<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><feed
	xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:thr="http://purl.org/syndication/thread/1.0"
	xml:lang="en-US"
	>
	<title type="text">Felix Salmon | Vox</title>
	<subtitle type="text">Our world has too much noise and too little context. Vox helps you understand what matters.</subtitle>

	<updated>2019-02-27T14:44:27+00:00</updated>

	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/author/felix-salmon" />
	<id>https://www.vox.com/authors/felix-salmon/rss</id>
	<link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="https://www.vox.com/authors/felix-salmon/rss" />

	<icon>https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/08/vox_logo_rss_light_mode.png?w=150&amp;h=100&amp;crop=1</icon>
		<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Felix Salmon</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Reuters just got $10 billion to build a sustainable news business. How should it spend it?]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2018/3/16/17126486/reuters-news-funding-10-billion-dollars-money" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2018/3/16/17126486/reuters-news-funding-10-billion-dollars-money</id>
			<updated>2018-03-16T14:58:07-04:00</updated>
			<published>2018-03-16T09:00:01-04:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Business &amp; Finance" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Media" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Money" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Technology" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[It&#8217;s the biggest assignment in journalism: Take a set-in-its-ways 167-year-old news organization and reconfigure it radically so that it can compete on the global stage against countless young digital upstarts. If it&#8217;s done right, billions of people could end up with trusted, independent, impartial news they would never otherwise have had access to. On the [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
							<content type="html">
											<![CDATA[

						
<figure>

<img alt="" data-caption="Blackstone chairman and CEO Stephen Schwarzman | Rabbani and Solimene Photography/Getty Images for FIT" data-portal-copyright="Rabbani and Solimene Photography/Getty Images for FIT" data-has-syndication-rights="1" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/10433693/530073130.jpg.jpg?quality=90&#038;strip=all&#038;crop=0,0,100,100" />
	<figcaption>
	Blackstone chairman and CEO Stephen Schwarzman | Rabbani and Solimene Photography/Getty Images for FIT	</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>It&rsquo;s the biggest assignment in journalism: Take a set-in-its-ways 167-year-old news organization and reconfigure it radically so that it can compete on the global stage against countless young digital upstarts. If it&rsquo;s done right, billions of people could end up with trusted, independent, impartial news they would never otherwise have had access to. On the other hand, if it&rsquo;s done wrong &mdash; or if it&rsquo;s not assigned at all &mdash; then one of the world&rsquo;s most storied newswires might be entering its final years.</p>

<p>Welcome to Reuters, the news agency which faces, today, the most epochal decision in its history. If it doesn&rsquo;t scale back, radically and quickly, its core financial-news offering, then in 30 years&rsquo; time it will be on life support. If it does make the change, however, then it can not only save itself; it might even be able to help transform billions of people&rsquo;s access to trusted news.</p>

<p>Opportunities like this don&rsquo;t come along very often &mdash; indeed, to a first approximation, they <em>never</em> come along. But now, thanks to a $17 billion M&amp;A deal in which private equity giant Blackstone is taking over the Thomson Reuters financial-terminal business, Reuters News (which is not part of the deal) has found itself in possession of an astonishing $10 billion lottery ticket. The catch: This lottery ticket is timed to self-destruct.</p>

<p>Reuters, from its<strong> </strong>very beginning in 1851, made its name by delivering fast and accurate information to both newspapers and the financial markets. Over the years, the financial data part of the business grew to dwarf the news business, and the billions of dollars in revenue thrown off by financial terminals have helped to pay for a global news operation that now employs more than 3,000 journalists in some 200 locations around the world.</p>

<p>But once the terminal business becomes controlled by Blackstone, led by Stephen Schwarzman rather than by Thomson Reuters, that business has much less incentive to pay Reuters hundreds of millions of dollars a year for its news. After all, Thomson Reuters had significant control over what Reuters covered. By contrast, Reuters will and must have complete editorial independence from Blackstone.</p>

<p>The result is that if Schwarzman wants to rely on a news operation, he&rsquo;s either going to build one of his own, like his fellow billionaire Mike Bloomberg did, or else he&rsquo;s going to contract with a news provider who will let him specify exactly what he wants to pay for. The days when Reuters could rely on financial data terminals to pay for its global newsgathering are now numbered.</p>

<p>That would be bad news indeed for Reuters, were it not for one thing: As part of the deal, Blackstone has agreed to pay Reuters at least $325 million a year for its news. Better yet, that payment is guaranteed for at least 30 years. That&rsquo;s a minimum of $9.75 billion in total &mdash; the kind of money most news organizations can only dream of. (To put that number in context, the Washington Post was bought by Jeff Bezos for $0.25 billion.)</p>

<p>It&rsquo;s going to be very, very tempting for Reuters to treat this as a no-big-deal change. It received about $325 million from the terminal business in 2017; it will do so again in 2018, and the year after that, and the year after that. Nothing&rsquo;s broken, so why bother fixing anything? A ship the size of Reuters has a very strong tendency to just keep on steaming ahead in the same way it&rsquo;s always done, and that has to be the expectation inside and outside the newsroom today.</p>

<p>But that would be a fatal mistake. Thomson Reuters won&rsquo;t share with me the contractual details of the agreement it made with Blackstone, nor will they tell me what if anything Reuters News is obliged to provide in return for the $9.75 billion. But it&rsquo;s entirely possible that those obligations are entirely nominal. Blackstone would agree to pay $325 million a year for Reuters News even if it valued that news at zero.</p>

<p>After all, if Blackstone didn&rsquo;t agree to the payment, there&rsquo;s no way the Thomson Reuters board of directors would ever have agreed to give up control of the terminal business. The board is already deeply split, with the board chairman, David Thomson, <a href="https://www.wsj.com/articles/thomson-reuters-chairman-criticized-its-17-billion-deal-with-blackstone-1518692400">opposed to the deal</a>. If the very existence of Reuters News was put into jeopardy by the sale, the deal could simply never be done. Instead, Thomson Reuters&rsquo;s board has managed to grant Reuters News a true runway to long-term sustainability.</p>

<p>Reuters, newly armed with its amazing guaranteed income stream, <em>must</em> embark on a reinvention which will allow it to maintain its size and scope when the money runs out in 2048. With the news agency and other media products only producing revenues of around $300 million, the hundreds of millions of dollars coming in from the terminal have always been crucial &mdash;&nbsp;and up until now, the terminal business has always, in one way or another, paid that shortfall. Going forward, it won&rsquo;t.</p>

<p>There&rsquo;s only one option, then, for the Reuters leadership: To declare that &ldquo;no effort shall be spared to expand, develop and adapt the news and other services and products of Thomson Reuters so as to maintain its leading position in the international news and information business.&rdquo; That shouldn&rsquo;t be too hard, since it&rsquo;s right there in the organization&rsquo;s foundational <a href="https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/about-us/trust-principles.html">Trust Principles</a>.</p>

<p>What would such an expansion, development and adaptation look like? A lot of people will have ideas on that front, but one long-term trend is undeniable: The world&rsquo;s middle-class news consumers are no longer going to be based mainly in Europe and North America.</p>

<p>Blackstone&rsquo;s billions should be able to give Reuters the ability to reach <a href="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/literate-and-illiterate-world-population">billions of emerging news consumers</a> directly, and to be able to compete with broadcasters (CNN, BBC, Al Jazeera, Star) that are hobbled by astronomical per-story costs. Spend some of that $325 million each year on tactical acquisitions and a bunch more on aggressive international expansion; pretty soon Reuters can become the first best source of news for a planet that is just now <a href="https://ourworldindata.org/literacy">emerging</a> into broad literacy.</p>

<p>At the same time, move out of all those expensive offices in global financial centers around the world, wired to provide up-to-the-second information on market prices, and stop hiring journalists based on their ability to understand yield curves and central bankers. Instead, tell the stories that domestic news consumers demand, delivered directly to their phones in a manner they can come to rely upon.</p>

<p>That&rsquo;s a significant change in skillset, which will probably require Reuters buying digital-native news organizations in most of the countries it&rsquo;s operating in. Wonderfully, it now has the wherewithal to do so. And it&rsquo;s much better to spend that money on preparing for the future than it is to squander it providing financial news for the benefit of an ungrateful Stephen Schwarzman.</p>
<hr class="wp-block-separator" />
<p><small><em>This article originally appeared on Recode.net.</em></small></p>
						]]>
									</content>
			
					</entry>
			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Felix Salmon</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Why salaries shouldn&#8217;t be secret]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2014/5/15/5719916/why-salaries-shouldnt-be-secret" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2014/5/15/5719916/why-salaries-shouldnt-be-secret</id>
			<updated>2019-02-27T09:44:27-05:00</updated>
			<published>2014-05-15T09:50:11-04:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="archives" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[No one knows exactly why Jill Abramson was fired as editor of the NYT. But one thing is clear: she was fired not long after she started asking questions about the amount that she had been paid, over the course of her career in NYT senior management, compared to the amount that her male predecessor [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
							<content type="html">
											<![CDATA[

						
<figure>

<img alt="" data-caption="Jill Abramson, the former editor of the New York Times, got into a confrontation with management over her pay. | Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for the New York Times" data-portal-copyright="Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for the New York Times" data-has-syndication-rights="1" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/14718247/485951317.0.1411745544.jpg?quality=90&#038;strip=all&#038;crop=0,0,100,100" />
	<figcaption>
	Jill Abramson, the former editor of the New York Times, got into a confrontation with management over her pay. | Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for the New York Times	</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>No one knows exactly <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/currency/2014/05/why-jill-abramson-was-fired.html">why Jill Abramson was fired</a> as editor of the NYT. But one thing is clear: she was fired not long after she started asking questions about the amount that she had been paid, over the course of her career in NYT senior management, compared to the amount that her male predecessor was paid.</p>

<p>Very few people like to talk about how much money they make &mdash; especially not people who earn a lot of money. Since companies tend to be run by people who earn a lot of money, the result is a culture of silence and secrecy when it comes to pay. Such a culture clearly served the NYT ill in this case. If the salaries of senior NYT management had not been a closely-guarded secret, then Abramson would not have been shocked when she found out how much Bill Keller made before her, and Arthur Sulzberger would not have reacted badly to Abramson&rsquo;s questions about pay.</p>

<p><em>Felix Salmon is a senior editor at Fusion.</em></p>
<p><q aria-hidden="true" class="center"><span>secrecy about pay is bad for women, who are worse at asking for raises than men are</span></q></p>
<p>Indeed, secrecy surrounding pay is generally a bad idea for any organization. <a href="http://www.bhorowitz.com/how_to_minimize_politics_in_your_company">Ben Horowitz</a> has the best explanation of why that is: it can&rsquo;t help but foment poisonous internal politics. But there are other reasons, too.</p>

<p>For one thing, secrecy about pay is bad for women, who are worse at asking for raises than men are. If men secretly ask for raises and secretly get them, while women don&rsquo;t, then that helps to explain, at least in part, why men end up earning more than women.</p>

<p>Secrecy around pay is also a great way to allow managers to &mdash; consciously or unconsciously &mdash; play favorites with their staff. When you&rsquo;re deciding how much to pay your employees, you want to be as transparent as possible. A not-great way of being transparent is the civil service method: set narrow pay bands for every level of seniority, and then declare that the only way to get a substantial raise is to get a promotion. The problem with this kind of system is that it begets the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Principle">Peter Principle</a>: everybody gets promoted to a position of incompetence.</p>

<p>Still, there&rsquo;s quite a lot to be said for a system, like the civil service, in which everybody knows what everybody else is making. It makes conversations around pay much easier, and reduces craziness like <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2005/04/04/050404fa_fact?currentPage=all">this</a>:</p>
<blockquote class="wp-block-quote has-text-align-none is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>He sat down opposite me and then he told me the job was mine. &#8220;Do you want it?&#8221; Yes, I said, a little startled. The job, he explained, came with a guaranteed salary for three years. After that, I would be on my own: I&rsquo;d make what I brought in from my patients and would pay my own expenses. So, he went on, how much should we pay you?</p>

<p>After all those years of being told how much I would either pay (about forty thousand dollars a year for medical school) or get paid (about forty thousand dollars a year in residency), I was stumped. &#8220;How much do the surgeons usually make?&#8221; I asked.</p>

<p>He shook his head. &#8220;Look,&#8221; he said, &#8220;you tell me what you think is an appropriate income to start with until you&rsquo;re on your own, and if it&rsquo;s reasonable that&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;ll pay you.&#8221; He gave me a few days to think about it.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>More generally, a system whereby salaries are set internally, according to the value of the person and the position, is a system which doesn&rsquo;t find itself constantly buffeted by unpredictable exogenous factors.</p>
<p><q aria-hidden="true" class="center"><span>virtually everybody in corporate America has internalized the primacy of capital over labor</span></q></p><p class="caption"> </p>
<p>We&rsquo;ve all worked in companies, I&rsquo;m sure, where the only way to get a substantial raise is to confront management with a job offer from somewhere else. That&rsquo;s clearly a dreadful way to run a company, since it gives all employees a huge incentive to spend a lot of time looking for work elsewhere, even if they&rsquo;re very happy where they are.</p>

<p>One of the problems is that virtually everybody in corporate America &mdash; from senior management all the way down to entry-level employees &mdash; has internalized the primacy of capital over labor. There&rsquo;s an unspoken assumption that any given person should be paid the minimum amount necessary to prevent that person from leaving. The simplest way to calculate that amount is to simply see what the employee could earn elsewhere, and pay ever so slightly more than that. If a company pays a lot more than the employee could earn elsewhere, then the excess is considered to be wasted, on the grounds that you could get the same employee, performing the same work, for less money.</p>

<p>How is it that most Americans still believe in this way of looking at pay, even as we reach <a href="http://corporate.ford.com/news-center/press-releases-detail/677-5-dollar-a-day">the 100th anniversary of Henry Ford&rsquo;s efficiency wages</a>? Ford was the first &mdash; but by no means the last &mdash; businessman to notice that if you pay well above market rates, you get loyal, hard-working employees who rarely leave. Many contemporary companies have followed suit, from Goldman Sachs to Google to Bloomberg: a well-paid workforce is a happy workforce, which can build a truly world-beating company.</p>

<p>Such companies are, sadly, still rare, however. That&rsquo;s bad for employees &mdash; and it&rsquo;s bad for the economy as a whole. We need wages to go up: they&rsquo;ve been stagnant, for the bottom 90% of the population, for some 35 years now. We also need employee turnover to go down: employees become more valuable, in general, the longer they stay with a company &mdash; and it takes a long time, and a lot of human resources, to train a new employee up to the point at which they really understand how their new employer works.</p>

<p>There are two things I look for, then, in any company. The first is high entry-level wages. They&rsquo;re a sign that a company values all of its employees highly; that it likes to be able to pick anybody it wants to join its team; and that it considers new employees to be a long-term investment, rather than a short-term source of cheap labor.</p>

<p>The second thing I look for is a system whereby managers regularly earn less money than the people who report to them. You shouldn&rsquo;t need to get promoted to a position of incompetence just in order to earn more: you should get paid well for doing the job you do best, even if that doesn&rsquo;t involve managing anybody. The whole &#8220;<em>I</em> work for <em>you</em>&#8221; rhetoric of touchy-feely CEOs is actually true, or should be true: value is created by talented workers on the front lines, not by middle management, and it&rsquo;s management&rsquo;s job to support those workers any way they can, including by paying them as much as possible.</p>
<p><q aria-hidden="true" class="right"><span>let&rsquo;s bring pay rates out into the open, where they belong</span></q></p>
<p>If you have a company with high entry-level wages and where the front-line talent often gets paid better than the managers, then you&rsquo;re probably in a pretty efficient industry with relatively low turnover. On the other hand, if you have a company with low entry-level wages and where pay invariably rises the higher you go up the org chart, then you probably have a company where managers spend altogether too much time hiring and training people to do jobs they could probably do better themselves.</p>

<p>If you work for a company where everybody knows what everybody else is earning, then it&rsquo;s going to be very easy to see what&rsquo;s going on. You&rsquo;ll see who the stars are, you&rsquo;ll see what kind of skills and talent the company rewards, and you&rsquo;ll see whether this is the kind of place where you fit in. You&rsquo;ll also see whether men get paid more than women, whether managers are generally overpaid, and whether behavior like threatening to quit is rewarded with big raises. What&rsquo;s more, because management knows that everybody else will see such things, they&rsquo;ll be much less likely to do the kind of secret deals which are all too common in most companies today.</p>

<p>So let&rsquo;s bring pay rates out into the open, where they belong. Doing so will create better companies, staffed with better-paid and more productive employees. Which is surely exactly what America needs, in a world where it can never compete by racing to the bottom.</p>

<p><em>Felix Salmon is a senior editor at Fusion.</em></p>
						]]>
									</content>
			
					</entry>
	</feed>
