 There’s something uncomfortable about writing about media while you run a media company. If you write about your competitors, you’re reasonably assumed to be taking unfair shots; if you write about yourself, you’re inevitably talking your book. That’s part of why I’ve largely ceded this space to the great Max Tani, and gone back to writing about politics. But I am jumping back in here to share some Semafor news: As The Wall Street Journal reported, we’ve built a profitable business around our journalism, with $40 million in revenue and $2 million in profits, and just got a huge vote of confidence from sophisticated investors in a new funding round. So what’s the real story here? Is media no longer cursed? Conversely, are we in some kind of valuation bubble? Based on long experience, here’s my boring answer: News is a tough business, but its demise is overstated. The most discerning news consumers are desperate for information, insight, and the global dot-connecting that the best journalism does, and that technology can enhance but not replace. Semafor is competing with other healthy businesses like The Economist and the FT to produce news that respects our readers’ intelligence and the decisions they have to make, across emails, the web, and live convenings. We’ve been able to assemble enormously talented journalists and businesspeople. And we’ve rooted what we’re doing in deep respect for what in other industries is called the “customer”: both you, dear reader, and the sponsors who want to associate with the values of hard-hitting news coverage, in full knowledge they can’t control what that will entail. That’s a fragile tradition worth celebrating. The obvious, sometimes overlooked part of rebuilding the news in an era of technological revolution is what’s changing on the commercial side. As one veteran media entrepreneur wrote of Semafor this week, we’ve been obsessed with building “an actual business — with real margins, real discipline, and REAL DEMAND — before chasing scale (and never chasing OPTICS).” Finally, we’re so excited about what’s coming next. We’ll be investing in our journalism, and recruiting in particular for great journalists in Washington and those who cover global business; and we’ll be expanding the reach of our events from Silicon Valley to Asia to, of course, the great nations of media and marketing. Thank you so much for being part of Semafor’s community — we’re just getting started. Also: Another media investment of note, plus a Mixed Signals episode followers of the Lizza-Nuzzi saga definitely won’t want to miss. |