Hartford Business Journal

January 25, 2016

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www.HartfordBusiness.com January 25, 2016 • Hartford Business Journal 5 Wiley aims to preserve CT's fourth estate By John Stearns jstearns@HartfordBusiness.com T he new publisher and CEO of the Hartford Courant Media Group is an adept media sales executive, staunch defender of journalism as the fourth estate and fan of fast cars. After high school, Tom Wiley spent three years racing and repairing Formula F2000 cars before his team lost its sponsorship. "I decided I was going to figure out pro- motions and sponsorship and advertising, so when I went back to school, that's why I went into advertising," Wiley said. After graduating from Michigan State University and landing a newspaper sales job in Lansing, Mich., his boss learned his love for cars and had him sell to auto dealers. It didn't seem like work for an admitted "gear head." Wiley, 47, tells that story to make a point: "I think management is not about systems and it's not about policies, it's about people. We manage people. … My first manger put me into selling car ads because he found out I was a car guy." Wiley rose through newspaper ranks to lead sales departments at local and cor- porate levels and be publisher. He worked in Lansing; Buffalo, N.Y.; Davenport, Iowa; St. Louis; and finally New Haven, where he was publisher of Digital First Media's (DFM) Connecticut publications, includ- ing the New Haven Register. Later he became executive vice president of sales for all DFM properties in 18 states. He joined the Courant earlier this month. He was New Haven's publisher during the Sandy Hook school massacre in Newtown. "It gives you perspective on the impor- tance of what we do," he said, adding no one else does the journalistic work newspapers and other traditional media outlets do. "If the newspaper industry doesn't do it, it's largely gone." He commended Connecticut Public Broadcasting's work, but said journalism and the fourth estate exist on the watch of newspapers like the Courant. Wiley said his leadership style is focused on improving front-line journal- ism and sales capabilities and how the business serves those groups, building on staff's existing skills. That includes using digital tools to help tell stories, evaluating coverage opportuni- ties and where to go deep on stories, and providing more local perspective on region- al and national stories, Wiley said. "On the sales side, it's about developing [salespeople's] skill sets so that they're sell- ing the advertisers what they want to buy and they're able to understand and communicate and evangelize the incredibly valuable audi- ences that we deliver, and frankly counter the sort of common knowledge that nobody reads the newspaper anymore," he said. "We have an 89 percent reach across our product suite," he said, referencing the news- paper, courant.com and other products. "Yet we apologize and we hang our heads … like it ain't what it used to be, but it's actually greater than it used to be — it's just much, much, much more complex." Matt DeRienzo, who was editor at the New Haven Register under Wiley, praised his former boss, calling him a renaissance man in terms of appreciating good journalism. "He gave us the leeway to do it right and to think about the long-term health of the newspaper and, really important, he supported the independence of the news- room and following journalistic ethics as it related to interaction with advertisers and the company," said DeRienzo, now interim executive director of LION Publishers, which represents independent online news sites, and a journalism teacher at Quinnipi- ac University and University of New Haven. On the business side, Wiley was inno- vative, DeRienzo said. Wiley also demonstrated creativity at Lee Enterprises in Davenport when he helped develop an audience-based selling system that calculated target rating points against frequency schedules in print, which wasn't common in print but proved suc- cessful, he said. The system later translated nicely into selling digital, he added. Wiley and his wife, Julie, live in Cheshire and have two girls, Miura, 16, and Sela, 14, and a boy, Cullen, 12. Their sports schedules often require mom in one city, dad in another. When not enjoying family, Wiley still likes hitting the gas, taking his Porsche Cayman to a track to "drive fast in circles and giggle." He points to a photo of a 1989 Porsche 911 Turbo he owned and apparently relished. "I never should have sold it," Wiley said. n H B J P H O T O | J O H N S T E A R N S Tom Wiley is seen in his office next to a photo of a 1989 Porsche 911 Turbo he once owned and wishes he hadn't sold. 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THINK • PLAN • BUILD for Healthcare hittlesey & Hadley accountants are different. We care about our clients, not just their numbers. Our insight and practical advice is original and has been etched into the region's business landscape for more than 50 years. Who wants ordinary outcomes? Our visionary ap- proach to auditing, tax planning, business and technology consulting renders innovative outcomes that will change the way you do business. Put your trust in advisors with real solutions. Let our knowledge create your next masterpiece. W Real Solutions Real Advisors It's An Art Whittlesey & Hadley, P.C. Hartford and Hamden, CT • Holyoke, MA www.whcpa.com Tom Wiley President and CEO, Hartford Courant Media Group Highest education: Bachelor's degree in advertising, Michigan State University, 1992. Executive insights: " We don't have any audience if we don't have any journalists, and we don't have any sales if we don't have any salespeople. The rest of the organization is really built around fulfilling the needs of those groups and removing the obstacles for them." EXECUTIVE PROFILE

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