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Subject:

AEJ 95 MuellerJ MME Circulation problems of St. Louis Sun

From:

Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Sat, 3 Feb 1996 10:13:37 EST

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text/plain

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Parts/Attachments

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Delivery System Disaster:
Circulation Problems of the St. Louis Sun
 
 
 
 
Submitted by
James E. Mueller
Graduate Student
Department of Journalism
College of Communication
University of Texas at Austin
7917 Wheel Rim Circle
Austin, TX 78749
512-301-3129
 
 
 
 
Submitted to:
Media Management and Economics Division
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication
Fiona A.E. McQuarrie
550 University Avenue
University of Prince Edward Island
Charlottestown, PEI
Canada, C1A4P3
 
 
 
April 1, 1995
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Delivery System Disaster:
Circulation Problems of the St. Louis Sun
 
 
 
 
 
 
Abstract
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
        This paper uses the case study method to examine the role circulation
 
            delivery problems played in the death of the St. Louis Sun, an
 
    innovative metropolitan daily that lasted for seven months in 1989-1990.
 
            The study uses intensive interviews, corporate documents, and media
 
         coverage to analyze the question of the paper's demise. It concludes
 
          that delivery problems were instrumental in the newspaper's failure.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Delivery System Disaster: Circulation Problems of the St. Louis Sun -_
 
 
 
 
 
 
        "Nothing, it seems, is simple about circulation except the basic adage:
 
            Circulation increases come one at a time, but circulation drops come
in
 
            droves" (Thorn and Pfeil, 1987, p. xv).
 
I. Introduction: Why study the Sun ?
 
        So few American cities--about two dozen--have competing daily
 
    newspapers that it is generally assumed within the industry that only
 
           the largest cities can support two or more dailies. The trend toward
 
          one-newspaper cities is so clear that attempts to start new
metropolitan
 
            dailies are as rare as hand-operated presses.
        The last profitable launch of a metropolitan daily was that of New
 
         York's Newsday in 1940. The Washington Times was established in 1982,
 
            but industry experts count it as an exception to the trend because
of
 
           its financial subsidization by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification
 
          Church. (Rosenstiel, 1989).
        A recent failure that drew national attention was the St. Louis Sun,
 
            which was founded by Ralph M. Ingersoll II in 1989. It lasted seven
 
         months, but its brief life is worth studying for the lessons it could
 
           provide media managers on starting and operating a news business.
Some
 
            media industry experts thought Ingersoll might succeed in 1989 for
 
        several reasons, one of the most important being his proven track record
 
            as a newspaper manager. His newspaper empire in 1989 consisted of
more
 
            than 150 newspapers in the United States and Europe, including a
chain
 
            of about 40 free-distribution weeklies in the St. Louis area
(Sharkey,
 
            1989). Ingersoll was described as "an intellectual" and "no
 
  self-deluding newcomer but a crafty revamper of smaller papers" (Henry,
 
            1989, p. 60). Fortune selected him as one of the 25 most fascinating
 
          business people of the year in 1989.
        Ingersoll's chain of St. Louis suburban weeklies gave him an
 
    established advertising base in his target market, which was served by a
 
            daily that was vulnerable in several ways. The Post-Dispatch was a
 
        liberal newspaper in a conservative city and had made its reputation on
 
            national and international news rather than on local news. The Post
was
 
            also not as successful financially as one might expect in a monopoly
 
          market. The Post received only 35 percent of all local advertising in
 
           its market compared to 53 percent for newspapers nationwide (Heins,
 
         1989).
        But if there was an opportunity for establishing a new daily in St.
 
          Louis in 1989, what happened to the Sun? When the Sun went out of
 
        business in the spring of 1990, several theories emerged to explain its
 
            demise. The Sun's death was blamed on its content (Klotzer, 1990a),
its
 
            rejection by the St. Louis market, and its lack of financing when
 
       Ingersoll's junk bond empire collapsed (Eubanks, 1990). Ingersoll
 
       himself said it was "absolutely clear" that there was no need for ano
 
          ther daily in the St. Louis market, which he maintained was "inundated
 
            by information" (Coleridge, 1993, pp. 124-125).
        All of these factors doubtless played a role in the failure of the Sun.
 
            The collapse of any enterprise involving hundreds of people and
millions
 
            of dollars can rarely be tied to one simple cause. However, one
factor
 
            that may have doomed the paper before it started publishing was its
 
         poorly planned and executed circulation strategy. It is the intent of
 
           this paper to use the case study method to explore how circulation
 
        problems rooted in poor planning contributed to the Sun's failure. The
 
            case study method was chosen for this project because it can
indicate
 
           causality and because it allows the researcher to use a variety of
data
 
            sources (Wimmer and Dominick, 1994). Data sources for this study
were
 
           intensive interviews with some of the key people who worked for the
Sun,
 
             company records on file at the St. Louis Public Library, academic
 
        studies, and media coverage of the Sun. The number and variety of
 
        sources used should increase the validity of the study by allowing for
 
            triangulation of data. An interview subject may well have a limited
or
 
            biased perspective, but comparing his or her story with company
 
     documents should enable the researcher to come closer to the truth. The
 
            use of multiple data sources also leads to more "thickly described
 
        cases" so that the case study can be compared to similar situations
 
         (Lindlof, 1995). Such a case study of the Sun should thus provide
useful
 
            information to media managers, particularly to the extent of showing
 
          what mistakes to avoid in planning a new enterprise. From a
theoretical
 
            perspective, this case study should add to the existing work on
media
 
           management theory as it applies to planning and operating a
circulation
 
            system. It should also shed light on the question of whether the
trend
 
            toward one-newspaper cities is irreversible. For if the Sun's demise
was
 
            caused by poor planning and not by the failure of the product itself
or
 
            by competing in a saturated market, then the Sun cannot be held as
an
 
           example of the death of daily metropolitan newspaper competition in
any
 
            but the largest American cities.
 
II. Literature review
 
        One of the first theories on the effect of competition on the survival
 
            of newspapers was developed in 1884 by S.N.D. North, whose "law of
 
        newspaper growth" was based upon the economic theory of supply and
 
        demand. North (as cited in McCombs, 1972) posited that the number of
 
          newspapers that can survive in a metropolitan area is limited by the
 
          size and characteristics of the population, and any extra newspapers
 
          will fail despite the quality of their content. McCombs (1972) argued
in
 
            his Principle of Relative Constancy that a strong editorial product
is
 
            not enough to start a new newspaper. "The market must be large
enough to
 
            provide sufficient money to support competing newspapers" (McCombs,
 
         1972, p. 19). Owen (1975, pp. 52-53) asserted that economic factors
have
 
            determined that "head-on competition among newspapers in the same
town
 
            is a disequalibrium situation, one that will eventually be succeeded
by
 
            merger, failure of one paper, or a joint operating agreement,
tantamount
 
            to a merger." Owen noted that economies of scale and geographic
factors
 
            ultimately determine the size and character of newspapers. The
demand by
 
            readers for local news and by advertisers for local audiences means
a
 
           newspaper cannot extend itself beyond a certain area, otherwise it
 
        incurs increasing distribution costs but declining profits because it is
 
            reaching readers who are not local--a group of readers that
advertisers
 
            are not as interested in. Owen pointed out that basically the only
way
 
            newspapers can compete within the same area is under the Umbrella
Model,
 
            in which small dailies and weeklies can compete for different types
of
 
            advertising under the umbrella of a large metropolitan daily, which
gets
 
            advertisements from businesses in its own city and from regional and
 
          national advertisers but cannot serve local advertisers and readers
 
         outside the metropolitan area.
        Lacy (1988) asserted that the trailing newspaper in a competitive
 
        situation goes out of business because of a "circulation spiral"
 
      involving advertising and circulation. "As a newspaper acquires a
 
       majority of circulation in a market, it begins to attract a
 
 disproportionate percentage of advertising. This in turn helps to
 
       attract more readers, which also attracts more advertising" (Lacy, 1988,
 
            p. 150).
        The importance of planning in the management of a business is
 
    documented in many texts. Brickner and Cope (1988) noted that planning
 
            is necessary to identify potential problems, improve decision
making,
 
           focus on the organization's future, help the organization adapt to
 
        change, and aid in assuring the survival of the organization. Lacy, et
 
            al., (1993, p. 220) listed eight steps in strategic planning:
examine
 
           the business environment and past performance; evaluate available
 
       resources; identify, select, prioritize and operationalize planning
 
         goals; identify alternative approaches for obtaining goals; select from
 
            among the alternative approaches; implement the plan; monitor
 
   implementation; and evaluate the plan's progress and adjust the plan.
 
           Lavine and Wackman (1988, p. 111) stressed that plans should be
 
     developed in "small, manageable steps" and that "what-if" scenarios
 
         should be created to deal with anticipated problems.
        Lamb (1987) noted that 90 percent of new business ventures fail, and
 
           that ventures started by large corporations usually only succeed when
 
           they are allowed to develop their own strategies separate from
corporate
 
            management. Lamb (p. 164) asserted that management of a new venture
is
 
            usually a problem because the new venture is often managed " . . .
by
 
           the same people who have risen in the ranks of the parent
corporation,
 
            and who intend to manage in the way they always have been told to
 
       manage. That just does not work; a new venture is a qualitatively
 
       different beast than a big corporation." Lamb suggested that a new
 
        venture be located far enough away from corporate headquarters to
 
       provide its managers autonomy and that top managers realize it will take
 
            three to 10 years for the project to succeed. Block (as cited in
Lamb,
 
            1987) listed 27 potential reasons for the failure of a new venture
 
        including the incorrect use of distribution channels and the failure to
 
            read market reaction correctly.
         Lacy (1993, p. 55) used the term "fuzzy market structure" to explain
 
            that newspaper markets are becoming difficult to define and
understand
 
            because of social and technological changes. He argued that
increasing
 
            diversity in the type and number of media outlets and increasing
 
      diversity in characteristics of readers has contributed to the fuzzy
 
          market structure. Lacy concluded (p. 65) that traditional readership
 
          studies will not work and that "research should aim more at
 
 understanding the role of information in the community and for
 
    individuals than just asking what they like and do not like."
        The importance of prompt, efficient service in retaining readers is
 
          well-documented in newspaper management texts. A guide on improving
 
         circulation produced by the American Newspaper Publishers Association
 
           [ANPA] and the Newspaper Advertising Bureau [NAB] (1990, p. 43),
lists
 
            reader "satisfaction with home delivery/single copy service" as one
of
 
            "ten vital signs" for measuring the health of a newspaper. The
report
 
            stated that readers must be "serviced with a timely, well-oiled
 
     distribution system" (p. 43). Rankin (1986, p. 11) pointed out in his
 
           text on newspaper management that, "No matter how excellent the
 
     editorial product of the newspaper may be, its advertising revenue will
 
            be nonexistent if the newspaper is not sold and read." One
circulation
 
            executive was quoted by Rankin (p. 18) as saying that:
        Service and circulation increase are directly correlated over the long
 
            run as excellent service makes selling much easier. Retention of the
 
               newspaper in the home ultimately depends on the type of service a
 
            subscriber receives. Circulation executives must also thoroughly
 
           understand the relationship between good delivery service and the
image
 
                 that good service generates in the eyes of an advertiser.
Willis (1988, p. 94) called circulation, "a key link in the production
 
            chain that leads to fulfillment of the newspaper's overall mission."
 
          Thorn and Pfeil (1987, p. 213), who have written one of the few modern
 
            texts specifically on circulation techniques, asserted that
 
 dependability is "crucial" for a successful distribution system.
        Readers whose morning papers frequently are delivered too late to be
 
           read before leaving for work quickly lose the habit of newspaper
 
           reading. Subscribers have a right to expect that they will receive
their
 
                 newspapers on time. Nonsubscribers wanting to purchase a
newspaper on a
 
                 particular day should find single copies easily accessible. . .
.
 
            Erratic production and transportation schedules destroy carrier
morale
 
                 and result in dissatisfied customers (Thorn and Pfeil, 1987, p.
213).
But perhaps the importance of circulation delivery is best summed up by
 
            Fink (1988, p. 199): "Be there when readers are--or else."
        Research shows that most U.S. daily subscribers are generally satisfied
 
            with their delivery service. A 1980 Newspaper Readership Project
survey
 
            (as cited in Thorn and Pfeil, 1987) found that only 5 percent of
 
       respondents expressed any dissatisfaction with their newspapers'
 
      delivery. The study found only 22 percent of nonsubscribers blamed poor
 
            service as a reason for not taking the paper. A national study done
10
 
            years later found much the same results: only 5 percent expressed
 
       dissatisfaction and 2 percent either did not respond or said "don't
 
         know" (ANPA and NAB, 1990).
         Many articles about the Sun have been published in general
 
   circulation magazines or newspapers, but few academic studies have been
 
            done on the newspaper. Hellinger (1990) conducted a limited content
 
         analysis of the Sun and the Post during the first months of their
 
         competition and found their content to be similar. This study could
 
         indicate that the Sun may have suffered because it did not
 
 differentiate itself from its competition. Hellinger's data was
 
      supported by a more lengthy content analysis done by Mueller (1992). A
 
            comparison of the content of the Post, Sun and Globe found
evidence
 
           that competition increases the diversity of content (Johnson and
Wanta,
 
            1993). But none of the content analyses dealt with circulation in
more
 
            than a tangential manner.
        There are also few academic studies on circulation, and most of the
 
          studies focus on things like the effect of price on readership or
 
       promotion techniques. For example, Lacy and Fico (1991) found a strong
 
            relationship between newspaper content quality and circulation.
Lewis
 
            (1995) found significant negative relations between newspaper price
and
 
            circulation in her study on newspaper price increases. Picard (1991)
 
          studied the effect of price increases on circulation and found in his
 
           case study of a mid-sized daily that price increases can help
 
   circulation. Niemeier (1988) developed a framework for market evaluation
 
            that emphasized identifying opportunities for circulation growth. He
 
          suggested evaluating circulation areas based on the business strength
 
           and market attractiveness of the areas; different circulation
strategies
 
            would then be applied to the areas based on the areas' perceived
value
 
            to the newspaper. Gamst (1986) surveyed youth carriers and their
parents
 
            to determine problems the carriers encountered on the job and
possible
 
            reasons they might quit. He found evidence of communication problems
 
          between carriers and circulation managers but noted that the study may
 
            not be generalizable to other newspapers because he only surveyed
 
       carriers for the San Jose Mercury News.
        This study on circulation problems at the Sun should add to the current
 
            body of academic research as well as provide some useful information
for
 
            media professionals.
 
III. Circulation problems of the Sun
 
        Ingersoll's market research on the new newspaper showed that potential
 
            readers were there. In an August 1989 report entitled New Newspaper
in
 
            St. Louis, Kennan Research and Consulting Inc. concluded from focus
 
         groups and one-on-one intensive interviews that: "There is absolutely
no
 
            doubt that the St. Louis Sun has an excellent potential to succeed
in
 
            the St. Louis market." The report stated that the "main negative"
was
 
           the tabloid format, but that the negative connotation could be
reduced
 
            over time as people got used to it. It recommended that an intensive
pro
 
            motion campaign be conducted to establish the paper's image. The
report
 
            closed with what would later turn out to be a prophetic comment: "It
is
 
            crucially important to realize that a short period of time (one to
three
 
            months) after the introduction will determine the future success of
the
 
            newspaper. The situation dictates a need for 'hitting hard' during
this
 
            period of time" (Kennan Research and Consulting Inc., 1989).
        The man in charge of "hitting hard" was Tom Birkenmeier, the Sun's
 
          promotions director and a man who had worked in advertising and public
 
            relations in St. Louis since 1967. Birkenmeier wrote in a memo to
 
       Ingersoll that focus groups showed readers thought the Sun was "lively
 
            and exciting," but were only lukewarm about the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch
 
            (T.J. Birkenmeier, personal communication, August 5, 1989). "The
Post
 
           has failed to make a positive emotional connection with many readers,
 
           and they've had 111 years to do it. It is almost as if they are
damned
 
            with faint praise" (T.J. Birkenmeier, personal communication,
August, 5,
 
            1989).
        Sun staffers, encouraged by the research and the knowledge they were
 
           part of a great challenge, solicited subscribers and advertisers.
 
        Birkenmeier recalled in an interview with the author that it was the
 
          hardest he had every worked in his life, yet at the same time was very
 
            exciting. Birkenmeier's job was to solicit as many subscribers as
 
       possible. He used direct mail, television advertisements and "every
 
         known arsenal/weapon/marketing tool" in what he described as a highly
 
           successful marketing campaign (T.J. Birkenmeier, personal
communication,
 
            March 14, 1995).
         One of the marketing weapons was Ingersoll himself. The publisher, who
 
            had announced earlier that year that he would move to St. Louis to
 
        personally run the new newspaper, joined various civic groups. Ingersoll
 
            had made himself and the Sun logo ubiquitous in St. Louis--Ingersoll
 
          through appearances on the civic-lunch circuit, and the Sun logo
through
 
            a $2.5 million promotion campaign including things like a ski-cap
 
        giveaway at a St. Louis Cardinal baseball game (Reilly, 1989).
         Birkenmeier said that the promotional campaign worked so well that
 
          between 111,000 and 114,000 people had requested trial subscriptions
by
 
            the launch date, which was Sept. 25, 1989 (T.J. Birkenmeier,
personal
 
           communication, March 14, 1995). Ingersoll had said he could turn a
 
        profit on fewer than 100,000 circulation (Stroud and Smith, 1989). But
 
            poor service by the circulation department angered many of the new
 
        subscribers.
        One of the first mistakes was made in the way the new subscribers were
 
            signed up. Sun executives decided to try pay-in-advance billing,
which
 
            according to Birkenmeier, "does wonders for your cash flow" but was
 
          something new to the St. Louis daily market, where most subscribers
 
          were used to paying for their newspapers after they were delivered
(T.J.
 
            Birkenmeier, personal communication, March 14, 1995). He said the
error
 
            was made worse by the design of the bill itself, which was so
confusing
 
            that many subscribers did not know how to fill it out.
         It was simply the most confusing thing known to man. The marketing
 
          guys were never consulted. Here you get the market all pumped up, you
 
                get people to send in their orders, their trial subscriptions.
They're
 
                 pumped; they're ready to go. They get a bill--before the
newspaper
 
             comes. That in and of itself is not a mortal sin. But when you
compound
 
                 that with the fact that the paper, which is a daily paper, a
morning
 
               paper, which should be delivered before 7 a.m., doesn't get
delivered
 
                until 10 and 11 o'clock in the morning, what happens? You have
meltdown
 
                 (T.J. Birkenmeier, personal communication, March 14, 1995).
The poor delivery service occurred mainly because of a problem with the
 
            Sun printing presses. The company planned to print the newspapers
on
 
           twin presses in a renovated printing plant in the southern part of
the
 
            metropolitan area. But during a trial run about three weeks before
the
 
            launch date, it was discovered that the two presses in the plant
were
 
           not twins; half the papers would thus have to be printed at a
Suburban
 
            Journals' plant in the northern part of the metropolitan area (T.J.
 
         Birkenmeier, personal communication, March 14, 1995). "How did this
 
         happen? Nobody knows," Birkenmeier said. The resulting confusion over
 
           the carrier routes meant many papers would be delivered late simply
 
         because the carriers did not know their routes well.
        Bear in mind this is all happening with that launch date clicking off
 
            every hour. Half your carriers now have to go north instead of south
and
 
                 these guys--right up through this period we are signing people
 
         [subscribers] up furiously--we're writing as many orders as we can. So
 
                 on the day of the launch carriers are coming out with new
subscriptions
 
                 that they just got that day; they've haven't run those routes;
they
 
              don't know where those people are. The only way I can describe it
is it
 
                 was like watching a thoroughbred racehorse fall down inside the
chute
 
                when the gates open. The Sun never recovered from that problem
(T.J.
 
                Birkenmeier, personal communication, March 14, 1995).
Many subscribers got their papers late or not at all. Others could not
 
            find them in the vending machines or stores around town. The paper
had
 
            to install three extra phone lines into its offices to handle about
 
         11,000 phone calls from people who had not gotten their newspapers
(T.J.
 
            Birkenmeier, personal communication, March 14, 1995). Customers who
were
 
            excited by the publicity campaign became angry at not getting their
 
         papers and became angrier when they couldn't get a prompt response to
 
           their phone calls.
        It's a huge, gigantic mess. And what's going on is the customers are
 
           getting more and more angry. So then what sets in are cancellations.
 
               'Cancel my subscription! No, don't even call me and talk to me
about it
 
                 because you couldn't get it right!' So you went from orders,
orders,
 
               orders . . . It was like watching a car go off a cliff (T.J.
 
        Birkenmeier, personal communication, March 14, 1995).
By industry standards, the delivery problems were horrendous. Comparing
 
            national statistics to a Sun market study done a few months after
its
 
            September launch date suggests the importance of the paper's
delivery
 
           problems. Recall that the national study mentioned earlier showed
only 5
 
            percent of respondents expressed dissatisfaction with their delivery
se
 
            rvice (ANPA and NAB, 1990). Ingersoll's readership survey revealed
that
 
            15 percent of single-copy buyers said they had trouble finding
copies of
 
            the Sun (Clark, Martire and Bartolomeo Inc., 1990). And 67 percent
of
 
           former Sun subscribers said a delivery problem was the main reason
they
 
            canceled their subscriptions. One out of two of those who canceled
and
 
            said they had called the paper to complain also said their
complaints
 
           were not handled well by Sun employees.
        Yet another way of looking at the Sun's problems is counting the
 
        number of complaints per 1,000 papers that were home-delivered
 
    subscriptions. A ratio of one complaint per 1,000 is considered low by
 
            industry standards (ANPA and NAB, 1990). Certainly not all of the
11,000
 
            calls a day the Sun was receiving were complaints. But even if one
is
 
            charitable and assumes only half were complaints, at 5,500
complaints
 
           per 55,000 home subscribers [the number of subscribers reported by
 
        Goodman, 1989,] the day the paper was launched yields 10 complaints per
 
            1,000. Put another way, a conservatively estimated complaint ratio
for
 
            the Sun is 10 times what is considered a good figure by industry
 
      standards.
        The problems were also evident in the newsroom. Kevin Horrigan, the
 
          Sun's star columnist told the author in an interview that he did not
 
          think the paper's top executives ever "had a handle on the business
 
         side" of the Sun. Horrigan called the circulation department "a
 
     disaster" and said it could not deliver the paper to homes or to retail
 
            outlets around the city (K. Horrigan, personal communication, March
16,
 
            1995).
        Sun marketing officials, especially Birkenmeier, wanted to conduct a
 
           public relations campaign to explain what had happened to the
readers.
 
            Birkenmeier wanted to tell St. Louisans that the paper had more
 
     subscriptions than it could handle but that it would correct the
 
      problem. But he said the idea was rejected by Sun executives (T.J.
 
         Birkenmeier, personal communication, March 14, 1995).
        (The rejection of the public relations campaign) was a major mistake.
 
            We should have worried about it. It was a classic case of not
worrying
 
                 about the customer. If there was anything we should have done,
we should
 
                 have bent over backward to make those people happy (T.J.
Birkenmeier,
 
                personal communication, March 14, 1995).
Sun Publisher Thomas Tallarico said in an interview with the author
 
           that a public relations campaign would not have done any good. "We
 
        didn't want to acknowledge that we had a problem at that point. We were
 
            hopeful we would solve it in short order" (T. Tallarico, personal
 
       communication, March 15, 1995). Tallarico, however, did say that the
 
          plan for establishing the Sun was too complex and tried to cover too
 
           many facets of the newspaper business. If he were to do it over
again,
 
            he would not try to deliver papers to the entire metropolitan area
and
 
            might let the carriers handle billing. "We were too ambitious in our
 
          undertaking. We didn't have the resources for what we were trying to
do.
 
            I would have started out with a less grandiose scheme" (T.
Tallarico,
 
           personal communication, March 15, 1995).
        One major problem with the plan was that it relied heavily on
 
    single-copy sales in a city in which most subscribers wanted home
 
       delivery. Ingersoll said that since the Post sold about 120,000 single
 
            copies a day, it was reasonable that the Sun could sell 75,000
single
 
           copies, especially with a colorful tabloid format and more
single-copy
 
            outlets than the Post had (Klotzer, 1990b). But single-copy sales
were
 
            less than half what had been expected and were extremely
inconsistent
 
           from day to day (Klotzer, 1990b).
        Ingersoll said the decision to close the paper was based on its failure
 
            to increase single-copy sales despite good weather, the start of the
 
          baseball season and promotions such as bingo games (Gauen and Mannies,
 
            1990). However, both Birkenmeier and Horrigan contended the emphasis
on
 
            single-copy sales was a flawed concept from the beginning, and that
Sun
 
            executives had research that showed St. Louisans wanted their
newspaper
 
            home-delivered.
        They had all these numbers and all this research . . . that said St.
 
           Louisans are home-based and interested in family, and I think they
were
 
                 right. But what they failed to recognize was that in this town
people
 
                wanted a newspaper delivered to their homes because that's where
they
 
                live their lives. (K. Horrigan, personal communication, March
16, 1995).
Birkenmeier told the author that it was "absolute, utter stupidity" to
 
            emphasize single-copy sales.
         All research in the market showed that St. Louis is a home-delivery
 
            market. And there is a very simple reason: We are not a commuter
market.
 
                 We didn't have MetroLink [St. Louis' new light rail system].
Where
 
             tabloids do very well is where you have commuter markets, I mean
you
 
               have lots of densely packed people and single copy is a very big
issue.
 
                 St. Louis is a home-delivery market. Putting boxes on every
corner was a
 
                 huge expense and a huge delivery problem (T.J. Birkenmeier,
personal
 
               communication, March 14, 1995).
He concluded that it took resources that might have been devoted to
 
         solving the home-delivery problem.
        Ingersoll maintained the single-copy emphasis was a reasonable decision
 
            in 1989 because there were non-commuter markets like Trenton, New
 
       Jersey, where single-copy sales were strong (Klotzer, 1990b).
 
    Single-copy sales had settled at about 17,000 a day when Ingersoll
 
        closed the Sun on April 25, 1990 (Coleridge, 1993).
 
IV. Discussion
 
        It is clear from the evidence presented that circulation problems
 
        caused by poor planning and inadequate resources played a key role in
 
           the failure of the Sun. The only question that remains is how big a
 
          factor circulation problems were compared to other issues such as
 
       quality of content and lack of financing. Two of the three people
 
       interviewed for this paper concluded that the circulation problems were
 
            fatal. As was mentioned earlier, Birkenmeier contended the Sun
never
 
           recovered from the mixed up orders when it first began publishing.
 
        Horrigan said he agreed "100 percent" with Birkenmeier. "There's no
 
         doubt about it. You get people excited about your product and then you
 
            can't get your product to them--they're going to give up on you in a
 
          hurry. That was certainly something that wasn't thought through" (K.
 
          Horrigan, personal communication, March 16, 1995).
        The Sun research on consumer satisfaction when compared to industry
 
          standards also indicated a problem of major dimensions. Ingersoll
 
       himself admitted there was "considerable chaos" in the home delivery
 
          system (Klotzer, 1990b). A knowledgeable observer, former St. Louis
 
         Globe-Democrat publisher G. Duncan Bauman, said the Sun had "the most
 
           inept circulation department in America" (Kramer, 1990). Even a
casual
 
            reader blamed delivery problems for the Sun's demise. Robert Ritter
 
         wrote in a letter to the editor of the Post that he enjoyed both it and
 
            the Sun but could rarely find the latter in machines or stores. He
added
 
            that his mother was an early subscriber but had to call twice and
then
 
            wait two weeks to get her subscription in order. "These may seem
like
 
           two small incidents, but if you multiply them by the thousands of
city
 
            and county residents, it could have made a difference" (Ritter,
1990).
        However, Tallarico asserted that the circulation was not a fatal error
 
            and that the main reason the Sun failed was that the St. Louis
market
 
            rejected it.
        We got so much excitement and demand that we couldn't cope with it.
 
           But one thing you'll never know is how many of those who subscribed
did
 
                 so out of pure curiosity and how many became frustrated because
they
 
               tried to subscribe and couldn't because of poor service (T.
Tallarico,
 
                 personal communication, March 15, 1995).
Tallarico is correct in that it is impossible to tell whether the Sun
 
           would have succeeded had its circulation distribution system worked
 
         better. But better planning by management would have allowed the paper
 
            to succeed or fail based more on the quality of the product rather
than
 
            on the quality of service.
        This study demonstrates that Sun executives violated several basic
 
         planning principles. First, they ignored market research that
indicated
 
            that an emphasis on single-copy sales would not work in St. Louis.
 
        Although this approach has worked in other cities, Sun executives should
 
            have realized that each market has individual characteristics. Their
 
          emphasis on single-copy sales used resources for serving retail
outlets
 
            that could better have been applied to serving home delivery
 
  subscribers. Thus Sun executives failed to adequately use their limited
 
            resources because they did not understand their market.
         Sun executives also failed to plan for emergencies such as the
 
      printing press mix-up. They should have developed some worst-case
 
       scenarios. The fact that the problem with the printing presses was only
 
            discovered a few weeks before the opening indicates that someone was
not
 
            doing his or her job. Birkenmeier said no one knew who was
responsible,
 
            but someone should have been responsible for making sure the
printing
 
           plant was renovated correctly. Such a crucial flaw should have been
 
         discovered earlier.
        Tallarico admitted the Sun's plan was too complicated. Management
 
        theory suggests that business plans, especially for new ventures, should
 
            be kept simple. The Sun executives chose to serve an area that was
too
 
            large for their system to handle, and they tried to do too many
things,
 
            such as doing the billing rather than letting the carriers do it.
        Ingersoll also made a mistake by moving to St. Louis and supervising
 
           the Sun too closely. Lamb (1987) pointed out that new business
ventures
 
            have a better chance of success when their managers are given
autonomy
 
            from the corporate headquarters. Horrigan noted that Ingersoll was
 
        frequently distracted from the Sun by corporate problems (K. Horrigan,
 
            personal communication, March 16, 1995). Lastly, Ingersoll closed
the
 
           Sun too soon, although he probably had no choice because of the
collapse
 
            of the junk bond market. Lamb (1987) noted new ventures take three
to 10
 
            years to succeed, and the Sun only had seven months. Ingersoll was
 
        incorrect in his assessment that the St. Louis market rejected the Sun
 
            because he never gave the city enough time to judge the paper.
        The Sun may have died even had circulation worked perfectly, but the
 
           poor service doomed it to failure before other factors such as
content
 
            and advertising sales could even be evaluated. Indeed, Horrigan said
the
 
            Sun probably would have been killed by the recession of the early
1990s
 
            had it survived its first-year circulation crisis. Yet because the
Sun's
 
            circulation problems were so serious, the newspaper cannot be
dismissed
 
            as simply more proof that American cities can support only one daily
 
          newspaper. The question of whether St. Louis and other American cities
 
            of comparable size can support two daily newspapers has not been
 
      decisively answered by the failure of the Sun.
        The Sun's demise does, however, show that a poorly planned business
 
           venture will fail and fail quickly. Corporate entrepreneurs who want
to
 
            create a new daily must study their target market thoroughly, plan
for
 
            all contingencies, give local management the freedom to develop a
unique
 
            product and then have the patience and resources to support it
during a
 
            growth period spanning years rather than months.
         More research on the Sun is needed to determine what role other
 
       factors played in the paper's failure. Ingersoll had said he wanted to
 
            use the Sun to reinvent the American newspaper with a "post-modern"
 
         look, and create a "laptop" that would attract the video generation
 
         (Teinowitz, 1989, p. 82). A qualitative analysis of the newspaper would
 
            be helpful in determining the role content played in the collapse of
the
 
            newspaper. An examination of the company's finances would shed light
on
 
            the impact of the collapse of the junk bond market on the Sun.
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