Louise
Roy President & Chief Executive Director Telemedia Inc.
(First published May 28/98)
Louise Roy has one mission: to make Telemedia Inc.
grow.
The $200 million company, currently with 13 magazines and
22 radio stations, grew, with little exception, for 30 years
under former president Philippe deGaspé Beaubien. He
had taken it from a few declining radio stations and one TV
station to its current status before retiring in 1997.
Roy's job is to take it to the next step, in company with
the three de Gaspé Beaubien adult children who are
now joint shareholders of the Montreal-based company.
Telemedia reverted to a privately-owned company in late 1997
after more than a dozen years as a public firm.
Roy had been named president in June/97 after moving
through a series of high-profile senior executive positions
locally and internationally. Her background has been one of
senior positions within service industries.
Following studies in sociology with a Ph.D. from the
University of Wisconsin, the Quebec City native worked in
various capacities with the Quebec Department of Transport
as well as being a lecturer at the Université de
Montréal.
But it was her nomination in 1985 as president and CEO of
the Montreal Urban Community Transit Corporation that thrust
her into prominence. The MUCTC employs 8,000 employees and
operates the full bus and subway network and connecting
commuter train lines in the Montreal region. Her goal was to
make it more customer and service oriented.
Roy moved to the Laurentian Group of companies in 1992 as
senior vice-president financial and customer service,
developing and coordinating corporate policies and human
resource management for the banking and insurance
institution.
Following the Laurentian Group's merger the Mouvement
Desjardins, Telemedia came calling, but Roy had barely moved
in to take responsibility for its Quebec division when Air
France, which had had a loss of $4 billion Cdn., drew her to
Paris, as executive vice-president of marketing and quality,
to effect a turn-around of the company. That was 1996, and
when she left to move back to Telemedia, the airline was out
of the red and sporting a $200 million Cdn. profit.
Telemedia: A Strong Culture and Many Entrepreneurs
When Roy moved back into Telemedia, it seemed publicly
that she was moving into a sphere of business little known
to her, but in truth, she had sat on the Board of Directors
of the company during her three years with Air France.
" By being on the Board, I got to know Telemedia and its
properties quite well," says Roy. " Telemedia is a company
with a strong culture focused on customers, clients,
creativity and responsibility.
"My job involves strategy, locating resources and
investments and making budget decisions, but to have a job
like this also means being able to communicate and manage
people. We must be artists in terms of being creative in the
management of people.
"There are two businesses here: radio and publishing, and
both are committed to creativity and responsibility. We have
a good mix of young and seniors, and there's not a lot of
movement. It's a long, lean operation. People must be very
flexible and ready to be hands-on.
"The staff is autonomous. If people are not
entrepreneurs, they have no place in the company. With the
downsizing that has taken place, we have a lot of people who
have had to question themselves and take on new habits and
more than one hat.
"We encourage our people here to know what's going on, to
take responsibility and to take charge."
In earlier years as a private company, Telemedia had lost
several senior executives because of the inability to become
shareholders - notably Normand Beauchamp and Paul-Emile
Beaulne who went on to head Radiomutuel, and Pierre
Béland and Pierre Arcand who now own Radio stations
CKVL-AM, CKOI-FM, CIQC-AM and CFQR-FM. With Telemedia having
reverted to a private company again, Roy as senior executive
is not a shareholder, but, she says, "There are ways to have
long-term incentives."
A Workaholic
An admitted workaholic, Roy finds that one of the things
that cut into what would be free time is the great demand
for the company, and her personal participation, in
charitable causes.
"That's always the case for CEOs," she says. "Because of
Telemedia's product mix, we get particularly involved in
women's service causes, plus theatre and the 'Y'. And I have
particular interest in artists."
This latter interest stems in part from the fact that her
husband is an artist and many of her friends are painters.
"I try to lead a balanced life," she says. "I enjoy the
country, walking and swimming, and most of all, I try to
reserve time for friendship. I value it most."
She enjoys cooking for friends, and says she's noted for
her 'lapin au moutarde.'
Acquisitions on the Menu
Time for such pursuits is limited, however, and with the
new Radio Policy recently announced by the Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to allow
an increased number of stations in some markets by one owner
(see Pubzone stories, May 4/98), Roy has her eye out for
acquisitions in the radio sector, the section of Telemedia
that accounts for about $80 million of the $200 million
business.
"The radio market is very fragmented, and internal
growth, while being attained, has been hard," she says. "The
partnership of Telemedia stations with Radiomutuel helped
bring the AM stations to profitability, and our FM networks
have been growing. For example, Rock-Détente
(CITE-FM) was 6th in adults 30+ market six years ago and
it's now first. And in the English market, EZ Rock is coming
up, with Toronto, Orillia, London and Moncton now with the
format. The format of The Fan (CJCL-AM), Telemedia
Toronto-based all-sports stations, could also be extended to
other stations, because we have the skills, competence and
expertise of running talk radio, although there are no plans
at the moment.
" But this new CRTC ruling will allow growth by
acquisitions."
In terms of magazines, the company has grown in many
cases through partnerships.
Elle and
Eating Well
(the latter in the U.S.) are through partnership with
Hachette Filipacchi Magazines;
TV Hebdo with
Trustmedia;
Sympatico NetLife with MediaLinx. In
addition, the company acquired an interest in Zoom Media.
"Partnerships have been good for us," says Roy. "They
were good solutions to make at the time, because it's better
to have 50% of something that works than nothing at all."
Fifteen years ago, if Telemedia launched a magazine, it
was given a year to break even or disappear. Today, it's
more like a three-year shot, says Roy.
"We're looking at future opportunities, but investing in
a magazine today is a long-term investment, and faced with
great competition with other media. To invest in a brand for
long-term survival means it must be well-targeted and
nurtured.
"Canadian like to read magazines with Canadian content,
so if you have good brands, you can do well.
Our Canadian
Living, Homemaker's
Magazine, our western books
(
Western Living, Vancouver Magazine) that are growing
with the economy in western Canada, are cases in point.
"But Canada is a mature market. Of magazines sold in
English-Canada, 80% are American, 20% Canadian. And we can't
export our best titles. Brands like
Canadian Living
and
Vancouver Magazine would go nowhere in the U.S..
"In Canada, readers are loyal to good Canadian magazines.
That's why we hope that the Canadian government will find a
good solution, agreeable to all, to help protect the
Canadian magazine industry in light of the World Trade
Organization ruling last year." (The WTO struck down an 80%
excise tax Canada levied on revenues from split-run editions
of U.S. magazines sold in Canada. François de
Gaspé Beaubien, president of Telemedia's North
American Publishing, represents the company in dealing with
the government on the topic).
Products Better Known Than Company
But while the government level recognizes Telemedia as a
whole, the general public connects more with its individual
properties, a situation that suits Roy just fine.
"We haven't put emphasis on the corporate image. For a
lot of people, Telemedia is CKAC. For others it's
Madame
au Foyer or
Canadian Living. It's not bad when
people know our products. I'd be upset if everyone knew who
Telemedia was and noone knew our properties. The company has
always built on loyalty to our products.
"We're a decentralized company, with each property having
its own bottom line. Our emphasis recentlyhas been in
updating, changing, modernizing each of our magazines. The
latest has been
Homemaker's with efforts to switch
it from free distribution to paid subscription. It's a big
challenge, like launching a new book, but it's going well.
We have 600,000 paid subscribers out of approximately 1
million total distribution and we'll grow that. It started
at the end of 1997. The magazine will eventually be on
newsstand racks, as well."
With the turnaround done on the magazines, Roy's
attention turns to her mission: to grow the company.
"It's time," she says. "It's time to make moves."
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