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Subject: AEJ 05 BeachboM INTL A New Newspaper with a New Formula Succeeds in Slovenias Emergent Democracy: A Case Study of Finance
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Sun, 5 Feb 2006 07:35:14 -0500
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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and
Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005.
         If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author
directly. If you have questions about the archives, email
rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, 
send email to
[log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the
body (drop the "").

(Feb 2006)
Thank you.
Elliott Parker
====================================================================

A New Newspaper with a New Formula Succeeds in Slovenia's Emergent 
Democracy:  A Case Study of Finance

Submission to:	AEJMC Conference 2005
	International Communication Division (ICD)

Authors/Affiliations:	Martine Robinson Beachboard
	Assistant Professor
Department of Mass Communication
Idaho State University

John C. Beachboard
	Assistant Professor
College of Business
Idaho State University

Mailing address:	Martine Robinson Beachboard
	Campus Box 8166
Idaho State University
Pocatello, ID  83209

Telephone number:	(208) 282-5395

Fax number:	(208) 282-2258

e-mail address:	[log in to unmask]

Abstract

As post-communist societies emerge from Eastern Europe, journalists 
learn to cope with both political and financial pressures.  The 
transition to market-driven print media evokes questions about the 
viability of quality journalism serving public interest and promoting 
democracy and plurality of voice.  This paper investigates Slovenia's 
post-independence start-up newspaper Finance and offers some 
provocative insights to the proposition that investment by foreign 
media conglomerates might provide independence from local political 
and advertiser influence.



Submission to:	AEJMC Conference 2005
	International Communication Division (ICD)


A New Newspaper with a New Formula Succeeds in Slovenia's Emergent 
Democracy:  A Case Study of Finance


Abstract

As post-communist societies emerge from Eastern Europe, journalists 
learn to cope with both political and financial pressures.  The 
transition to market-driven print media evokes questions about the 
viability of quality journalism serving public interest and promoting 
democracy and plurality of voice.  This paper investigates Slovenia's 
post-independence start-up newspaper Finance and offers some 
provocative insights to the proposition that investment by foreign 
media conglomerates might provide independence from local political 
and advertiser influence.


 "Democracy is the worst form of government except all those other 
forms that have been tried."
~ Winston Churchill

A New Newspaper with a New Formula Succeeds in Slovenia's Emergent 
Democracy:  A Case Study of Finance
[Authors' names withheld pending review]
Submission to AEJMC Conference 2005, International Communication Division (ICD)

Introduction, Background and Motivation for This Study

Churchill's quip regarding the relative merits of alternative forms 
of government might well be paraphrased to apply to options for 
funding journalism:  Market-driven journalism, as commonly practiced 
in western democracies, seems to be the worst form of journalism 
except for all those other forms that have been tried.  The authors' 
recent research into the evolving practice of print journalism in 
Slovenia and the specific investigation of the business news 
publication Finance offer some unique and provocative insights on 
this proposition.
Two major but related streams of critical research relating to 
shortcomings of market-driven journalism are especially relevant to 
the purposes of this study.  One stream laments the gradual 
diminution of quality hard-news reporting in the public interest and 
its increasing replacement with superficial information, 
sensationalistic news and celebrity gossip (Ansolabehere & Iyengar, 
1997; McChesney, 1999; Postman, 1986).  The second critical stream 
addresses the implications of media ownership by a large and 
transnational conglomerates under the loosely defined rubrics of 
media globalization and cultural imperialism (Demers, 1999; Downing, 
1996; Hamelink, 1994; Herman & McChesney, 1997; Hollifield, 2001; 
IPI, 2004; McPhail, 1987; Schiller, 1976; Thompson, 1997; Tomlinson, 
1991)  A chief concern here is that increasing consolidation, 
globalization and deregulation of media conglomerates has been 
"preparing the way for the inexorable advance of a 'one-dimensional' 
capitalist culture" (Tomlinson, 1991, p. 120).
Thus it is interesting to find a newspaper editor in a small, newly 
democratized country who welcomes ownership by a foreign media 
conglomerate because of the benefits that such investment can 
provide.  This case studies a relatively new and successful start-up 
newspaper in the Southeastern European republic of Slovenia which was 
liberated from Yugoslavia and communist influence in 1991.

Three Slovenian Start-Up Failures, Three Successes
The authors believe that hard-news journalism plays important roles 
in society and that quality journalistic practice must be nurtured to 
more effectively serve the needs of societies.  We appreciate the 
concerns of scholars and social critics who fear that the 
profit-maximizing behavior of media conglomerates diminishes quality 
of news reporting and pluralism of voice in the marketplace of ideas 
(McManus, 1994).  Questioning whether western models of journalism 
will necessarily prevail in the democracies emerging from formerly 
communist European nations, the authors conceived a project to 
investigate the post-independence evolution of print journalism in 
the former Yugoslavia.  We selected Slovenia to study due to its 
relative economic and political stability and its stronger western 
orientation relative to other formerly communist nations.[1]
After Slovenia declared its independence in June 1991, its 
expresident Milan Kucan made these predictions concerning the world 
around him:  "Nothing will remain the way it was.  Naturally, 
newspapers are the exception" (Frankl, 2004).  Some observers hoped 
the new democracy would see a proliferation of new news dailies, 
increasing the quality and diversity of reporting.  In fact, there 
have been changes in the Slovenian media space, though perhaps not 
entirely consistent with Kucan's vision.  The major news publications 
existing prior to Slovenian independence remain today:  Delo and 
Dnevnik published in Ljubljana, Vecer published in Maribor, and the 
alternative weekly Mladina.  Three post-independence general-interest 
newspapers started in the 1990s failed:  Slovenec, Republika and 
Jutranjik.  While an analysis of these failures is beyond the scope 
of this paper, multiple sources indicated that the Slovenian public 
was offended by strong political positions reflected in their 
editorial content (Bervar, 2001; Frankl, 2005; Slovenian Journalist, 
2004; Hrvatin, Kucic & Petkovic, 2004).
	Meanwhile, three special-interest publications succeeded:  Slovenske 
Novice, which has the largest circulation of any newspaper in the 
country (107,000) but is considered to be of "yellow" tabloid quality 
(Bervar, 2001; Slovenian Journalist, 2004), Ekipa sports daily, and 
the business daily Finance  The last of these, Finance, published in 
Ljubljana, provides a particularly revelatory case (Yin, 1994; 
Eisenhardt, 1989) for empirically examining a specific example of 
foreign ownership and its influence on the availability of news 
content in Slovenia.

Research Question
This situation led to the development of the following research 
question:  What can be learned about the implications of foreign 
ownership for journalism quality from the examination of a 
post-independence start-up news publication in an emergent democracy?
	  In writing this case, the authors neither explicitly challenge nor 
support the critical narratives informing global media 
studies.  Rather, we seek to provide a fair and transparent 
interpretation of the experiences and perspectives of actors directly 
involved in the production of news.  We seek to represent "local 
knowledge" (Geertz, 1985) and in so doing to provide an additional 
perspective for those seeking to construct theoretical bases for the 
formulation of national policies governing ownership, production and 
dissemination of news-related media.

Methodology:  An Interpretivist Case-Study Design

This study employs a case-study design intended to provide a 
fine-grained examination of the creation and operation of the 
Slovenian business daily newspaper Finance.  The purpose is not to 
extend theory but to provide a basis for evaluating it by 
representing and necessarily interpreting the lived experience of 
actors directly involved with the production of news products.  The 
research takes an interpretive philosophical approach illustrated by 
an analogy developed by Slife and Williams (1995, p. 87).  In 
describing interpretive ways of knowing, they ask the reader to 
consider the difference between a map of a city and an informal 
account of that city provided by a resident.  The map, while 
admittedly an interpretation, represents an abstraction of an 
objective reality, depicting "only those features of the place that 
would remain unchanged if no one lived there (e.g., patterns of 
streets, layouts of buildings)."  The informal account is quite 
different although ultimately as informative or even more so.  While 
"necessarily personal, incomplete and biased…" the personal account 
might describe the best places to eat or sections of towns to 
avoid.  By providing such description, the informal account "gives 
meaning to the town, from a native's point of view."  Certainly not 
the only description or possible interpretation but legitimate nonetheless.
As are many scholars, we are interested in the consequences of 
increasing dominance of media production by transnational 
conglomerates, in particular attempting to understand the effects of 
foreign media ownership on local news production and 
consumption.  The Finance case merited study because it appeared to 
contradict commonly held assumptions concerning transnational media 
domination and ownership, highlighting a continuing need to study the 
particular as well as the general and to employ multiple research 
methods (Hollifield, 2001; Yin, 1994; March, Sproull & Tamuz, 1991; 
Stake, 1994).
	Research activities and processes included in this study can be 
grouped into the following categories:
•	Case selection.  Finance is notable as the only daily hard-news 
publication established in post-communist Slovenia that has survived 
until today.  We acknowledge that Finance, as a business news 
publication, occupies a market segment distinct from the newspapers 
that failed.  Despite this limitation, it merits study due to its 
approach in selecting and presenting content and its increasing 
readership in political and business sectors.
•	Data collection.  While documentary evidence was examined, the 
primary data sources were face-to-face interviews with key informants 
at Finance.  Additional interviews were conducted with journalists, 
Slovenian academicians and officials from the Slovenian Ministry of 
Information.  The selection of participants was purposive, and 
snowball techniques identified additional informants.  Interviews 
were organized around the research question but were conducted using 
the "active interview" approach (Holstein & Gubrium, 1994).  With the 
permission of the study participants, researchers tape-recorded 
interviews.  The primary author conducted follow-up telephonic 
interviews and e-mail exchanges with multiple study 
participants.  While the authors did not promise participants 
confidentiality, we felt some revelations might be sensitive enough 
to merit protection.  Thus, while we are able to specifically 
identify the sources of quotes used, we have attempted to be discreet 
about revealing some identities.
•	Data analysis.  Analysis consisted primarily of the creation of a 
case narrative that seeks to accurately reflect interviewee 
perceptions respecting answers to the research question.  The 
objective was to develop an accurate and rich description of a 
phenomenon as seen through the eyes of the study 
participants.  Related literature is referenced to provide useful context.
•	Validity and reliability assessments.  The authors used the results 
of the unstructured interviews to develop narrative themes 
representing participants' varied perspectives.  Where possible, we 
used participant checks to test whether our interpretation of 
interview data fairly represents participant views (Miles & Huberman, 
1994; Altheide & Johnson, 1994; Patton, 2002).
These procedures demonstrate the authors' commitment to employing 
disciplined data elicitation and analysis techniques consistent with 
recommendations of leading qualitative researchers and methodologists.
Given the interpretive philosophy guiding the design and execution of 
this study and consistent with a recommended approach for writing 
qualitative research, we present the study findings first and then 
introduce relevant literature in our interpretation of the data 
(Creswell, 1994).
In the remainder of this paper, we first briefly describe Slovenia's 
unique history.  Next we provide an overview of the Slovenian print 
media landscape in which Finance competes.  We then describe the 
publication's mission, history and services.  This context provides a 
backdrop for encountering the chief editor's perspective regarding 
the role played by Finance in the Slovenian media market, and the 
impact foreign investment has had on Finance's development and the 
quality of services it is able to provide to its readership.  The 
paper closes with an interpretation of this case within the broader 
context of global media studies.

Historical Context of Slovenian Media[2]

While the authors acknowledge their affinity for examining historical 
context, study participants insisted this was vital to understanding 
current challenges and practices:  First you must understand our 
history, they would say; it is different; it influences what we do, 
how we think today.  Slovenia always was unique among Yugoslavian 
republics and from Central and Eastern European states emerging from 
Soviet domination.  Slovenia has been more westward-oriented.  Not 
only is it geographically the most western territory in the former 
Yugoslavia, but German nobility ruled local populations beginning 
before 1000 AD, and German immigrants established towns and 
businesses in the region.  Slovenia had the strongest economy of the 
Yugoslavian republics.  Josip Broz, Tito's "third way" to socialism 
permitted a degree of regional autonomy and private-sector economic 
activity even in a system of centralized political control (Campbell, 
1980; Lydall, 1987).  In the view of study participants, these 
factors helped prepare Slovenia to make the transition to a 
democratic, market-oriented economy.
	Slovenian print media, even under communism, had some tradition of 
market support.  In 1945 Tito was able to break away from 
Stalin.  The communist party was interested in media but did little 
to fund media aside from public television.  The communist government 
did provide a safety net which kept newspapers from going bankrupt, 
but major earnings came from subscriptions and advertising (Frankl, 
2004; Hrvatin et al., 2004).
In post-independence Slovenia, there are half a dozen major news 
publications, about the same as under communism.  However, there are 
not as many different editorial perspectives as this number might 
imply due to media ownership concentration in terms of political and 
economic influence.  As Hrvatin et al. (2004) point out, a 
significant lack of ownership transparency can conceal the identities 
of media "controlling" interests.  They indicate extensive direct 
media cross-ownership and further indirect cross-ownership at 
parent-company levels.  More alarmingly, they report strong ties 
between leading political and business interests, suggesting the 
potential for political and economic collusion.  Members of media 
governing boards "are chairpersons of the largest Slovenian companies 
(which are also the largest advertisers), owners of advertising 
agencies and chairpersons or supervisory board members of the largest 
banks.  This means that media power is closely connected with 
economic power…" (Hrvatin et al., 2004, p. 477).
Finance has survived and grown the past 13 years with an injection of 
foreign media-conglomerate investment and a modern approach to 
writing and editing.  The newspaper has a typical press run of 24 
tabloid-size pages and a paid circulation of 10,000.  By way of 
comparison, the most widely read serious newspaper in Slovenia, the 
generally respected Delo, has a circulation of 90,000.  Slovenia's 
news publications have the circulation sizes and numbers of employees 
indicated at Table 1.  Alternative though similar figures are 
available from Freedom House (2003).

Table 1.  Major Slovenian Publications' Circulation and Staff Sizes*
Publications
Circulation
Readership
Employees (Journalists)
Daily Newspapers
Slovenske Novice
107,000
355,000
n/a
Delo
90,000
237,000
452 (165)
Dnevnik
66,000
159,000
226 (71)
Vecer
62,000
170,000
231 (71)
Ekipa
25,000
n/a
n/a
Finance (business daily)
10,000
36,000
110 (50)
Weekly Publications
n/a
Mladina
19,300
102,000
n/a
Mag
17,000
58,000
n/a
Žurnal (free distribution)
214,000
n/a
n/a
* Circulation and readership based on Hrvatin et al. (2004, p. 61); 
numbers of employees from websites and interviews.

The Finance Case Description

This section examines the particular case of Finance, a business 
daily newspaper whose primary focus is on reporting economic and 
economically relevant news to the Slovenian business community.  In 
Finance's own words, it seeks to offer businesspeople "breaking 
business news, exclusive coverage" and a determination "always to be 
the first to know and the one to bring superior understanding of the 
business environment to all interested" (Finance, 2005).  In addition 
to reporting economic news originating in Slovenia, Finance acts as a 
Slovenian language conduit for reporting international business news 
to the Slovenian business community and, with the addition of English 
language pages to its print and new-media products, provides 
Slovenian business news to the international business community.
Finance's core product and revenue source is its print-version 
daily.  It has expanded its reach by adding traditional- and 
new-media products to reach a wider market and promote subscription 
to its print edition.  The website at <finance-on.net> reaches 50,000 
unique users per month, a "Business Morning" daily e-mail service has 
more than 20,000 subscribers, and a text-only e-mail product called 
"Radar," which matches information to user interests, has 3,000 
users.  The Finance brand authors a television morning show of three 
to four minutes, and twice weekly radio programs.  While relatively 
small, Finance views itself as a multi-media information services 
company.  "We do not consider ourselves only as a daily 
newspaper.  We are a service company.  We distribute information and 
opinions and entertainment," said editor-in-chief Peter Frankl (2004).
	The inception of the Finance publication dates to the first year 
following Slovenian independence.  Upon the country's 1991 
declaration of independence from Yugoslavia and with the advent of 
democracy, a Slovenian publishing group called Gospodarski vestnik 
(GV) saw an opportunity to create a business-oriented publication 
focusing on the financial information needs of Slovenia's emerging 
market economy.  Finance, funded in part with government 
privatization funds, was first published as a biweekly specialty 
newspaper in 1992.  In 1999, GV partnered with Dagens Industri (DI), 
selling a 48.6-percent in Finance.  This DI is the business press 
segment of one of the largest European media conglomerates, the 
Swedish publishing group Bonnier AB which owns newspapers in Denmark, 
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Slovenia and Sweden as 
well as a 50-percent stake in the Austrian business daily 
Wirtschaftsblatt (Finance, 2005).  The strength of the editorial 
product combined with the injection of Bonnier capital enabled 
Finance to start appearing five times a week in 2001.  In 2002 
Finance showed its first profit.  "It was a small profit.  But it is 
not a large project.  Total investment in the enterprise was about 
2.8 million euros" (Frankl, 2004).  Bonnier subsequently bought out 
Gospodarski vestnik, which dissolved in February 2005; thus, Bonnier 
is now essentially the 100 percent owner of Finance.
The company Casnik Finance, d.o.o. is managed by Jurij Giacomeli as 
managing director with Frankl as editor-in-chief.  Frankl began his 
journalism career in 1990 with major daily Delo.  He later worked for 
Gospodarski vestnik business weekly, joining Finance at its inception 
and becoming its editor-in-chief in 1995.  Newspaper employees total 
110 people in all departments; 50 of these workers are journalists.
The original readers of Finance were entrepreneurs, managers from 
large companies, college students, "decision makers and opinion 
leaders and officials in state institutions… and more affluent 
readers who are attractive to advertisers."  Later the readership 
appeal broadened to include "people who deal with money – which is 
almost everyone," as Frankl said.  In contrast to reading habits in 
some of their neighboring countries, Slovenians tend to remain loyal 
to a single daily newspaper.  Consequently, most readers of Finance 
also read one of the major dailies, usually Delo.

The Economics of Finance
Finance may serve the public interest but certainly it is not purely 
a public service project.  "If we want to contribute to society, yes, 
we also have a purpose to make money," Frankl said.  Some 70 percent 
of Finance's revenues come from advertising and 30 percent from 
circulation sales.  Major advertiser categories include banking 
concerns, information and communications technology firms, computer 
manufacturers, construction, financial investment firms, automotive, 
travel and alcohol.  Much of the advertising is 
business-to-business.  A four-color, full-page ad in the print 
edition costs 3,200 euros.  Other 2005 advertising options and rates 
are displayed at Table 2.  The newsstand price of Finance, 1.30 
euros, is about twice as high as that of a general daily, not unusual 
for a business publication.

Table 2.  Finance Advertising Rates in 2005
Advertising Product
Cost
Print ad open rate
30 euros per 10-mm column
Print ad, four-color, full-page
3,200 euros
Print ad, front-page
500+ euros
Web banner
415+ euros per week
Web section sponsorship
205+ euros per week
"Business Morning" e-mail bulletin
205+ euros per week
Web business-portrait expansion
210 euros for six months
Web surround session
640 euros per day
Web floating ad
30+ euro cost-per-thousand
Rates available at <finance.com>.

	When Finance news products appear on other Slovenian media vehicles, 
as in the case of Finance's TV broadcast, money does not change 
hands.  Rather, the relationship is what might be called symbiotic 
(Croteau & Hoynes, 2002).  "We don't pay them; they don't pay us.  We 
have exclusive news that television does not have.  They are 
interested in our editorial material.  We don't have funds to finance 
our own TV station, which, for example, Financial Times has.  We will 
never have that because our market is not a global market.  So we 
have to… be more inventive" (Frankl, 2004).  	
The extension of Finance's content distribution capabilities through 
collaboration with other media is not just Frankl's philosophy but 
the philosophy of the Bonnier group:  "You should consider yourself 
as a service company giving your audience the service it pays you 
for, and you disseminate this service [through] different 
media.  [These] media will distribute hot news to the audience; this 
will give more value added than print," Frankl said (2004).
One challenge Finance does not face, financially and otherwise, which 
the major dailies do, is funding international news coverage.  Having 
reporters travel to other countries is not part of its agenda.  "We 
are local.  We cannot replace the International Times.  We find the 
Slovenian perspective."  The newspaper does use stringers and other 
"collaborators" to augment information provided by Reuters and 
Bloomberg information services, Frankl said.
In terms of economic viability, Finance currently earns a profit of 
about five to six percent.  Bonnier's DI division targets an 18 
percent return on investment, and Frankl believes that Finance is 
moving in the right direction to eventually achieve this 
target.  Frankl equivocated a bit concerning how Finance salaries 
compare with those of competitors.  "Maybe we pay them a little 
less.  Maybe, maybe not….  We have to compete with big newspapers on 
the labor market, so, yes, we have to pay."  In any case, operating 
in Europe, the company is obliged to offer its employees health benefits.

The View from the Newsroom
The researchers' interest in Finance was piqued by comments heard in 
an interview with a Slovenian university professor concerning its 
unique business model.  Consistent with the objectives of our broader 
study, our interviews at Finance focused on the state of Slovenian 
journalism and Finance's role within this broader landscape.  The 
primary themes addressed below concern the overall quality of 
journalistic practices – Finance's vis-ŕ-vis Slovenia's major news 
dailies – and perceived constraints influencing journalistic 
quality.  We start by presenting the views of Frankl, the aggressive 
managing editor of the Finance, and then contrast his views with 
observations and comments provided by a variety of sources from 
Slovenian journalists, officials and scholars.

Quality Journalism:   Public Interest or Interesting the 
Public?  "People need honest information; they want to exchange 
views.  And newspapers are an important infrastructure for that," as 
Frankl said.  "Quality" in journalism generally means media 
supporting "public interest" in preference to "what interests the 
public"[3] (Johnson, 2004; McChesney, 1999; Minow & Lamay, 
1995).  For the Finance editor, quality journalism entails 
both.  After all, a newspaper must be compelling enough to be 
consumed in order to stay in business, or it won't have any effect on 
society at all.
The traditional major dailies in Slovenia feature longer stories and 
grayer pages, whereas Finance, printed on pale-pink paper, runs many 
short stories, photos on every page, charts and graphs, and 
bright-red section headings.  The contrast is intentional.  For 
Frankl deficiencies in quality of journalism as practiced in Slovenia 
have multiple causes:  political and financial pressures, outmoded 
routines and lack of motivation, the latter of which may be legacies 
of 40-plus years of communist rule (Frankl, 2004; Ministry of 
Information, 2004; Slovenian Journalist, 2004).  These factors lead 
to two major problems:  circumscription of what is covered and the 
diminution of what is read.
Direct political pressure on journalists in Slovenia is much less now 
than under communism.  Journalists no longer need fear that if they 
"go too far" the police will come to the door, as one interviewee put 
it.  However, if coercive political pressure has lessened in the past 
decade, more subtle political influence and financial pressure and 
have been noted.
"What is worse, I don't know:  private monopoly or state-owned 
monopoly," Frankl said (2005).  There can be combinations of 
political and financial pressure in a system where there are strong 
ties between leading political and business interests, where heads of 
the largest Slovenian companies hold chairs on media governing boards 
(Hrvatin et al., 2004, p. 477).  For Frankl the way to avoid this 
local politico-financial grip is investment from outside national 
borders.  He endorses foreign investment in Slovenian journalism, 
even when it comes from a large conglomerate.  For him, academicians' 
concerns about threats of foreign ownership are "typical Central 
European" foolishness prompted by fear of stakeholder power's 
affecting editorial autonomy.  "The true threat is local corporate 
monopolies and state-owned corporations," he said (Frankl, 2005).
For Frankl, issues of political and financial influence are not 
theoretical.  They impinge on day-to-day operation of his newspaper 
and directly impact the quality of journalism, although his views 
regarding privatized news media and the consequences of foreign 
investment may be at odds with accepted wisdom.  There is a Slovenian 
political leader now, he said, "who tries to pose himself as a strong 
leader, and he has some similarities… to Berlusconi in Italy….  Those 
two guys exercise their power in different ways because Berlusconi 
owns the media and in our case he doesn't own the media but he does 
own the media!" (Frankl, 2004).  Frankl's company's owner, Bonnier AB 
of Sweden, he said, has given Finance autonomy from "local centers of 
power, from the influence of politicians and advertisers.  Yes, we 
still feel pressure, but if it were Slovenian corporate pressure, 
then it might be more effective" (Frankl, 2005).  Thus, in Frankl's 
view, plurality of voice is enhanced by external financial 
investment; "the emergence of new daily papers becomes more difficult 
if the law limits maximum newspaper ownership percentages" (Frankl, 2003).
In commenting on the quality of Slovenian journalism, Frankl said if 
the typical Slovenian journalist finds out something irregular is 
going on, he or she is unlikely to report on it if the information 
was not disseminated through proper means, "and a press conference is 
considered to be proper.  It's very easy to report honestly on the 
events of the previous day:  'He said that, she said that.'  This is 
a press conference," Frankl said.  But it is not enough.  This 
restricts the range of stories covered.  It does not educate or 
enlighten or provide useful insight or analysis.
Frankl opines that poor-quality journalism exists because it is 
relatively easy to produce.  This circumstance reflects professional 
routines of the traditional communist era when reporters were not 
accustomed to conducting aggressive investigative 
journalism.  Currently Slovenian journalists "are not very 
controversial because they like their quality of life which is at the 
moment pretty high" (Frankl, 2004).  An applicable American idiom 
might be, Why rock the boat?  Until a couple of years ago, the 
Slovenian press was reluctant to criticize the government, individual 
politicians or corporations, Frankl said.  "Something really, really 
bad would have to happen for most newspapers to publish a story on 
corruption in a state-owned company which advertises with their 
newspaper...  They are aware of corruption, but they don't write 
about it, because it would mean trouble with management of the media, 
so they don't care.  It takes a lot of editorial stamina to criticize 
on a personal level.  Why should you be a revolutionary if everything 
[in your personal life] is fine?  They work from 9 to 5, they go 
home, they have their lives, they travel, fine.  They have a good life."
He perceives his publication to have helped break that barrier.  "We 
started a new culture… one that keeps its distance from special 
interests….  We publish stories on some actual corruption in some 
state-owned company, and nobody else publishes that.  They publish a 
story on corruption in a state institution but not where advertisers 
are."  Has Finance ever lost advertisers due to failure to yield to 
their demands?  "Yes, but they come back…" They return because they 
recognize Finance as a valuable vehicle for reaching their target consumers.
Testifying to the business daily's tenacity or to what Frankl calls 
"editorial stamina" is a January 2005 lawsuit involving 
Finance.  Varis-Lendava, a Slovenian manufacturer of bathroom 
fixtures and likely a potential advertiser, sought a court order to 
prevent Finance from reporting on a lawsuit pending against it in 
Augsburg, Germany.  So Finance management found itself in court but 
seemed confident of prevailing (Slovenia Bulletin, 2005).
Although some journalists interviewed in our broader study admitted 
that Slovenian journalists censored themselves, Frankl was proud to 
say, "We don't practice self-censorship."  And if news sources are 
unhappy with the paper's reporting?  "Well, we 'kill' sources.  If he 
doesn't like it, then you just 'kill him' and you go to another who 
will talk to you.  I have killed quite a few sources."  Frankl said 
this philosophy was "partly introduced" by the newspaper's Swedish 
owners, adding that "it had to be this way" because Bonnier owns 
newspapers in multiple ex-socialist countries including Latvia, 
Estonia, Lithuania, Poland and Russia, and it seeks to uniformly 
apply a new journalism standard in these emergent democracies (Frankl, 2005).
Asked for an example of its editorial perspectives and quality 
in-depth reporting, Frankl noted his newspaper's editorial support of 
European Union accession.  "We were very 'pro.'  We did a big 
supplement on that.  We were pro and also did quite some work on 
explaining what the role of the European Union is, what will happen… 
how our lives will change, how business will change."  The newspaper 
published a special educational supplement on the EU and its 
implications one week before the accession.  That edition of the 
paper, 24 April 2004, was 56 pages.  Asked if his country's 
journalists generally educate [rather than just inform] readers, 
Frankl said, "I don't think Slovenian newspapers educate [readers] a 
lot.  Education means more work…  To educate, you have to first want 
to educate.  You have to be more vivid, write better, give more 
historical background, draw timelines, fight for attention.  I have 
examples of newspapers we can go to," he said, walking from his 
office into the newsroom to point out other publications.  "They are 
just boring.  Why on earth should they do that?  [There is] no need 
to do that."  Such newspapers will die, he said, because they are 
written in a traditional European manner, with lengthy text which 
does not appeal to today's readers.
In writing style, most Slovenian newspapers tend to emulate 
traditional, old-style Central European newspapers.  Delo, Slovenia's 
largest daily, "models itself after German newspapers…" (Veteran 
Journalist, 2004).  "The results are lengthy, wordy articles and gray 
pages, not appealing to young and busy readers…. And it's also 
boring," Frankl insisted, and boring will not survive (Frankl, 2004).
This old style is not necessarily tied to political 
ideology.  Journalism can be dry and boring under communism or 
capitalism, Frankl said.  For example, he said, "the [German] 
Frankfurter Algemeine is very communist…  and very boring."  Long 
articles are often an excuse to write badly."  Frankl is passionate 
on this subject, predicting that Slovenian newspapers as well as 
traditional German newspapers will need to "invest more into making 
communication more efficient….  They are boring, and they will have 
to change.  And this will be a problem.  It will be a 
process."  Print media "just have to adapt to the fact people have 
less time to read," he said.  "They will have to introduce new 
solutions" (Frankl, 2004).

Other Perspectives on Finance.  If Frankl believes he has found the 
optimal formula for Slovenian journalism, not everyone agrees.  Some 
observers find Finance a bit sensationalistic.  It is less formal in 
writing style than its competitors.  It may even be perceived as 
"yellow" by some journalists, Frankl said.  Another journalist 
interviewed for this study commented that Finance was "quite tabloid 
in style" but "not really yellow," observing that it may occasionally 
print gossip but "sometimes the gossip turns out to be true."  And 
Finance "does have some good sources," that journalist added 
(Slovenian Journalist, 2004).  A Slovenian Ministry of Information 
employee commented that Finance is "more or less yellow," adding 
that, "it is true that they tackle almost every relevant topic" but 
that its reporting is too "sensationalistic" and "bombastic" for it 
to be regarded as a serious financial paper.  He felt the newspaper 
needed to offer deeper analysis of problems (Ministry of Information, 
2005).  Like the journalist, this interviewee tempered his criticism 
with a compliment:  "There is no doubt that [Finance] has some very 
capable and eminent columnists which are a sort of a counterweight to 
the general journalistic practice."  Finance's approach may be at the 
forefront of a national trend.  A reporter from a major Slovenian 
daily said he thought and indeed hoped that reader interest in 
shorter stories would prove to be a short-lived phase and that the 
public would eventually come to appreciate in-depth reporting again 
(Slovenian Journalist, 2004).  However, he admitted that his 
publication already may be imitating Frankl's; it probably "uses more 
illustrations and graphics [now] because Finance does," he said.
Frankl of course does not consider his newspaper to be yellow.  But 
he does acknowledge entertaining as one his publication's roles.  Is 
this the necessary alternative to traditional "boring" 
journalism:  "infotainment"?  There will be infotainment, Frankl 
said.  But that is not his focus.  "Our market niche is honest journalism."
Whatever its qualities, Finance may be influential in a vital market 
segment.  It is the only daily Slovenian newspaper focusing primarily 
on financial and economic issues and is "therefore a major opinion 
maker… because it has no noteworthy comparison [competitor]," the 
Ministry of Information official said.  "Information provided in 
Finance very often has direct impact on the financial markets in 
Slovenia.  The majority regard it as a credible information source."
Evidence that Finance does produce quality reporting is that young 
journalists do aspire to work there (Slovenian Journalist, 
2004).  Like Mladina, a historically young and rebellious newspaper, 
Finance is noted for "opening up important stories," a phrase 
Slovenians use similarly to the American "scoop."  One Finance 
employee (Slovenian Journalist, 2004) commented, "We have no 
competitors in print media.  They try, but they do not have the same 
frame of mind.  Our news is quick and fast."  The editor-in-chief 
claims to have reporters who "naturally want to do good 
journalism.  I always say, 'Write what you want to write, just ask 
the other side what they want to say, realize the ethics, do good 
work, and nobody will inhibit you if your work is fine.'  We don't 
have untouchables" (Frankl, 2004).
When discussing his concern about the lack of entrepreneurial spirit 
at Slovenia's major dailies, Frankl cited as an example his inability 
to find a Slovenian newspaper on the newsstands on a European 
holiday, 31 October 2003.  Neither was there a Croatian or Italian 
daily to be found.  "The only paper I could buy was Kleine Zeitung 
[an Austrian paper].  We protect our comforts," Frankl 
complained.  "I hope it will never again be like that."
His view is not universally popular.  A younger reporter interviewed 
for this study (Slovenian Journalist, 2004) observed that in this 
regard, there are two types of journalists, those who write easy 
stories and leave work at 3 p.m., and those who labor until 9 p.m. or 
later.  The difference may be generational:  there are indications 
that older journalists may be less dedicated.  Those who were 
reporters under communism may "still have this matrix" (Slovenian 
Journalist, 2004).  However, this young interviewee, who began his 
journalism career post-independence, opined that perhaps Frankl had a 
"hard capitalist" viewpoint whereby workers should "leave their souls 
on the work desk."  An accomplished journalist himself, the young 
reporter added, "I don't believe that…  We deserve our day [holiday] 
free."  Besides, he added, "if the stock exchange is closed, there is 
no news to fill."  Similarly, a Slovenian Journalists Union employee 
lamented a perceived change in ethos brought about by privatization 
and westernization:  a chipping away at the old culture of community, 
commiseration and appreciation for leisure in favor of competitive 
capitalism (SNS, 2004).

Interpreting the Finance Case

This onsite study has investigated the journalism philosophy and 
practice of a specific, specialty newspaper, Finance.  The previous 
sections provided a comprehensive description of the publication and 
present key informants' views regarding Finance and the role it plays 
in the Slovenian media space.  While any type of writing necessarily 
represents an interpretive act, transparency was the objective of the 
description.  The authors sought to faithfully present the 
perceptions and understandings of study participants and to minimize 
overtly interpreting their meaning.  In this section we do offer an 
explicit interpretation of the Finance case by seeking to juxtapose 
the descriptions of this particular case with broader narrative 
discourses associated with global media studies.  We describe how we 
employ relevant literature to make sense of the Finance case and 
employ the case to help illustrate the literature.
	We are most interested in the quality of hard news reporting, 
believing an aggressive and uncensored press to be an essential 
prerequisite to the establishment of a legitimate democratic 
government.  The case of Finance appeared noteworthy because early 
reports suggested the publication was making a significant 
contribution to the quality of Slovenian journalism, despite its 
foreign ownership.
We acknowledge that a single case study does not prove nor disprove 
theory.  The purpose of descriptive cases is to provide insight on 
the experience lived in a particular context.  Our sense is that 
theory can usefully contribute to an interpretive understanding of 
the world only when balanced with an accretion of understanding 
derived from particular lived experiences.
Thus, the intertwined themes we wish to explore within the context of 
the Slovenian print media space and the Finance publication include:
•	The implications of profit-based news production, media 
concentration and foreign ownership for quality of journalism.
•	The implications of changing readership tastes for quality of journalism.
We explore these themes at a time when newspaper readership in 
western democracies is in decline.  Circulation has been declining in 
the United States at about one percent per year since the 1970s 
(Groves, 1997; Douglas County Libraries, 2001).  Between 1999 and 
2003 European circulation declines ranged from 1.3 percent in Sweden 
to 8.1 percent in Germany, 12.9 percent in Austria, and 16.76 percent 
in Portugal (Finfacts, 2005).  Loss of readers directly decreases 
circulation income and indirectly reduces advertising 
income.  Readers are a newspaper's raison d'ętre.  Whatever the 
reasons for the readership decline, whether they be 
anti-intellectualism, competition from other media or activities, 
laziness or a desire to be entertained, circulation must be addressed.

Changing Readership Tastes
Observers have noted changes in readership preferences with the rise 
of market-driven media (Ansolabehere & Iyengar, 1997; Downing, 1996; 
McChesney, 1999; Postman, 1986).  Research provides evidence of 
changing readership habits and preferences in formerly communist 
nations, where the typical socialist reader had "a habit of reading 
newspapers that he probably got from his parents" and was willing to 
learn about events "from a serious newspaper, with solid expertise 
and respectable opinions" rather than from the "yellow" press (Jones, 
2002, pp. 365-366).  In Russia younger readers are less interested in 
serious, old-style journalism; the new generation of readers appears 
to prefer a paper a "jazzier logo" and color photographs, a paper 
from which they "can learn about scandals, who's sleeping with whom, 
criminal stuff.  Izvestia had tried to avoid these topics, but it's 
hard to do, because it's really easy to attract readers with this 
kind of coverage" (Jones, 2002, pp. 365-370).  The Russian experience 
in this regard parallels what we observed in Slovenia.  The most 
successful post-independence publication, in terms of circulation and 
readership, is Slovenske Novice, widely regarded as a tabloid-quality 
publication.  Gossip, scandal and sensationalistic writing do sell 
papers and represent competition for serious news dailies.
	While this paper leaves unaddressed issues concerning possible 
causes of these changes in readership taste, the Finance editor's 
view is that one cannot and need not resist what appears to be an 
inevitable change in reader tastes.  It is hard to imagine that 
Frankl would ever have thought the ponderous German style of 
newswriting was warranted, but he clearly believes that a 
continuation of such writing practices will spell the demise of 
dailies unwilling to change.  He believes readers still want honest 
news reporting and analysis but no longer spend the time and 
intellectual effort required to extract desired information from 
ponderously written articles.  His solution is more concise, precise 
and possibly more entertaining presentation of hard news.  As 
Schlesinger (1995, p. 110) points out, it has become merely "an 
analytical exercise" to try to "hermetically seal" information from 
entertainment.

Market-Driven Media:  News Demand, News Supply and News Quality
Readership tastes are critically important to privately financed 
publishers.  Seventy percent of Finance's revenues derive from 
advertising sales, and advertising rates are a direct function of 
market demographics and size.  Thus, publications must produce 
something readers are willing to consume.  Furthermore, publications 
must attract advertisers.  Herman and McChesney express concern about 
this development.  While acknowledging that "competition and the need 
to satisfy audiences ultimately compel the commercial media to 'give 
the people what they want,'" they contend that consumer choice is 
limited because program offerings are inevitably shaped by advertiser 
interests which "in turn feature entertainment, the avoidance of 
controversy, minimal public participation, and the erosion of the 
public sphere" (Herman & McChesney, 1997, pp. 189,190).
The seemingly inherent conflict between profit maximization and 
quality news production surfaced in our broader study of Slovenian 
journalism (Self, 2005).  A participant in that study, a journalist 
at a major Slovenian daily, noted that although his publication had 
earned a 35 percent profit for the year, it was unwilling to fund 
international travel for its correspondents to cover important 
breaking news (Slovenian Journalist, 2004).  Of course, such events 
are not unique to Slovenia; the reduction of newsroom investment and 
resultant coverage in the interest of profit maximization certainly 
has also been lamented in the United States (Just & Rosenstiel, 2005).
Yet Frankl believes that good journalism is not at odds with good 
business; rather, he finds that good journalism is good business 
because the resulting product will be the most profitable over the 
long term.  He sees "professional editing" as his strongest defense 
against pressure from politicians or advertisers, exemplifying the 
scholarly view that professional routines are a major factor in 
determining message quality (Croteau & Hoynes, 2002).  Herman and 
McChesney acknowledge some truth in this perspective and find that 
some reporters do "first-rate work, despite corporate control of the 
industry" but "in many critical areas this kind of journalism is the 
exception and has been discouraged by bottom-line pressures" because 
"each sector is expected to have a positive effect on the firm's 
earning's statement."  They reflect that, given "the vagueness and 
flexibility of objectivity standards, professionalism… can only 
rarely override the imperatives of ownership and advertiser interests 
on bottom-line pressures" (Herman and McChesney, 1997, pp. 192-193).

Foreign Ownership:  Threat and Opportunity
To the consternation of many media observers and scholars, the world 
is experiencing unprecedented growth of multi- or trans-national 
media conglomerates (Artz & Kamalipour, 2003; Hollifield, 2001; 
Marques de Melo, 1988; Roncagliolo, 1994; Schlesinger, 1995).  In 
former Soviet bloc economies, "a lack of domestic capital has led to 
an influx of foreign capital" by Western European media corporations 
where investment has been judged to be potentially profitable 
(Schlesinger, 1995, p. 113).  The Hungarian experience is 
particularly notable as foreign ownership of principle media there 
rapidly grew to nearly 80 percent (Ognianova, 1997, p. 8), and study 
participants noted they did not desire to follow the Hungarian model 
of privatization (Slovenian Journalist, 2004).  While capital influx 
has occurred in Slovenia, legislative restrictions slowed the entry 
of foreign capital into the Slovenian market (Karlekar, 2004, p. 167).
	Foreign ownership as well as internationalization of media products 
has been particularly evident in print media.  For example, papers 
such as The Financial Times, The International Herald Tribune and The 
Wall Street Journal began "consciously addressing international 
political and economic elites in the nearest thing we have to a 
European lingua franca, namely English," and the "quality press in 
various countries have also begun to produce 'European' supplements, 
compiled from reports and features selected from like-minded 
newspapers across the continent" (Schlesinger, 1995, p. 
111).  Foreign media ownership and participation elicits multiple 
concerns.  The primary issue with respect to this study is potential 
implications of foreign ownership on the quality and quantity of 
local news coverage (internal to a particular country).  The fear is 
that foreign ownership will impose homogenized versions of 
international news slanted toward the interests of business and 
political elites while ignoring aggressive coverage of local issues 
such as corruption and government/business collusion.
	Yet in the case of Finance, a more virtuous dynamic appears to have 
occurred.  Frankl attributes his ability to pursue aggressive 
investigative journalism at least in part to foreign capital and 
ownership.  Given the levels of direct and indirect government and 
big-business ownership of media currently existing within Slovenia, 
powerful pressure can be covertly and overtly brought to bear on the 
press (Hrvatin et al., 2004).  Frankl credits the corporate 
philosophy and financial backing of a Swedish owner with helping his 
department maintain the "editorial stamina" required to stand up to 
advertiser pressure.
This study is not constrained to simply trusting Frankl's assertion 
in this respect.  Rather, evidence of Finance's aggressive 
investigative reporting was corroborated by study participants 
working at competing publications and government ministries.  While 
these sources did not always appreciate Finance's reportorial style, 
there were multiple acknowledgements of its having "scooped" the 
competition by breaking important news stories.  However, it must be 
acknowledged that Finance's experience may be atypical in that 
Bonnier is family-owned, and there are no public stockholders to satisfy.
Conclusion

The authors have sought in this paper to construct a narrative report 
that contributes to readers' understanding of the philosophy and 
operation of a particular Slovenian media product that is intimately 
informed by understanding of key informants directly involved in the 
newspaper's production.  Implicit in this effort is a conviction that 
such a narrative provides not only a useful object of reflection for 
study participants but observations and insights that readers might 
usefully apply to the analysis of their own distinct concerns.  It is 
understood that Slovenian history and culture as well as the unique 
individuals and circumstances involved in Finance's creation and 
operation preclude our ability draw generalizations from this 
case.  However, we believe that one can still learn from this case.
	The majority of research addressing media privatization, 
consolidation and globalization is critical in its orientation, 
maintaining that commercialization and foreign ownership of local 
media have disastrous effects and/or potential in terms of public 
interest and the maintenance of local culture.  We do not contest 
these meta-narratives on the basis of this single case.  We do, 
however, argue that we have revealed a specific case pleasantly at 
odds with the conventional wisdom of these meta-narratives.  And, 
harking back to our opening quote, we find reason to hope that 
capitalist-driven journalism need not be a fruitless means of funding 
journalism in the public interest.
Whether the reader agrees with Frankl regarding the unappealing 
nature of the traditional German reporting style, or is shocked by 
Bonnier's 18 percent profit target, or disdains the use of bold 
graphics and colors, or is quite comfortable with the notion that a 
newspaper might not publish on a national holiday, one must 
acknowledge that Finance is a for-profit publication that contributes 
to plurality of voice in the marketplace of ideas, making a 
contribution to public interest and democratic debate.  Not everyone 
likes it or approves of it, but Finance does seem to exemplify the 
shape of the future.  As one journalist interviewed for this study 
commented, "It will be interesting to see if it stays a mix of hard 
news and yellow press….  I believe they will follow this uneasy 
balance in the future."


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[1]  A pragmatic rationale for site selection came from the limited 
resources for study, Slovenia's relatively small size, and the large 
proportion of the population who speak English or German (which the 
authors speak).  The initial report resulting from this study was 
presented at (citation withheld to preserve authors' anonymity during 
review process).
[2]  A more complete summary of the Slovenian historical context is 
provided in the authors' previous work, (withheld to preserve 
authors' anonymity during review process).
[3]  As former Chairman of the FCC Newton N. Minow famously 
commented, "What do we mean by 'the public interest'?  Some say the 
public interest is merely what interests the public.  I disagree."

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