What weak newspaper economy? Not for ‘chief
revenue officer’
Even in this bleak newspaper economy,
being a “chief revenue officer” (whatever the hell that means) seems to be
thriving.
Andy Wiedlin went from chief revenue officer at BuzzFeed to
entrepreneur-in-residence (whatever the hell that means) at Andreessen
Horowitz.
Jed Hartman went from group
publisher for Time, Fortune and Money to chief revenue officer at the
Washington Post.
Hartman’s predecessor, Kevin Gentzel,
who lasted 18 months at the Post, has this rotating chief revenue officer gig
down pat. He went from Forbes to News Distribution Network to the Washington
Post in a less than three years. Hardly enough time to etch his name on his office
door.
Michael Rooney went from chief
revenue officer at the Wall Street Journal to the same title at Tribune
Publishing.
When Taylor Corp. bought the
Minneapolis Star Tribune this year, top Star Trib ad executive Jeff Griffing
became Taylor’s chief revenue officer.
Even sports teams get into the act.
The Cleveland Browns made Brent Stehlik their chief revenue officer in late
2012.
On another note, Pete Bale went from vice president and
general manager of digital operations at CNN International to CEO at the
Center for Public Integrity. There HAS to be a joke or punch line in there
somewhere.
I guess chief financial officer and bookkeeper
are relics of the past. A bean-counter by any other name is still a rose, apparently.
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