overview
ABC, SBS, BBC
Advance
Annenberg
AOL
APN
Astors
Aust Networks
Beaverbrook
Bertelsmann
Black
Cox
Disney
DMG
Elsevier
Fairfax
Financial Press
Fleet Street
Hearst
Liberty
Maxwell
News & Murdoch
New Yorker
NY Times
Packer
Sony
Thomson
Time Warner
Tribune
US Networks
Viacom
Vivendi
W Post
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Thomson
Conrad Black's major Canadian rival,
the multinational Thomson group, in mid February announced that it was
essentially abandoning print in favour of electronic publishing and in
mid-July disposed of its remaining travel businesses for several billion dollars.
the company
Based in Toronto, the group is still
predominantly owned by the Thomson family, worth upwards of US$16
billion. Roy Thomson - once described as "an animated cash register"
- bought a Canadian radio station in the thirties, thereafter describing his
favourite music as "the sound of radio commercials at $10 a
whack." Characterized by some as a devout
newspaperman, he quipped that "I
buy newspapers to make money to buy more newspapers to make more
money." When asked by Nikita Khrushchev what good all the money
would do him, since he couldn't take it with him, Thomson replied
"Then I'm not going".
The empire by that stage encompassed more than 200
newspapers in the US, Canada
and the UK (including the flagship Globe & Mail in Toronto and the Times and Sunday Times
in London), North Sea
oil, packaged tours and television broadcasting ("a licence
to print money"). Like Beaverbrook and Astor he became a British citizen and
gained a title.
On his death in 1976 son Kenneth restructured the
empire: oil and television was sold, the two Times were bought
by Rupert Murdoch after management failure to get a grip on the Fleet
Street unions meant they were a licence to lose money, the travel
business went upstream as services to agents rather than retailing. In
the past five years the group has been engulfing specialist publishers,
online and offline, as part of its strategy to become a dominant player in
global online data services to lawyers, scientists, financial services and other
professions.
Studies
Roy Thomson's quirky After I Was
Sixty: A Chapter of Autobiography (London, Collins 64) and Russell Braddon's Roy
Thomson of Fleet Street (London, Collins 65) offer a view of the
founder and the early empire.
Ken Thomson: Canada's Enigmatic Billionaire (Toronto, Burgher 96)
by Vic Pearson is the standard hagiography - Thomson collects art, is
kind to dogs and small children, doesn't eat journalists for breakfast -
decorated with vignettes of the billionaire's meanness such as bulk
purchasing of stale hamburger buns and cadging lifts from staff.
Big on gossip, short on business analysis.
Susan Goldenberg's The Thomson Empire:
A MultiBillion Dollar Canadian Dynasty (London, Sidgwick &
Jackson 84) is a standard corporate biography. Richard Doyle's Hurley-Burley: A
Time At The Globe (Toronto, Macmillan Canada 90) and David Hayes' Power
& Influence: The Globe & Mail and the News Revolution
(Toronto, Key Porter 92) are more insightful.
holdings
The changing structure of the
group - pieces being bought, moved around, sold off - means that it's
easiest to highlight major products:
Financial publications and services include American Banker,
AutEx, Electronic Settlements Group (ESG), First Call, IFR, ILX
Systems, PORTIA, Securities Data and The
Globe & Mail.
Thomson Healthcare provides information, drug databases and
communications to pharmaceutical companies, hospitals, physicians and
managed-care organizations. Its American
Health Consultants is the world's largest publisher of
healthcare newsletters. Medical
Economics publishes healthcare magazines, directories,
references, newsletters, databases, and new media.
Thomson's Legal & Regulatory
unit - competing with Reed-Elzevier and Kluwers-Wolter - is one of the
global 'big three' legal,
regulatory, tax and accounting publishers. Print and online brands
include Westlaw,
Sweet & Maxwell, Thomson & Thomson, Editorial Aranzadi, Carswell
and RIA. Graham
& Whiteside is a leading international publisher of corporate and
professional information.
Looking somewhat
stodgy (and to be flogged off during the next wave of restructuring?)
venerable US publisher Charles
Scribner's Sons is increasingly concentrating on reference books.
Directory giant Gale Group and Jane's (technoporn for 12 year olds and
specialist reference material about defence,
transportation and law enforcement) look more secure. Macmillan Reference
USA was acquired after the Maxwell empire got lost at sea and is now to
include parts of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. It includes Primary Source
Microfilm, a major humanities, social sciences and news archive. The Taft
Group publishes reference works on the philanthropic sector. Thorndike
Press is a major publisher of Large Print editions
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