Meredith Corporation

views updated May 29 2018

Meredith Corporation

1716 Locust Street
Des Moines, Iowa 50309-3023
U.S.A.
(515) 284-3000
(800) 284-4236
Fax: (515) 284-2700
Web site: http://www.meredith.com

Public Company
Incorporated:
1902
Employees: 2,559
Sales: $1 billion (1998)
Stock Exchanges: New York
Ticker Symbol: MDP
NAIC: 51112 Periodical Publishers; 51113 Book Publishers; 51312 Television Broadcasting

Meredith Corporation is a leading media company, focused primarily on magazines and broadcasting. The company is best known for publishing two of Americas most popular magazines: Better Homes and Gardens, with a circulation of 7.6 million, and Ladies Home Journal, with a circulation of 4.5 million. About 85 percent of the diversified media companys revenues comes from its magazine business, which publishes 21 subscription magazines, more than 40 special interest publications, and a number of custom publications. The company also publishes close to 300 books, including the best-selling, red-and-white checkerboard-covered Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook and a line of do-it-yourself titles it produces in conjunction with the Home Depot chain of stores. In addition, the company owns and operates 11 television stations, primarily in smaller markets such as Flint, Michigan and Ocala, Florida. As of 1999 the company was in the process of buying Atlantas CBS affiliate KGNX-TV, giving Meredith an entry into the nations tenth largest television market. Merediths diverse media projects focus for the most part on home and family. It maintains a database of some 60 million customer names, the largest such database among U.S. media companies. Approximately one-third of the U.S. population, or 65 million people, read a Meredith magazine each year.

Early History

The seeds that started the Meredith Corporation were given to Edwin Thomas (E. T.) Meredith as a wedding present. On E. T. Merediths wedding day, his grandfather gave him several gold pieces, the controlling interest in his newspaper, and a note that said, Sink or swim. After returning his grandfathers newspaper to profitability, Meredith sold it for a profit and began publishing a service-oriented farm magazine called Successful Farming in 1902. The magazine grew quickly, from a starting circulation of 500 to more than half a million subscribers by 1914. The company had grown proportionally, from five employees in 1902 to almost 200 in 1912. In 1999 the company had more than 2,500 employees and still occupied the same building that was established as company headquarters in 1912. The building went through some expansion as well, including an $18 million renovation completed in 1980.

After serving a year as Woodrow Wilsons Secretary of Agriculture, E. T. Meredith returned to his company in 1920 and decided to publish more magazines. In 1922 the company purchased one magazine, Dairy Farmer, and launched another, Fruit, Garden and Home. Meredith tried to make Dairy Farmer a national success for five years before merging it with Successful Farming. Unable to make a profit until 1927, Fruit, Garden and Home, a magazine similar to Successful Farming for the home and family, had start-up difficulties as well. At first, advertisers paid $450 per black-and-white page in Fruit, Garden and Home, as opposed to Successful Farmings rate of $1,800 per black-and-white page. After a name change in 1924 to Better Homes & Gardens, the magazines fortunes turned around, allowing it to command $1,800 per black-and-white page of advertising by 1925.

By the time of E. T. Merediths death in 1928, the year he was considered a candidate for the presidency, Better Homes and Gardens and Successful Farming had reached a combined circulation of 2.5 million. After World War II, Better Homes and Gardens had surpassed McCalls, Good Housekeeping, and Ladies Home Journal to become the leading monthly magazine. Holding a circulation of about eight million for more than two decades, Better Homes and Gardens remained a powerful magazine into the 1990s, when it ranked third largest in the United States, behind only Readers Digest and National Geographic.

Meredith capitalized on the success of Better Homes and Gardens magazine and began publishing the Better Homes and Gardens Cook Book in 1930. Magazine subscribers received complimentary copies of the first edition, and book sales grew rapidly. The cookbook became one of the best-selling hardback books in America, with more than 29 million copies sold by its eleventh edition in 1995. The company has since used the Better Homes and Gardens name to further its profits, using it to sell special interest publications starting in 1937, to open a real estate service in 1978, and to offer garden tools at 2,000 Wal-Mart stores starting in 1994.

Diversification in the Postwar Years

To raise the capital necessary to diversify its interests, the company began offering stock to the public in 1946. Over the next ten years, Meredith bought three television stations and opened a commercial printing business. By 1965, the company was listed on the New York Stock Exchange. By 1969, the company had formed a printing partnership with the Burda family of West Germany, which would grow into one of the largest printing businesses in the United States.

In 1978 Meredith began a franchise-operated real estate business under the Better Homes and Gardens name. Its a natural extension of the product franchise, Meredith chairperson Robert Burnett told Advertising Age. By 1985, the business challenged established realtors like Century 21 and Coldwell Banker, according to Advertising Age. The real estate business had grown to include about 700 firms, which owned and operated about 1,300 offices and had 24,000 sales associates by 1994. Company headquarters supplied the franchisees with marketing, management, and sales training information.

Growth in the 1980s

Although Meredith was publicly owned, it had a long history of only cautiously seeking investors. In 1985, however, it turned into a very different kind of company, Paine Webber analyst J. Kendrick Noble told Advertising Age. At that time, Meredith began welcoming interest in its operations. Meredith started sponsoring art exhibits in New York and giving presentations to security analysts. The change occurred to fuel a growth strategy, which helped make it a Fortune 500 company.

At the beginning of the 1980s, Merediths interests included a printing business, a fulfillment system, a real estate franchise, four television stations, and three magazines: Better Homes and Gardens, Metropolitan Home, and Successful Farming. The company expanded quickly during the 1980s, entering the video market with Meredith Video Publishing, purchasing three television stations, launching seven new magazines, publishing a Korean edition of Better Homes and Gardens magazine (an Australian edition had been published since 1978), and purchasing Ladies Home Journal, the sixth largest womens service magazine when ranked by circulation at the time of the purchase in 1986. Despite its acquisitions and expansion, however, the company soon floundered. In 1992 Meredith had a net loss of $6.3 million.

In response, management decided to streamline Meredith, ridding the company of ancillary businesses. To soften the blow of a nationwide advertising slump it felt in its magazines and television stations, Meredith sold its 50 percent interest in the Meredith/Burda printing partnership to R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company of Chicago in 1990. Given the high costs of remaining competitive in the printing business, Meredith president Jack Rehm felt the sale was smart, telling Business Record that we had to make a choice to either get bigger or else to get out. We felt we could better use our resources in our other businesses and depart the printing business. To further streamline, Meredith sold its fulfillment business to Neodata of Boulder, Colorado, in 1991, and two television stations were sold off in 1993. Moreover, the companys work force was cut by seven percent, to 2,000, between 1992 and 1994.

Merediths cuts and investments allowed it to focus on what it did best. E. T. Meredith III told Business Week in 1994, Were going back to what we were: a successful magazine and broadcasting company. Meredith planned to add three or four magazines per year. Realizing that advertising profits might never be as high as they were during the lucrative 1980s, the company earmarked $400 million for additional TV and magazine acquisitions, according to Business Week. In addition, the company developed customized marketing programs, which could create tailored packages of Merediths magazine and book publishing, real estate service, and television stations for advertisers specific needs. By 1994, company profits had started to climb again, jumping 23 percent over 1993 to $22.9 million on revenues of $799 million.

Company Perspectives:

We are Meredith Corporation, a publicly held media company founded upon service to our customers. Our cornerstone is knowledge and understanding of the home and family market. From that, we have built businesses that serve well-defined readers and viewers, deliver the messages of our advertisers, and extend our franchises and related expertise to other special markets. Our products and services distinguish themselves on the basis of quality, customer service, and value that can be trusted.

Merediths streamlining helped the company take advantage of its unique niche, the home and family. Meredith sold its chic magazine, Metropolitan Home, to Hachette Filipacchi Magazines, the publishers of Elle, and introduced several new titles that targeted different domestic topics, such as Country Home, Country America, WOOD, Midwest Living, and Better Homes and Gardens American Patchwork & Quilting. Merediths new magazines met with significant success, with growing circulations of 200,000 to one million. Shari Wall, senior vice-president at J. Walter Thompson in Chicago, noted Merediths fortuitous position in the market, telling Business Week that their thrust of family and home is the hot thing for the 1990s. Meredith, too, eagerly publicized its area of focus. The company launched an advertising campaign for its magazine group in 1993, which asserted, If it has to do with home and family, it has to be in Meredith. The campaign featured black-and-white pictures of real families having fun together.

Although Meredith promoted itself aggressively to advertisers, it relied most heavily on its subscribers, who fueled the companys rebound. Circulation for most of the companys magazines was up in 1993, but company president Jack Rehm told the New York Times that the reason we have succeeded with so many magazine titles in the last several years is that we are able to get readers to really pay for the magazines. We must count much more on the reader to generate the revenue stream than the advertiser. Historically, that has not been true, and magazines who were overly dependent on advertising were the ones who really suffered. In 1993 Merediths magazine subscription and newsstand revenues accounted for 32.2 percent of the company revenues, or $257.45 million, and magazine advertising revenues made up 29.6 percent, with $236.81 million.

Merediths Better Homes and Gardens magazine proved a good example of the companys success in managing large publications. Better Homes and Gardens led the shelter magazine industry in ad revenues and pages in 1988, offering its advertisers an audience four times the size of its next competitor, according to Marketing and Media Decisions. A four-color page cost $103,480 in Better Homes and Gardens; in Architectural Digest, Better Homes and Gardens closest competitor in shelter magazines, a similar advertisement cost $28,490. According to some analysts, Better Homes and Gardens fortunes can be traced to the trend toward home and hearth that started in the late 1980s and early 1990s; the magazine benefited because it bridged the home and womens service categories.

Meredith took a conservative approach to changing its flagship magazine, refusing to bow to the shifting winds of publishing fashion. For example, when faced with single, disenfranchised dropouts at advertising agencies in the 1960s who were insulted that we would continue to publish [Better Homes and Gardens] when [they] didnt think it should exist, Burnett told Advertising Age, it was tempting to say, Weve got to change Better Homes and Gardens and get with it. Meredith remained committed, however, to the magazines focus on home and family.

To keep the magazine contemporary, Meredith continually made subtle changes, rather than doing major redesigns every five years like other magazines. According to Burnett, in an article in Advertising Age, rapid change was likely to alienate readers; Burnett commented that the worst thing that could happen is for your best friend to show up with a changed personality; its a shock and a negative. The magazines enhancements for 1994 included the addition of puzzles and games for parents and their children. The companys strategy paid off, as Better Homes and Gardens continued to be a leader in its category.

In 1994 Merediths several large circulation magazines and book clubs generated a subscriber database of 63 million, the largest database in the United States. Meredith began exploiting this database for profit in 1992, as the companys marketing department began using the database to give editors valuable feedback on their magazines readership, as well as to cross-promote books and magazine spin-offs, target direct mail programs for advertisers, research new markets, and test new products. The company also used the database to aid in the launch of a new magazine called Crayola Kids, to insert specialized ads in targeted magazines for an auto advertiser, and to put in targeted editorials in Better Homes and Gardens issues. The database also helped to turn around the fortunes of Merediths book division. Despite its more than 30 years of experience in database marketing, during which it had also used rented lists, Meredith did not consider itself a very sophisticated user of its own resource. Clem Svede, vice-president and director of consumer marketing, noted in Direct that when someone asks how our database is doing, we say We think were at the top of our classbut were only in the first grade.

In 1993 the company faced a challenge in the form of a natural disaster. Massive flooding in the Midwest that year, particularly in Iowa, reached the companys Des Moines headquarters, ruining the companys mainframe computer system. As a result, the company was forced to install a new desktop publishing network about eight months earlier than planned. Under the guidance of Robert Furstenau, director of production and technology for Merediths magazines, the company converted to the new system in about two days. Meredith immediately purchased $400,000 worth of Macintosh computers and peripheral equipment, installed them in a rented space, and flew in software specialists from around the country to give 103 editorial employees two weeks of training information in a few hours. Despite the chaotic atmosphere, no deadlines were missed, and in the long run the desktop system has reduced the companys prepress production costs. Furstenau told the Des Moines Register that the flood has got to be one of the better things that has happened to magazine production at Meredith in a long time.

Changes in the Late 1990s

The company had floundered in the early 1990s, with erratic earnings, a rather staid image, and thin operating margins well below the publishing industry average. Yet it had great assets, particularly in its under-exploited customer database and in its Better Homes and Gardens brand name recognition. In 1994 the company announced ambitious plans to launch new magazine titles, buy more television stations, swing lucrative licensing deals, and expand its book publishing division. The book division ultimately did not pay off, and in 1995 the company sold its book club to Book of the Month Club and reduced its commitment to book publishing. But in other areas Meredith was right on track. It managed to launch new magazine titles with great skill, primarily because it learned to target audiences using its existing customer database. Although other media companies such as Hearst and Time Warner also had massive databases, Merediths was singular in that its customers were very similar, described in a December 4, 1994 Forbes article as nesterspeople who are interested in their homes and in spending money to make them better. Thus it was not too difficult for Meredith to cull the list and find, for example, people with older homes: a good market for its Traditional Home magazine and the related Renovation Style. Other new titles in the mid-1990s were American Patchwork & Quilting and homegarden. The company managed to hold costs for new magazines down to $2 million to $3 million, considered impressively low in the publishing industry, and most turned a profit within two to three years. The company also embarked on a successful licensing deal in 1994, letting mass-marketer Wal-Mart open Better Homes and Gardens Garden Centers in more than 2,000 stores. These sold gardening equipment marked with the Better Homes and Gardens name, as well as the magazine itself and other Meredith gardening titles. The deal with Wal-Mart led to minimum royalties of $3 million for each of the first three years and $5 million for the next two years. Meredith also brokered the Better Homes and Gardens name by publishing small booklets for sale at checkout counters, with titles like Garden, Deck & Landscape Planner. The company had 40 such books by 1995 and printed a total of 35 million copies. By the mid-1990s, such brand extensions were leading to impressive earnings: the company told Forbes in 1995 that it derived $1.05 in income from brand extensions for every dollar of revenue the magazine Better Homes and Gardens earned.

In its broadcasting segment, Meredith also performed as planned. By 1996, the company had seven stations, and these contributed more than 40 percent of the firms profit. In 1997 the company purchased three more television stations, picking them up for $435 million from First Media Television. This acquisition gave Meredith stations in Orlando, Florida, Greeneville, South Carolina, and Bend, Oregon. They were small markets, but increased Merediths share of the nations television market from five percent to eight percent. By 1998, Meredith owned 11 stations, and these accounted for about 18 percent of the companys total revenue. Its stations were all in small markets, yet most of them were predicted to be strong growth areas. In late 1998 Meredith negotiated to buy its first station in a top ten market, Atlantas WGNX. Not only was Atlanta a major market, but it was one of the countrys fastest growing TV markets.

By 1999, Meredith seemed to be in very good shape. Its big advantage was that its core producthome-related publications and productswas more and more the in thing. The number of people aged 45 to 54 was increasing as the baby-boomers aged, and this demographic tended to spend the most on home-related goods. The old-fashioned appeal of Better Homes and Gardens and the other Meredith publications seemed likely to be back in style with a vengeance in the coming decade. The company had managed to shed unprofitable businesses such as its real estate venture and much of its book publishing and concentrate on what it knew best. In addition, Meredith was able to make useful cross-connections between its publishing and broadcasting sectors, for example, launching a syndicated Better Homes and Gardens television show. Financially, the company was in record shape, with sales topping $1 billion for the first time in fiscal 1998.

Principal Subsidiaries

Meredith Cable, Inc. (70%); Meredith Video Publishing Corporation; Meredith International, Ltd.

Further Reading

Carmody, Deirdre, A Focus on Home, Hearth and Profit, New York Times, October 4, 1993, p. C7.

Chase, Brett, Meredith Leaves Printing Behind, Looks to Future, Business Record, January 13, 1992, p. 2.

Cyr, Diane, Database Magic at Meredith, Direct: The Magazine of Direct Marketing Management, February 1994.

Ebert, Larry Kai, Meredith at 75: Multi-Media Expansion, Advertising Age, October 31, 1977, pp. 3, 78, 80.

Kasler, Dale, Meredith Veteran Named New Better Homes Editor, Des Moines Register, April 6, 1993.

_____, Meredith Will Launch Big Gardening Magazine, Des Moines Register, July 4, 1994, p. 3.

_____, The Talk of the Industry: Flood a Boon for Meredith, Des Moines Register, September 13, 1993.

Levin, Gary, Meredith: Growing Up with an 800-lb. Gorilla, Advertising Age, March 11, 1985.

Melcher, Richard A., Homes, GardensAnd a Tidy Turnaround, Business Week, August 22, 1994, pp. 55-56.

Podems, Ruth, Serving Families for 77 Years, Target Marketing, September 1989, pp. 18-24.

Williams, Scott, Realtor Links Up with Chain, Seattle Times, July 15, 1992, p. B4.

Sara Pendergast

updated by A. Woodward

Meredith Corporation

views updated May 18 2018

Meredith Corporation

1716 Locust Street
Des Moines, Iowa 50309-3023
U.S.A.
(515) 284-3000
Fax: (515) 284-2700

Public Company
Incorporated:
1902
Employees: 1,895
Total Assets: $864.47 million
Stock Exchanges: New York

SICs: 2721 Periodicals; 2731 Book Publishing; 4833
Television Broadcasting Stations; 6794 Patent Owners &
Lessors

Meredith Corporation is best known for publishing two of Americas most popular magazines: Better Homes and Gardens, with a circulation of 7.6million, and Ladies Home Journal, with a circulation of five million. About 65 percent of the diversified media companys revenues come from its magazine business, which publishes 19 subscription magazines, more than 40 special interest publications, and a number of custom publications. The company also publishes about 175 different books, including the best-selling, red-and-white-checkerboard covered Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook. In addition, the company owns and operates five television stations and is involved in cable television and residential real estate. Even though Meredith has diversified into many areas of the media industry, all its products have a home and family slant. In 1994, women made up 61 percent of the companys employees.

The seeds that started the Meredith Corporation were given to Edwin Thomas (E. T.) Meredith as a wedding present. On E. T. Merediths wedding day, his grandfather gave him several gold pieces, the controlling interest in his newspaper, and a note that said, Sink or swim. After returning his grandfathers newspaper to profitability, Meredith sold it for a profit and began publishing a service oriented farm magazine called Successful Farming in 1902. The magazine grew quickly, from a starting circulation of 500 to over half a million subscribers by 1914. The company had grown proportionally, from five employees in 1902 to almost 200 in 1912. In 1994, the company had almost 2,000 employees and still occupied the same building that was established company headquarters in 1912. The building went through some expansion as well, including an $18 million renovation completed in 1980.

After serving a year as Woodrow Wilsons Secretary of Agriculture, E.T. Meredith returned to his company in 1920 and decided to publish more magazines. In 1922, the company purchased one magazine, Dairy Farmer, and launched another, Fruit, Garden and Home. Meredith tried to make the Dairy Farmer a national success for five years before merging it with Successful Farming. Unable to make a profit until 1927, Fruit, Garden and Home, a magazine similar to Successful Farming for the home and family, had start-up difficulties as well. At first, advertisers paid $450 per black-and-white page in Fruit, Garden and Home, as opposed to Successful Farmings rate of $1,800 per black-and-white page. After a name change in 1924 to Better Homes & Gardens, the magazines fortunes turned around, allowing it to command $1,800 per black-and-white page of advertising by 1925.

By E. T. Merediths death in 1928, the year he was considered a candidate for the presidency, Better Homes and Gardens and Successful Farming had reached a combined circulation of 2.5 million. After World War II, Better Homes and Gardens had surpassed McCalls, Good Housekeeping, and Ladies Home Journal to become the leading monthly magazine. Holding a circulation of about eight million for more than two decades, Better Homes and Gardens remained a powerful magazine into the 1990s, when it ranked fourth largest in the United States.

Meredith capitalized on the success of Better Homes and Gardens magazine and began publishing the Better Homes and Gardens Cook Book in 1930. Magazine subscribers received complimentary copies of the first edition, and book sales grew rapidly. The cookbook became one of the best-selling hardback books in America, with over 29 million copies sold by its tenth edition in 1992. The company has since used the Better Homes and Gardens name to further its profits, using it to sell special interest publications starting in 1937, to open a real estate service in 1978, and to offer garden tools at 2,000 Wal-Mart stores starting in 1994.

To raise the capital necessary to diversify its interests, the company began offering stock to the public in 1946. Over the next ten years, Meredith bought three television stations and opened a commercial printing business. By 1965, the company was listed on the New York Stock Exchange. By 1969, the company had had formed a printing partnership with the Burda family of West Germany, which would grow into one of the largest printing businesses in the United States.

In 1978, Meredith began a franchise-operated real estate business under the Better Homes and Gardens name. Its a natural extension of the product franchise, Meredith chairperson Robert Burnett told Advertising Age. By 1985, the business challenged established realtors like Century 21 and Coldwell Banker, according to Advertising Age. The real estate business had grown to include about 700 firms, which owned and operated about 1,300 offices and had 24,000 sales associates by 1994. Company headquarters supplied the franchisees with marketing, management, and sales training information.

Although Meredith was publicly owned, it had a long history of cautiously seeking investors. In 1985, however, it turned

into a very different kind of company, Paine Webber analyst J. Kendrick Noble told Advertising Age. At that time, Meredith began welcoming interest in its operations. Meredith started sponsoring art exhibits in New York and giving presentations to security analysts. The change occurred to fuel a growth strategy, which helped make it a Fortune 500 company.

At the beginning of the 1980s, Merediths interests included a printing business, a fulfillment system, a real estate franchise, four television stations, and three magazines: Better Homes and Gardens, Metropolitan Home, and Successful Farming. The company expanded quickly during the 1980s, entering the video market with Meredith Video Publishing, purchasing three television stations, launching seven new magazines, publishing a Korean edition of Better Homes and Gardens magazine (an Australian edition had been published since 1978), and purchasing Ladies Home Journal, the sixth-largest womens service magazine when ranked by circulation at the time of the purchase in 1986. Despite its acquisitions and expansion, the company soon floundered. In 1992, Meredith had a net loss of $6.3 million.

In response, management decided to streamline Meredith, ridding the company of ancillary businesses. To soften the blow of a nationwide advertising slump it felt in its magazines and television stations, Meredith sold its 50 percent interest in the Meredith/Burda printing partnership to R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company of Chicago in 1990. Given the high costs of remaining competitive in the printing business, Meredith president Jack Rehm felt the sale was smart, telling Business Record that we had to make a choice to either get bigger or else to get out. We felt we could better use our resources in our other businesses and depart the printing business. To further streamline, Meredith sold its fulfillment business to Neodata of Boulder, Colorado, in 1991, and two television stations were also sold off in 1993. Moreover, the companys work force was cut by seven percent, to 2,000, between 1992 and 1994.

Merediths cuts and investments allowed it to focus on what it did best. E. T. Meredith III told Business Week in 1994 that Were going back to what we were: a successful magazine and broadcasting company. Meredith planned to add three or four magazines per year. Realizing that advertising profits might never be as high as they were during the lucrative 1980s, the company earmarked $400 million for additional TV and magazine acquisitions, according to Business Week. In addition, the company developed customized marketing programs, which could create tailored packages of Merediths magazine and book publishing, real estate service, and television stations for advertisers specific needs. By 1994, company profits had started to climb again, jumping 23 percent over 1993 to $22.9 million on revenues of $799 million.

Merediths streamlining helped the company take advantage of its unique niche, the home and family. Meredith sold its chic magazine, Metropolitan Home, to Hachette Filipacchi Magazines, the publishers of Elle, and introduced several new titles that targeted different domestic topics, such as Country Home, Country America, WOOD, Midwest Living, and Better Homes and Gardens American Patchwork & Quilting. Merediths new magazines met with significant success, with growing circulations of 200,000 to one million. Shari Wall, senior vice-president at J. Walter Thompson in Chicago, noted Merediths fortuitous position in the market, telling Business Week that their thrust of family and home is the hot thing for the 1990s. Meredith, too, eagerly publicized its area of focus. The company launched an advertising campaign for its magazine group in 1993, which asserted that If it has to do with home and family, it has to be in Meredith. The campaign featured black-and-white pictures of real families having fun together.

Although Meredith promoted itself aggressively to advertisers, it relied most heavily on its subscribers, who fueled the companys rebound. Circulation for most of the companys magazines was up in 1993, but company president Jack Rehm told the New York Times that the reason we have succeeded with so many magazine titles in the last several years is that we are able to get readers to really pay for the magazines. We must count much more on the reader to generate the revenue stream than the advertiser. Historically, that has not been true, and magazines who were overly dependent on advertising were the ones who really suffered. In 1993, Merediths magazine subscription and newsstand revenues accounted for 32.2 percent of the company revenues, or $257.45 million, while magazine advertising revenues made up 29.6 percent, with $236.81 million.

Merediths Better Homes and Gardens magazine proved a good example of the companys success in managing large publications. Better Homes and Gardens led the shelter magazine industry in ad revenues and pages in 1988, offering its advertisers an audience four times the size of its next competitor, according to Marketing and Media Decisions. A four-color page cost $103,480 in Better Homes and Gardens, in Architectural Digest, Better Homes and Gardens s closest competitor in shelter magazines, a similar advertisement cost $28,490. According to some analysts, Better Homes and Gardens fortunes can be traced to the trend toward home and hearth that started in the late 1980s and early 1990s; the magazine benefitted because it bridged the home and womens service categories.

Meredith took a conservative approach to changing its flagship magazine, refusing to bow to the shifting winds of publishing fashion. For example, when faced with single, disenfranchised dropouts at advertising agencies in the 1960s who were insulted that we would continue to publish [Better Homes and Gardens] when [they] didnt think it should exist, Burnett told Advertising Age, it was tempting to say, Weve got to change Better Homes and Gardens and get with it. However, Meredith remained committed to the magazines focus on home and family.

To keep the magazine contemporary, Meredith continually made subtle changes, rather than doing major redesigns every five years like other magazines. According to Burnett, in an article in Advertising Age, rapid change was likely to alienate readers; Burnett commented that the worst thing that could happen is for your best friend to show up with a changed personality; its a shock and a negative. The magazines enhancements for 1994 included the addition of puzzles and games for parents and their children. The companys strategy paid off, as Better Homes and Gardens continued to be a leader in its category.

In 1994, Merediths several large circulation magazines and book clubs generated a subscriber database of 63 million, the largest database in the United States. Meredith began exploiting this database for profit in 1992, as thecompanys marketing department began using the database to give editors valuable feedback on their magazines readership, as well as to cross-promote books and magazine spin-offs, target direct mail programs for advertisers, research new markets, and test new products. The company also used the database to aid in the launch of a new magazine called Crayola Kids, to insert specialized ads in targeted magazines for an auto advertiser, and to put in targeted editorials in Better Homes and Garden issues. The database also helped to turn around the fortunes of Merediths book division. Despite its over 30 years of experience in database marketing, during which it had also used rented lists, Meredith did not consider itself a very sophisticated user of its own resource. Clem Svede, vice-president and director of consumer marketing, noted in Direct that when someone asks how our database is doing, we say We think were at the top of our classbut were only in the first grade.

In 1993, the company faced a challenge in the form of a natural disaster. Massive flooding in the Midwest that year, particularly in Iowa, reached the companys Des Moines headquarters, ruining the companys mainframe computer system. As a result, the company was forced to install a new desktop publishing network about eight months earlier than planned. Under the guidance of Robert Furstenau, director of production and technology for Merediths magazines, the company converted to the new system in about two days. Meredith immediately purchased $400,000 worth of Macintosh computers and peripheral equipment, installed them in a rented space, and flew in software specialists from around the country to give 103 editorial employees two weeks of training information in a few hours. Despite the chaotic atmosphere, no deadlines were missed, and in the long run, the desktop system has reduced the companys pre-press production costs. Furstenau told the Des Moines Register that the flood has got to be one of the better things that has happened to magazine production at Meredith in a long time.

In 1994, Meredith forecasted a strong future in the home and family marketplace. It planned to continue to focus on its most profitable divisions, magazines and television stations. The company expected to release a new gardening magazine in 1995, with a potential circulation of between 750,000 and one million, according to the Des Moines Register. The company also anticipated investing in new product development to enhance the performance of its book division. As its cable partnership proved financially draining, Meredith planned to sell or adjust the partnerships operations to achieve an acceptable level of financial performance. Finally, as a media company, Meredith was developing CD-ROM products for the information superhighway through Multicom Publishing Inc.

Principal Subsidiaries

Meredith Cable, Inc. (70%); Meredith Video Publishing Corporation; Meredith International, Ltd.

Further Reading

Carmody, Deirdre, A Focus on Home, Hearth and Profit, New York Times, October 4, 1993, p. C7.

Chase, Brett, Meredith Leaves Printing behind, Looks to Future, Business Record, January 13, 1992, p. 2.

Cyr, Diane, Database Magic at Meredith, Direct: The Magazine of Direct Marketing Management, February 1994.

Ebert, Larry Kai, Meredith at 75: Multi-Media Expansion, Advertising Age, October 31, 1977, pp. 3, 78, 80.

Kasler, Dale, Meredith Veteran Named New Better Homes Editor, Des Moines Register, April 6, 1993; Meredith Will Launch Big Gardening Magazine, Des Moines Register, July 4, 1994, p. 3; The Talk of the Industry: Flood a Boon for Meredith, Des Moines Register, September 13, 1993.

Levin, Gary, Meredith: Growing up with an 800-lb. Gorilla, Advertising Age, March 11, 1985.

Melcher, Richard A., Homes, GardensAnd a Tidy Turnaround, Business Week, August 22, 1994, pp. 55-56.

Podems, Ruth, Serving Families for 77 Years, Target Marketing, September 1989, pp. 18-24.

Williams, Scott, Realtor Links Up with Chain, Seattle Times, July 15, 1992, p. B4.

Sara Pendergast

Meredith Corporation

views updated May 18 2018

Meredith Corporation

1716 Locust Street
Des Moines, Iowa 50309-3023
U.S.A.

Telephone: (515) 284-3000
Toll Free: (800) 284-4236
Fax: (515) 284-2700
Web site: http://www.meredith.com

Public Company
Incorporated:
1905
Employees: 2696
Sales: $1.22 billion (2005)
Stock Exchanges: New York
Ticker Symbol: MDP
NAIC: 511120 Periodical Publishers; 511130 Book Publishers; 513112 Radio Stations; 513120 Television Broadcasting

Meredith Corporation is a leading U.S. media company that is focused primarily on magazines and broadcasting. It is best known for publishing two of America's most popular magazines: Better Homes and Gardens and Ladies' Home Journal. About 75 percent of the diversified media company's revenue comes from its magazine business, which publishes 17 major brands plus about 160 special interest titles. The company also has more than 300 books in print, including the best-selling, red-and-white checkerboard-covered Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook. In addition, the company owns and operates 14 television stations, primarily in smaller markets such as Flint, Michigan, and Ocala, Florida, as well as one radio station. Meredith's diverse media projects focus for the most part on home and family. It maintains a large consumer database and has two-dozen Web sites, as well as extensive licensing agreements.

Early History

The seeds that started the Meredith Corporation were given to Edwin Thomas (E. T.) Meredith as a wedding present. On E.T. Meredith's wedding day, his grandfather gave him several gold pieces, the controlling interest in his newspaper, and a note that said, "Sink or swim." After returning his grandfather's newspaper to financial health, Meredith sold it for a profit and began publishing a service-oriented farm magazine called Successful Farming in 1902. The magazine grew quickly, from a starting circulation of 500 to more than half a million subscribers by 1914. The staff had grown proportionately, from five employees in 1902 to almost 200 in 1912. In 1999, the company had more than 2,500 employees and still occupied the same building that was established as company headquarters in 1912. The building went through some expansion, including an $18 million renovation completed in 1980.

After serving a year as Woodrow Wilson's Secretary of Agriculture, E.T. Meredith returned to his company in 1920 and decided to publish more magazines. In 1922, the company purchased one magazine, Dairy Farmer, and launched another, Fruit, Garden and Home. Meredith tried to make Dairy Farmer a national success for five years before merging it with Successful Farming. Unable to make a profit until 1927, Fruit, Garden and Home, a magazine similar to Successful Farming for the home and family, had start-up difficulties as well. At first, advertisers paid $450 per black-and-white page in Fruit, Garden and Home, as opposed to Successful Farming 's rate of $1,800 per black-and-white page. After a name change in 1924 to Better Homes and Gardens, the magazine's fortunes turned around, allowing it to command $1,800 per black-and-white page of advertising by 1925.

By the time of E.T. Meredith's death in 1928, the year he was considered a candidate for the U.S. presidency, Better Homes and Gardens and Successful Farming had reached a combined circulation of 2.5 million. After World War II, Better Homes and Gardens had surpassed McCall's, Good Housekeeping, and Ladies' Home Journal to become the leading monthly magazine. Holding a circulation of about eight million for more than two decades, Better Homes and Gardens remained a powerful magazine into the 1990s, when it ranked third largest in the United States, behind only Reader's Digest and National Geographic.

Meredith capitalized on the success of Better Homes and Gardens magazine and began publishing the Better Homes and Gardens Cook Book in 1930. Magazine subscribers received complimentary copies of the first edition, and book sales grew rapidly. The cookbook became one of the best-selling hardback books in America, with more than 29 million copies sold by its eleventh edition in 1995. The company has since used the Better Homes and Gardens name to further its profits, using it to sell special interest publications starting in 1937, to open a real estate service in 1978, and to offer garden tools at 2,000 Wal-Mart stores starting in 1994.

Diversification in the Postwar Years

To raise the capital necessary to diversify its interests, the company began offering stock to the public in 1946. Over the next ten years, Meredith bought three television stations and opened a commercial printing business. By 1965, the company was listed on the New York Stock Exchange. By 1969, the company had formed a printing partnership with the Burda family of West Germany, which would grow into one of the largest printing businesses in the United States.

In 1978, Meredith began a franchise-operated real estate business under the "Better Homes and Gardens" name. "It's a natural extension of the product franchise," Meredith chairperson Robert Burnett told Advertising Age. By 1985, the business challenged established realtors like Century 21 and Coldwell Banker, according to Advertising Age. The real estate business had grown to include about 700 firms, which owned and operated about 1,300 offices and had 24,000 sales associates by 1994. Company headquarters supplied the franchisees with marketing, management, and sales training information.

Although Meredith was publicly owned, it had a long history of only cautiously seeking investors. In 1985, however, it turned into "a very different kind of company," Paine Webber analystJ. Kendrick Noble told Advertising Age. At that time, Meredith began welcoming interest in its operations. Meredith also started sponsoring art exhibits in New York and giving presentations to security analysts. The change occurred to fuel a growth strategy that helped make it a Fortune 500 company.

At the beginning of the 1980s, Meredith's interests included a printing business, a fulfillment system, a real estate franchise, four television stations, and three magazines: Better Homes and Gardens, Metropolitan Home, and Successful Farming. The company expanded quickly during the 1980s, entering the video market with Meredith Video Publishing, purchasing three television stations, launching seven new magazines, publishing a Korean edition of Better Homes and Gardens magazine (an Australian edition had been published since 1978), and purchasing Ladies' Home Journal, the sixth largest women's service magazine when ranked by circulation at the time of the purchase in 1986.

Focusing in the 1990s

Despite its acquisitions and expansion, however, the company soon floundered. In 1992, Meredith had a net loss of $6.3 million. In response, management decided to streamline Meredith, ridding the company of ancillary businesses. To soften the blow of a nationwide advertising slump it felt in its magazines and television stations, Meredith sold its 50 percent interest in the Meredith/Burda printing partnership to R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company of Chicago in 1990. Given the high costs of remaining competitive in the printing business, Meredith president Jack Rehm felt the sale was smart, telling Business Record, "We had to make a choice to either get bigger or else to get out. We felt we could better use our resources in our other businesses and depart the printing business." To further streamline, Meredith sold its fulfillment business to Neodata of Boulder, Colorado, in 1991, and two television stations were sold off in 1993. Moreover, the company's work force was cut by 7 percent, to 2,000, between 1992 and 1994.

Meredith's cuts and investments allowed it to focus on what it did best. E.T. Meredith III told Business Week in 1994, "We're going back to what we were: a successful magazine and broadcasting company." Meredith planned to add three or four magazines per year. Realizing that advertising profits might never be as high as they were during the lucrative 1980s, the company earmarked $400 million for additional television and magazine acquisitions, according to Business Week. In addition, the company developed customized marketing programs that could create tailored packages of Meredith's magazine and book publishing, real estate service, and television stations for advertisers' specific needs. By 1994, company profits had started to climb again, jumping 23 percent over 1993 to $22.9 million on revenues of $799 million.

Meredith's streamlining helped the company take advantage of its unique niche, the home and family. Meredith sold its chic magazine, Metropolitan Home, to Hachette Filipacchi Magazines, the publishers of Elle, and introduced several new titles that targeted different domestic topics, such as Country Home, Country America, WOOD, Midwest Living, and American Patchwork & Quilting. Meredith's new magazines met with significant success, with growing circulations of 200,000 to one million. Shari Wall, senior vice-president at J. Walter Thompson in Chicago, noted Meredith's fortuitous position in the market, telling Business Week that "their thrust of family and home is the hot thing for the 1990s." Meredith, too, eagerly publicized its area of focus. In 1993, the company launched an advertising campaign for its magazine group that asserted "If it has to do with home and family, it has to be in Meredith." The campaign featured black-and-white pictures of real families having fun together.

Company Perspectives:

Our Mission: We are Meredith Corporation, a publicly held media and marketing company founded upon service to our customers and committed to building value for our shareholders. Our cornerstone is knowledge and understanding of the home and family market. From that, we have built businesses that serve well-defined readers and viewers, deliver the messages of advertisers and extend our brand franchises and expertise to related markets. Our products and services distinguish themselves on the basis of quality, customer service and value that can be trusted.

Although Meredith promoted itself aggressively to advertisers, it relied most heavily on its subscribers, who fueled the company's rebound. Circulation for most of the company's magazines was up in 1993, but company president Jack Rehm told the New York Times that "the reason we have succeeded with so many magazine titles in the last several years is that we are able to get readers to really pay for the magazines. We must count much more on the reader to generate the revenue stream than the advertiser. Historically, that has not been true, and magazines who were overly dependent on advertising were the ones who really suffered." In 1993, Meredith's magazine subscription and newsstand revenues accounted for 32.2 percent of the company revenues, or $257.45 million, and magazine advertising revenues made up 29.6 percent, with $236.81 million.

Meredith's Better Homes and Gardens magazine proved a good example of the company's success in managing large publications. Better Homes and Gardens led the shelter magazine industry in ad revenues and pages in 1988, offering its advertisers an audience four times the size of its next competitor, according to Marketing and Media Decisions. A four-color page cost $103,480 in Better Homes and Gardens; in Architectural Digest, Better Homes and Gardens ' closest competitor in shelter magazines, a similar advertisement cost $28,490. According to some analysts, Better Homes and Gardens ' fortunes can be traced to the trend toward home and hearth that started in the late 1980s and early 1990s; the magazine benefited because it bridged the home and women's service categories.

Meredith took a conservative approach to changing its flag-ship magazine, refusing to bow to the shifting winds of publishing fashion. For example, when faced with "single, disenfranchised dropouts" at advertising agencies in the 1960s who were "insulted that we would continue to publish [Better Homes and Gardens ] when [they] didn't think it should exist," Burnett told Advertising Age, "It was tempting to say, 'We've got to change Better Homes and Gardens and get with it.' " Meredith remained committed, however, to the magazine's focus on home and family.

To keep the magazine contemporary, Meredith continually made subtle changes rather than doing major redesigns every five years like other magazines. According to Burnett, in an article in Advertising Age, rapid change was likely to alienate readers. Burnett commented that "the worst thing that could happen is for your best friend to show up with a changed personality; it's a shock and a negative." The magazine's enhancements for 1994 included the addition of puzzles and games for parents and their children. The company's strategy paid off, as Better Homes and Gardens continued to be a leader in its category.

In 1994, Meredith's several large circulation magazines and book clubs generated a subscriber database of 63 million, the largest in the United States. Meredith began exploiting this database for profit in 1992, as the company's marketing department began using it to give editors valuable feedback on their magazine's readership, as well as to cross-promote books and magazine spin-offs, target direct mail programs for advertisers, research new markets, and test new products. The company also used the database to aid in the launch of a new magazine called Crayola Kids, to insert specialized ads in targeted magazines for an auto advertiser, and to put in targeted editorials in Better Homes and Gardens issues. The database also helped to turn around the fortunes of Meredith's book division. Despite its more than 30 years of experience in database marketing, during which it had also used rented lists, Meredith did not consider itself a very sophisticated user of its own resource. Clem Svede, vice-president and director of consumer marketing, noted in Direct that "when someone asks how our database is doing, we say 'We think we're at the top of our classbut we're only in the first grade.' "

In 1993, the company faced a challenge in the form of a natural disaster. Massive flooding in the Midwest that year, particularly in Iowa, reached the company's Des Moines headquarters, ruining the company's mainframe computer system. As a result, the company was forced to install a new desktop publishing network about eight months earlier than planned. Under the guidance of Robert Furstenau, director of production and technology for Meredith's magazines, the company converted to the new system in about two days. Meredith immediately purchased $400,000 worth of Macintosh computers and peripheral equipment, installed them in a rented space, and flew in software specialists from around the country to give 103 editorial employees two weeks of training information in a few hours. Despite the chaotic atmosphere, no deadlines were missed, and in the long run the desktop system has reduced the company's pre-press production costs. Furstenau told the Des Moines Register that the flood "has got to be one of the better things that has happened to magazine production at Meredith in a long time."

Key Dates:

1902:
E.T. Meredith begins publishing Successful Farming.
1922:
Dairy Farmer and Fruit, Garden and Home magazines are acquired.
1924:
Fruit, Garden and Home is renamed Better Homes and Gardens.
1930:
A Better Homes and Gardens cookbook is launched.
1936:
The company offers shares to the public.
1948:
Meredith enters the television broadcasting business.
1965:
Meredith lists on the New York Stock Exchange.
1986:
Ladies' Home Journal is acquired.
1993:
Meredith's Des Moines headquarters is flooded.
1998:
Revenues top $1 billion; More magazine launched.
2002:
Meredith buys American Baby for $115 million.
2005:
The company posts a year of record revenue; Meredith buys titles from Gruner + Jahr for $350 million.

Changes in the Late 1990s

The company had floundered in the early 1990s, with erratic earnings, a rather staid image, and thin operating margins well below the publishing industry average. Yet it had great assets, particularly in its under-exploited customer database and in its Better Homes and Gardens brand name recognition. In 1994, the company announced ambitious plans to launch new magazine titles, buy more television stations, swing lucrative licensing deals, and expand its book publishing division. The book division ultimately did not pay off, and in 1995 the company sold its book club to Book of the Month Club and reduced its commitment to book publishing. In other areas, however, Meredith was right on track. It managed to launch new magazine titles with great skill, primarily because it learned to target audiences using its existing customer database. Although other media companies such as Hearst and Time Warner also had massive databases, Meredith's was singular in that its customers were very similar, described in a December 4, 1994 Forbes article as "nesterspeople who are interested in their homes and in spending money to make them better." Thus it was not too difficult for Meredith to cull the list and find, for example, people with older homes: a good market for its Traditional Home magazine and the related Renovation Style. Other new titles in the mid-1990s were American Patchwork & Quilting and Home Garden. The company managed to hold costs for new magazines down to $2 million to $3 million, considered impressively low in the publishing industry, and most turned a profit within two to three years. The company also embarked on a successful licensing deal in 1994, letting mass-marketer Wal-Mart open Better Homes and Gardens Garden Centers in more than 2,000 stores. These sold gardening equipment marked with the "Better Homes and Gardens" name, as well as the magazine itself and other Meredith gardening titles. The deal with Wal-Mart led to minimum royalties of $3 million for each of the first three years and $5 million for the next two years. Meredith also brokered the Better Homes and Gardens name by publishing small booklets for sale at checkout counters with titles like Garden, Deck & Landscape Planner. The company had 40 such books by 1995 and printed a total of 35 million copies. By the mid-1990s, such brand extensions were leading to impressive earnings: the company told Forbes in 1995 that it derived $1.05 in income from brand extensions for every dollar of revenue the magazine Better Homes and Gardens earned.

In its broadcasting segment, Meredith also performed as planned. By 1996, the company had seven stations, and these contributed more than 40 percent of the firm's profit. In 1997, the company purchased three more television stations, picking them up for $435 million from First Media Television. This acquisition gave Meredith stations in Orlando, Florida; Greenville, South Carolina; and Bend, Oregon. They were small markets but increased Meredith's share of the nation's television market from 5 percent to 8 percent. By 1998, Meredith owned 11 stations, and these accounted for about 18 percent of the company's total revenue. Its stations were all in small markets, yet most of them were predicted to be strong growth areas. In late 1998, Meredith negotiated to buy its first station in a top-ten market, Atlanta's WGNX. Not only was Atlanta a major market, but it was one of the country's fastest growing television markets.

By 1999, Meredith seemed to be in very good shape. Its big advantage was that its core producthome-related publications and productswas more and more the "in" thing. The number of people aged 45 to 54 was increasing as the baby boomers aged, and this demographic tended to spend the most on home-related goods. The old-fashioned appeal of Better Homes and Gardens and the other Meredith publications seemed likely to be back in style with a vengeance in the coming decade. The company had managed to shed unprofitable businesses such as its real estate venture and much of its book publishing and concentrate on what it knew best. In addition, Meredith was able to make useful cross-connections between its publishing and broadcasting sectors in order to launch, for example, a syndicated Better Homes and Gardens television show. Financially, the company was in record shape, with sales topping $1 billion for the first time in fiscal 1998.

Meredith's share price and earnings reached unprecedented heights in the late 1990s. Folio: The Magazine for Magazine Management lauded Meredith's creativity while noting fiscal prowess. Folio called Meredith "the gatekeeper to the American family." With its database of more than 60 million names, the company was able to tailor its marketing for the benefit of advertisers. It was also early to spot new trends. Meredith launched a new magazine in 2000 to capitalize upon the emerging popularity of scrapbooking.

In Tune in the 2000s

In the general recession following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States, the company worked to maintain its momentum on a number of fronts, Meredith officials told Advertising Age. It was developing book titles with The Learning Channel's "Trading Spaces" show in addition to its wildly successful Home Depot series, launched in 1995. Ladies' Home Journal was reworked to make it more enticing to advertisers. Meredith's focus on family life seemed in step with the feeling of the country after the attacks, observed Business Week. The baby boomers had already been aging into a time of life said to be more concerned with home furnishing and decoration.

Meredith acquired American Baby magazine from Primedia in December 2002 for $115 million. The new parent invested in an extensive revamping of the title, which had a circulation of two million as well as Spanish language offerings and an Internet presence.

Meredith achieved a notable milestone with its More magazine, launched in 1998, which had nearly tripled in circulation to one million copies. According to Crain's New York Business, it was the first successful lifestyle magazine aimed at women over 40.

Branding exercises at Meredith were going through some adjustment. A new line of "Better Homes and Gardens" home furnishings was being marketed through home sales reps, while the name was being dropped from the real estate brokerage.

Still Growing in 2005

Meredith reported the highest income in its history, $128.1 million, for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2005. The company continued to get bigger. On July 1, 2005, Meredith closed a $350 million deal to buy Family Circle, Fitness, Parents, Child, and Ser Padres from Gruner + Jahr Publishing USA. Gruner + Jahr's Rosie and YM magazines had folded in a circulation misstatement scandal, but observers were optimistic the titles Meredith bought would thrive under Meredith's solid circulation methods.

In addition to taking over one of Better Homes and Gardens ' top rivals, Family Circle, the purchase expanded Meredith's reach with younger women and Hispanics. This enhanced its competition with giant Time Inc. and allowed Meredith to connect advertisers with females at every stage of life.

Following the purchases from Gruner + Jahr, Meredith organized its publishing operations into the Parenting Group, Women's Lifestyle Group, and Mass Reach Group. The Parenting Group was launching Siempre Mujer for Spanish speakers in September 2005.

With a circulation of 7.6 million, Better Homes and Gardens, the jewel of the Mass Reach Group, was the third largest magazine in the United States. According to MEDIAWEEK, Meredith was second only to Time Inc. in terms of readers. The Gruner + Jahr acquisitions lifted its combined circulation from 20 million to 30 million. Its consumer database contained 75 million names.

Former CEO and grandson of the company founder, EdwinT. "Ted" Meredith III, passed away in February 2003. He was considered responsible for keeping the company centered in Des Moines. Meredith's recent acquisitions had shifted had left it with more publishing employees in New York City than Iowa for the first time in its history, noted Advertising Age. A priority for then-chairman and CEO Bill Kerr was to keep the company's culture focused on the heartland, according to Business Week.

Kerr, who had joined Meredith in 1991 after heading the magazine group of the New York Times Co., was planning to retire in June 2006 after nine years at the top job. His likely successor was president and chief operating officer Steve Lacy, who had started with the company in 1998 as vice-president and chief financial officer.

Principal Subsidiaries

Meredith Holding Company.

Principal Divisions

Broadcasting; Publishing.

Principal Operating Units

Mass Reach Group; Parenting Group; Women's Lifestyle Group.

Principal Competitors

Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S., Inc.; Hearst Corporation; Time Inc.

Further Reading

Brown, Kathi Ann, Meredith: The First 100 Years, Des Moines, Iowa: Meredith Corporation, 2002.

Carmody, Deirdre, "A Focus on Home, Hearth and Profit," New York Times, October 4, 1993, p. C7.

Chase, Brett, "Meredith Leaves Printing Behind, Looks to Future," Business Record, January 13, 1992, p. 2.

Creamer, Matthew, "Meredith's First Step Is to Remove Tarnish from Titles; Good Track Record for Boosting Circulation, But G&J Scandal Lingers," Advertising Age, May 30, 2005, p. 4.

Cyr, Diane, "Database Magic at Meredith," Direct, February 1994.

Ebert, Larry Kai, "Meredith at 75: Multi-Media Expansion," Advertising Age, October 31, 1977, pp. 3, 78, 80.

Flamm, Matthew, "Getting Better with Age; 'More' Magazine Finds the Formula to Succeed with Women Over 40," Crain's New York Business, December 20, 2004, p. 3.

Granatstein, Lisa, "Baby Steps: Meredith Nurtures AB Group," MEDIAWEEK, January 19, 2004, pp. 3233.

, "Media Elite: William Kerr, Chairman/CEO, Meredith Corp.," MEDIAWEEK, January 26, 2004, p. 29.

Ives, Nat, "Meet the Sexiest Men in Magazines, or, How Des Moines-Based Meredith Became a Hot House," Advertising Age, August 1, 2005, p. 1.

Kasler, Dale, "Meredith Veteran Named New Better Homes Editor," Des Moines Register, April 6, 1993.

, "Meredith Will Launch "Big' Gardening Magazine," Des Moines Register, July 4, 1994, p. 3.

, "The Talk of the Industry: Flood a Boon for Meredith," Des Moines Register, September 13, 1993.

Levin, Gary, "Meredith: Growing Up with an '800-lb. Gorilla,' " Advertising Age, March 11, 1985.

Lovell, Michael, "A CEO Who Loved the Outdoors, Flying and His Employees: Ted Meredith, Grandson of the Media Company's Founder, Dies at 69," Business Record (Des Moines), February 10, 2003.

, "From Farming to TV, Meredith Has Grown with America," Business Record (Des Moines), December 9, 2002, pp. 1+.

, "Meredith's Reach Extends Beyond Its Titles," Business Record (Des Moines), December 16, 2002, pp. 1, 89.

McDougall, Paul, "Meredith: Gatekeeper to the American Family," Folio, April 1, 1999, p. 30.

Melcher, Richard A., "Homes, GardensAnd a Tidy Turnaround," Business Week, August 22, 1994, pp. 5556.

Podems, Ruth, "Serving Families for 77 Years," Target Marketing, September 1989, pp. 1824.

Pollock, Jim, "Focused Style Has Lacy on Track for Meredith's Top Job," Des Moines Business Record, January 17, 2005, p. 8.

Schnuer, Jenna, "Publishing Executive of the Year: Stephen M. Lacy," Advertising Age, October 20, 2003, p. S12.

Smith, Stephanie, "The Mother of All Deals," MEDIAWEEK, May 30, 2005.

Weber, Joseph, "Bull's-Eye in the Heartland; Iowa's Meredith Rides the Home-and-Hearth Wave," Business Week, June 23, 2003, p. 54.

Weller, Sam, "Meredith Publishing and Home Depot's Effort Produces Bestsellers," Publishers Weekly, August 10, 1998, p. 242.

Williams, Scott, "Realtor Links Up with Chain," Seattle Times, July 15, 1992, p. B4.

Sara Pendergast
updates: A. Woodward; Frederick C. Ingram

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