Meredith Corp., publisher of titles such as
Better Homes and Gardens, Wednesday named Stephen M. Lacy president and chief operating officer from president of the Meredith Publishing Group.
Lacy, 50, will oversee all of Meredith's business operations, including magazine and book publishing, integrated marketing, interactive media and broadcast television. Lacy, a rising star in the
publishing world, is credited with shepherding the company through the recent economic downturn, helping to increase advertising pages by 19 percent in calendar 2003. He also engineered the purchase
of the American Baby Group.
MediaDailyNews: What are your expectations for your new role?
Stephen M. Lacy: I am thrilled to have the opportunity to work with John Griffin [who succeeds
Lacy as Meredith Publishing Group president) to grow and develop that business. I am also glad that I will be able to balance my time to work Kevin O'Brien [president of the Meredith Broadcasting
Group) and the broadcast team. We are preparing for new growth across all disciplines.
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MDN: Speaking of Meredith's diversity, the company has been pushing convergence across various media
properties, including magazines and the 12-Meredith-owned TV stations. Is this something you will continue to drive?
Lacy: We do quite a bit, and we can certainly do more. At one time I was the
CFO, so I did have some opportunity to work in this area, so it's not entirely new.
We have been really successful at using our publishing assets for marketing programs to deliver in local
markets. For example, we have run spring retail promotions where we have used local TV stations to run Better Homes & Gardens-inspired content. We have used this for local market
promotions that drive people into stores. We usually use vignettes on local news, print pieces, direct mail, etc.
MDN: Some have commented that yours is an unusual succession, given your
financial background. Many Meredith CEOs have first served as the chief operating officer.
Lacy: I have a financial background I guess, but I have been here for seven years. I don't know if
what I am doing is all that unusual.
MDN: You have been credited with helping Meredith thrive during a downturn in the economy in recent years.
Lacy: We have had a strong circulation
dynamic to begin with, and that has allowed us to grow rate bases and grow market share. We could expand while others were detracting. When you come out of that you are in a much better position.
MDN: There has been a lot in the news about how the magazine industry is missing out on the advertising recovery. Is this something you are concerned about?
Lacy: Certainly it has
been less robust that we had anticipated. We are still seeing pretty strong results, which has to do with our positioning.