Free Newsletter Subscription
        BNC All Access

Market Eye: Swinging to a Profit

Businesses, Forbes and presidential hopefuls love Des Moines

By Michael Malone -- Broadcasting & Cable, 7/16/2012 12:01:00 AM

What’s Working in Des Moines-Ames

If you’re looking for mounds of scrap paper in the KCCI newsroom these days, you’ll have a hard time finding them. The station recently switched to a (mostly) paperless newsroom, where scripts, and their countless revisions, are circulated electronically, the anchors reading them on iPads.

It’s about workflow efficiency and trimming needless costs. “We’ll recoup costs inside of a year,” said Dave Busiek, KCCI news director.

Busiek acknowledged that KCCI is hardly the first station to shift to a paperless newsroom, but said the new system nonetheless feels “modern.” The practice may be more common in larger markets, but is fairly progressive for DMA No. 72.

As of late June, some of the more tactile talent was still clinging to their hard copies. “We’re closing the door on scripts in a week or so,” Busiek said. “We’re still transitioning a couple of anchors.” —MM
Click here to read more Market Eye articles

Swing state status can come and go. Pennsylvania, for one, isn’t the presidential battleground it used to be. Iowa, on the other hand, is adorned in purple for the foreseeable future.

The presidential spending arrived before the Iowa caucuses that mark the start of the election season in January, and it really hasn’t stopped. Local station sales execs think big when it comes to forecasting, but sometimes the spending still surprises. “We’ve not seen a signifi cant downturn in spending since the caucuses,” says Dale Woods, WHO president and general manager. “It gets bigger and bigger each month.”

Des Moines-Ames offers two very different employment cultures: one focused on banking and government, and the agricultural one that has long defi ned the region. That duality has helped DMA No. 72 hold up amidst economic downturns. Corporations with a major presence here include media giant Meredith and Wells Fargo. Station GMs like to point out the state capital’s frequent appearance in various media ‘Best of’ lists; Forbes magazine, for example, rated Des Moines No. 4 on its Best Places for Businesses and Careers.

“Someone here must have a relative at Forbes,” jokes Russ Hamilton, vice president and general manager at WOI. “They keep ranking us the best city for jobs, professionals, etc.”

Hearst Television’s KCCI has long dominated the ratings, but the May sweeps was tighter than execs at the CBS affiliate would like. KCCI won the major news races, but within-a-point contests in the morning and 6 p.m. suggest a strong WHO. The 10 p.m. race had KCCI at a 15.1 household rating/35 share and WHO at 10.1/23. KCCI doubled the ratings of WHO, an NBC affiliate, and WOI, an ABC station, in primetime.

Dave Busiek, news director at KCCI, believes Nielsen under-delivered its sample in May. “You see funny [ratings] books every now and then,” Busiek says. “This is a funny book.” (A Nielsen representative said the market’s sample met requirements for data quality, and noted that fluctuations in sample size happen.)

KCCI has thrived on enterprise reporting and well-tenured talent. “We are the breaking news station,” says Busiek. “People tend to stick around here.”

Local TV owns WHO. Citadel Communications owns WOI. Sinclair has Fox affiliate KDSM, and Pappas owns CW affiliate KCWI. Mediacom is the market’s major cable operator.

Some local stations enjoyed national plaudits in June. KCCI claimed the prestigious Murrow Award for overall excellence in markets 50- plus, while WHO got a Murrow for journalism excellence. Strong news means even more attention from the political hopefuls; Amanda Hull, KCCI general sales manager, mentions “extreme pressure on inventory” at the station.

Changes are coming. KCCI is transitioning to a paperless newsroom. WOI, which recently completed a newsroom build-out, this fall will add the syndicated Jeff Probst and Katie.

WHO main anchor John Bachman is retiring at the end of November, with weekend morning anchor and Iowa native Dan Winters moving up. “He’s demonstrated tremendous leadership and anchoring ability in the last five years,” Woods says of Winters. “And to have somebody homegrown is a wonderful asset.”

WHO has also elevated its weather strategy, launching a severe weather app and S-band radar, which improves content on its recently rebranded “Iowa’s Weather Channel” multicast. The 24-hour channel also dabbles in high school football, with live scores and commentary.

General managers offer abundant reasons why Des Moines is a fine place to live, including the business environment and friendly people. That famed heartland bonhomie may be put to the test after people have been subject to seemingly endless political ads for close to a year.

“It’s been a much more robust political situation than we anticipated,” says Woods. “Iowa is one of those magical swing states.”

E-mail comments to mmalone@nbmedia.com and follow him on Twitter: @BCMikeMalone
Talkback
Related Content

No related content found.

Also by Michael Malone

Most Popular Pages
    No Top Articles
Newbay Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Most Recent Resources

Advertisement
More Content
  • Blogs
  • Photos
  • Podcasts

Michael Malone

Station to Station

Michael Malone
July 11, 2012
TWC Imports Nexstar Signals For Displaced Hearst TV Viewers
It’s a busy week for retrans battles, and Time Warner Cable is working...
More

Jon Lafayette

Currency

Jon Lafayette
July 10, 2012
Not the Best Time for a Viacom Carriage War
With ratings down at several of its key networks, this might not be the best time...
More

0716 01 NBC Olympics_sm

Schmooze Gallery: July 16, 2012

View photos from recent industry events such as the NBC Olympics press conference and the 2012 BET Awards...
0709 01 Showtime_sm

Schmooze Gallery: July 9, 2012

View photos from recent industry events such as the 39th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards and the New York State Broadcasters Association Executive Conference...
0625 On Demand 01 Sehring_sm

Schmooze Gallery: On Demand Summit

View photos from B&C/MCN's fourth annual On Demand Summit, held June 20 at the Sentry Centers in New York.



Advertisement
About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2013 NewBay Media, LLC. 28 East 28th Street, 12th floor, New York, NY 10016 T (212) 378-0400 F (212) 378-0470
Use of this website is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy