Extra, Extra, Read All About It!
Posted: 2/1/2011 | By: Deena Higgs Nenad
Ten seconds before the Santa Rosa High School Mighty Lions of New
Mexico came from behind to clinch their high school football
championship game, the publisher of The Guadalupe County Communicator
grabbed the marching band’s trumpet player and handed him a newspaper.
The headline was shocking: “Kings of the Jungle — Lions Win!”
“His
eyes bulged out,” said Communicator publisher and reporter M.E.
Sprengelmeyer, who encouraged the musician to sell the extra edition as a
band boosters’ fundraiser. The four-page section was snapped up in 30
minutes, and the newspaper and its one advertiser, Community First Bank,
snapped up a huge chunk of goodwill.
“We blew the town away,” said
Sprengelmeyer, who sold nearly 2,000 papers that afternoon at the away
game, while his page designer sold the rest back home on the Santa Rosa
streets. “That’s what I’m trying to do is get the town all jazzed up
about the printed paper.”
And he’s done just that. Ever since losing
his job as a Washington, D.C. correspondent for Denver’s Rocky Mountain
News two years ago, Sprengelmeyer has been trying to save print
journalism. He used his savings to buy The Communicator, a
2,100-circulation paper in a 2,700-person town. A town on Route 66 once
used for the freight train scene over the Pecos River railroad bridge in
the movie “The Grapes of Wrath.” A town so small, Sprengelmeyer walks
to most of his interviews.
But he’s been successful with his 16-page
weekly, increasing revenue some 75 percent over the previous year by
staying local and relevant. He continued a popular feature started by
his predecessor, printing a letter to Santa from every child in the
county. And he’s so involved in the local school, he bought students an
underwater robot.
Sprengelmeyer, who drives 99 miles weekly on a
press run, said if he’s not back with the papers by 2 p.m. Thursdays,
cross-armed customers are waiting for him. He doesn’t like to
disappoint.
Take the Lions football game. Sprengelmeyer knew the
“football crazy town” would appreciate the extra edition, but the team’s
record was 7-4, the game was 150 miles away, and opponent Tularosa High
School was undefeated. Not only that, he would have to spend $700 plus
staff time for something that might be a bust.
“I called up one
advertiser and said, ‘Look, I’m taking a gamble here. If we win, we both
look great. If we don’t, we never had this conversation,’”
Sprengelmeyer said. “I told him I’d eat the cost.”
In-house, the
secret paper was known as the “Dewey Defeats Tularosa” edition, because
if the Lions lost and the paper ended up on Facebook, they’d be as
embarrassed as the Chicago Daily Tribune was when it wrongly
printed “Dewey defeats Truman” in 1948.
The
day after the game, he sent an intern out to sell congratulatory ads.
He sold 38 of 40. And he made extra-edition posters, which businesses
happily displayed. A week later, he sold a record 30 ads at around $100
each.
Now he wants to convey to other community newspapers that they too can connect to their readers.
“What
did I risk?” he asked. “I risked $700. It was a coin flip. Anything you
do that just creates excitement about the paper is critical.”
Not
every publication needs to be global or universal, he said, adding that
he is “disgusted” with newspaper corporations that think they must slash
expenses and staff.
“If the revenues are suffering because people
are questioning the relevance of your paper, invest to make it more
relevant,” he said. “Do exciting things to make it more relevant. Do whatever you have to to make it more relevant. Or die.”