN CEO Mark Thompson once rescued the New York Times from the end of newspapers. Can he do the same with CNN as cable TV dies?
Fortune · Bloomberg

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Mark Thompson is widely credited with transforming the New York Times into a digital newsroom as print journalism died a slow death in the online era. Now, after becoming CEO of cable network CNN, he will lead another historic, global news organization as changing market forces pose an existential risk to its future.

David Zaslav, the CEO of Warner Bros Discovery, which owns CNN, pointed to Thompson’s previous experiences, which also included leading the BBC, when announcing his hire on Wednesday. “Mark is a true innovator who has transformed for the digital age two of the world’s most respected news organizations,” Zaslav said in a statement.

Dan Ives, managing director of investment firm Wedbush Securities, called Thompson a “no-brainer CEO pick.”

Prior to leading the New York Times, Thompson was the BBC’s director general from 2004 to 2012. He joined the BBC in 1979 as a production trainee and rose the ranks over a more than 30-year career during which he ascended to the top job. In 2012, Thompson was appointed CEO of the New York Times Company after its previous CEO, Janet Robinson, stepped down unexpectedly.

Bringing a newspaper into the digital age…successfully

At the New York Times, Thompson spearheaded a digital overhaul that included an expansion into podcasting, shopping recommendations through the acquisition of online review site Wirecutter, and the addition of new digital subscriptions like NYT Cooking. In a 2021 interview, Thompson said his New York Times strategy was “smartphone-centric,” in that it was based on mobile devices as the main source of consumers’ attention. “It’s a puzzle,” he said. “How do you get the New York Times—this kind of big, rich thing—how do you make a great experience on a phone?”

The answer it seemed was to diversify as much as possible. A major part of Thompson’s success at the New York Times involved adding new kinds of content. Some notable examples include the “The Daily” podcast—whose Tuesday episode is No. 1 on the charts of Apple Podcasts’ news section—and building a dedicated app for the paper’s popular crossword puzzle. The Times was trying to “take the brand and the intellectual property and think of lots of different ways of exploiting it and getting it to different people in different ways,” he said in the same interview.

To enable his vision of a multifaceted New York Times, Thompson preferred to mostly spend his way out of turbulence rather than cut costs, as many other newspapers had done at the time, even though it did lay off approximately 70 employees in June 2020. “We’ve got a simpler idea, which is closer to what Netflix and other TV streaming services are up to,” he told CNBC in an interview when he was still New York Times CEO. “Which is you invest in great content, you build your content, you make it attractive to users, you make it easier for those users to subscribe, you get more and more subscribers and that enables you to invest in more great content. We’ve found a way of getting into a virtuous circle of growth rather than what I'm afraid is looking like a vicious cycle of decline for much of American newspapers.”