1997 ASBPE Editorial Salary
Survey
Good news in this year's survey:
pay increases for business editors are running ahead of inflation.
The American Society of Business Press Editors (ASBPE)
periodically conducts surveys of its members and other business
press editors to determine salary levels and working conditions
in the profession, and to profile the companies and publications
for whom business press editors work. This current survey was
conducted during the first half of 1997, and it is the first study
of editorial pay in the trade and professional press exclusively
in 10 years. No publishers, sales personnel or freelance writers
were included in the sample.
ASBPE believes the results of this survey accurately
mirror the contemporary makeup of the editorial side of the business
press in terms of compensation, tenure, responsibility and performance.
Further, the results reliably reflect the high level of job responsibility
and job titles among Society's membership.
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF BUSINESS PUBLICATIONS
AND PUBLISHING COMPANIES
Despite some widely circulated publications, most
business and professional titles - over 80 percent - have fewer
than 80,000 subscribers. Nearly half have circulations of between
10,000 and 50,000. Most (70 percent) are monthlies, but weekly,
biweekly, bimonthly and other frequencies are also represented
in the survey returns.
As the circulation figures might suggest, most of
the publications represented do not generate large revenues. Nearly
two-thirds of the publications polled for this study have revenues
of under $2.5 million, and more than a third have revenues of
less than $1 million. Somewhat surprising, given the fact that
most respondents were senior editors, is the fact that 15 percent
said they did not know the annual revenue figure for their publications.
This statistic could either indicate lack of interest in business
issues or, equally alarming in ASBPE's view, a reluctance among
publishers and publication managers to share business information
with editors.
EDITORIAL TITLES, TRAINING, AND RESPONSIBILITIES
Definitions:
Editorial Director, Editor-in-Chief:
This position supervises both multiple publications and single
publications. Responsibilities include making editorial policy
and supervising others who report to this position.
Editor, Executive Editor: This
individual is directly responsible for editorial content and production
of a single publication. He or she reports to either the editor-in-chief
or the publisher, depending on the structure of the organization
or publication group. Often, he or she is responsible for policy
making. Executive Editors may also be non-management positions
with industry expertise.
Managing Editor: This
title coordinates all facets of assembling and/or producing the
editorial product and reports directly to the Editor, Executive
Editor or Editor-in-Chief. In some instances, this is a writing
position.
Staff Editor: Usually
a writing or publication specialty position (e.g., News Editor,
Features Editor, Production Editor), this person contributes to
the overall content of publication either in an editorial or editorial
production capacity.
WORKING CONDITIONS AND SALARIES
In most cases (59 percent), a 40-hour work week
is the normal work schedule among business publishers. Thirty-four
percent of respondents indicated a shorter work week, and only
7 percent indicated a longer one. But as in most industries, the
business press demands - and usually gets - more than the official
number of work hours. Only six percent of editors said they work
no extra hours and 21 percent said they average 10 hours or more
of overtime weekly.
There is a considerable pay range within job titles,
especially at higher levels. The range for staff editors is relatively
small, while that of a senior editorial title varies by as much
as $20,000. Factors that influence this range include experience,
seniority, number of publications supervised and circulation.
Median salaries move significantly upwards when professional experience,
diversity of publishing skills, age and employment at a publication
with larger circulation (50,000+) are factored in.
Pay increases in 1997 are running ahead of general
inflation for most business press editors. Eight-four percent
of those surveyed scored raises of 3 percent or better, and 18
percent received pay hikes of 6 percent or more. An alarming 12
percent of respondents received no salary increase in calendar
year 1997, however.
GENDER EQUITY?
Disparity between salaries of men and women continues
to be a fact of life in the business press - as it is in most
businesses. At the entry level, men average 9 percent more than
women in the same job group. At upper levels (Editor, Editor-in-Chief
and Editorial Director), however, the difference drops to around
5 percent. Disparity at the upper editorial management levels
may not be completely attributable to gender bias, however. Experience,
education and, especially, tenure influence pay as well, and it
is difficult to say with certainty how large a role, if any, gender
bias plays.
There can be little doubt, however, that women are
making dramatic inroads into upper editorial management positions.
Contrary to some published surveys - including past ASBPE surveys
- this study finds that over the past 15 years, women have moved
rapidly into senior positions in the business press. This survey
of primarily senior editors drew a 51:49 ratio of male to female
respondents - a change from the 57:43 ratio in a similar survey
just five years ago and a 60:40 ratio 10 years ago.
SIGNS OF THE TIMES
Job Security
With the current spate of acquisition and consolidation
in the business and professional press, one would expect job security
to be a concern among business press editors. Some of the senior
editors who participated in this study in fact expressed trepidation,
but most indicated no genuine concern over job security. The current
strong economy may account for some of this lack of concern. Further,
senior editors may be more immune to the vagaries of the editorial
job market than their more junior colleagues. Perhaps, on the
heels of a period of rampant downsizing in American business,
editors have simply come to accept a certain level of insecurity.
Interestingly, there seems to be a geographical
bias in these figures. Most of the "uncertain" and "reasonably
solid" responses came from the Northeast.
New Opportunities
The rapid development of online communications has
created the first new job title in the business press in several
decades. The all-new title and responsibility, "Web Editor,"
is one area where business press editors may find an alternative
to the all-too-familiar traditional progression through the ranks.
Online publishing presents an opportunity to "bust out"
and create an all-new job with new responsibilities and an as-yet-unfettered
career path.
Job descriptions and compensation norms are yet
to be established, and there is no data to indicate trends, benchmarks
or even an averages. (Future ASBPE salary surveys will track this
job title.) It is by no means a foregone conclusion that new media
jobs will be staffed and managed by individuals with traditional
print journalism backgrounds. Particularly on corporate Web sites,
computer technicians and newly minted "knowledge specialists"
are commonly in charge of Web content. ASBPE's position is that
conventional journalistic skills will in the long run prove more
valuable to Web publishers than computer or network expertise.
Copyright © 1997 American Society of Business
Press Editors
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