Last week, news broke from publisher Bauer’s head office that Cleo and Dolly magazines would be merging their staff.
Though both magazines will continue to run separately, they will work under one editor-in-chief and with one set of staff . Half of the magazines’ current staff will lose their jobs including current Cleo editor, Sharri Markson who has stepped out of the ‘race’ for the editor-in-chief position across both titles, presumably leaving it to Dolly editor Tiffany Dunk.
It has also emerged that Cleo and Dolly will be using content translated from Bauer’s youth titles Joy and Bravo which the publishing house produce in Germany. Bauer insists there will still be Australian content in the mix.
This is just the latest difficult news in what has been a turbulent year in the Australian magazine industry.
Earlier this year Bauer Media also announced the closure of both Grazia and Madison magazines due to declining circulation.
With the talk of the decline in sales in current magazine climate, Mamamia’s founder and publisher who is the former Editor-In-Chief of Cosmopolitan, Cleo and Dolly has been fielding a lot of calls from media wanting comment about the current state of the younger end of the mag market. We decided to run some of her answers here in full for those interested in magazines.
Top Comments
What I find interesting is the decision to merge Dolly and Cleo rather than close the latter entirely. As I understand it, Cleo exists only because Packer initially couldn't get the rights to Cosmo so created an almost identical product and to this day they are essentially the same magazine with a slightly different name. Owning both products makes sense in a rising market but in a falling one it's a recipe for higher costs. Mia - any views?
And even more interesting is the cover of Cleo that features a story by Norman Mailer! Either Cleo's readers are much less intelligent than they were in the early 70s or the editors think they are - I cannot imagine Cleo or Cosmo today running a short story of any type, let alone by the leading literary figure of the age.
In the long run both of them are dead and Cosmo will follow. Part of it is as Mia said missing the internet boat and the chance to establish their brand online. But also I think their time has simply passed. Womens' mags have always had an equivocal relationship with feminism (and hard core feminists loathe them much more than lads mags) but I think they were an authentic part of a certain section of feminism embodied in new pink collar jobs (someone dismissed their audience as 'secretaries who work harder than their bosses and have multiple orgasms' which is a little unfair) and as that demographic declines and other opportunities for women have opened up, so too do they stop reading these magazines. Nothing particularly wrong or sad with it, just the way of changing tastes and markets.
I can't say I'm sad to see either go. Growing up as a dark skinned teenager during the 90's, it was always pretty depressing to never see any real efforts at diversity from either magazine, so discovering online magazines and blogs that were aimed at ALL women was a real blessing for me.