41 min

140: New York Times CMO David Rubin on the paper’s brave new world Marketing Today with Alan Hart

    • Marketing

This week on “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with David Rubin, chief marketing officer at The New York Times.
With perhaps a somewhat unexpected career beginning for a marketer — right after college he spent two years working on Capitol Hill for a Milwaukee congressman and two years in the Treasury Department during the Clinton administration — Rubin subsequently received an MBA from the Wharton School before joining Unilever. During his 13 years at Unilever, Rubin worked in brand building, helping launch Axe body spray and leading the turnaround of their U.S. Hair division. After that, he spent two years at Pinterest as their head of global brand before joining The Times.
During the podcast, Rubin discusses how being a product of the Baltimore public school system shaped the way he builds teams, the Fake News phenomenon, the recent TV-focused work he's overseen in marketing The New York Times, and the paper's shift from an advertising-based business model to one that is subscription-first, and how those two aspects coexist differently now.
“What we find is that the more we grow our consumer base and connection with the end user,” says Rubin, “the better our ad business gets. And that may be counterintuitive, but they come together. Ultimately, what advertisers want is a deeply engaged audience that they can sell their message to in appropriate ways. And The Times has that and has that more than it's ever had. And so, we see the two things as actually more synergistic from a business-model perspective, and that having the consumer-subscription-first mindset lifts all boats.”
Highlights from this week's “Marketing Today” podcast include: 
From Capitol Hill and the Clinton administration to Unilever, Pinterest, and The New York Times, all the roles Rubin has held were meant to create mass impact. (1:20)Rubin talks about the TV spot that launched The New York Times campaign, “The Truth Is Hard." (5:40)“Quality reporting really does matter” — Rubin discusses the impact of the Fake News phenomenon. (11:22)“He said. She said.” Rubin reflects upon the NYT's first extension of “The Truth Is Hard” campaign: “The Truth Has a Voice.” (14:13)Raising the bar each time: The New York Times unveils a more overt message with “The Truth Is Worth It.” (16:59)From advertising-based to subscription-first: the evolution of The New York Times business model. (24:19)Rubin talks cooking and crossword puzzles. (26:37)“Journalism happens in real time, and it's messy.” (29:29)“We seek the truth, and we help people understand the world.” (32:00)Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/marketingtoday
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Become a member today and listen ad-free, visit https://plus.acast.com/s/marketingtoday.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

This week on “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with David Rubin, chief marketing officer at The New York Times.
With perhaps a somewhat unexpected career beginning for a marketer — right after college he spent two years working on Capitol Hill for a Milwaukee congressman and two years in the Treasury Department during the Clinton administration — Rubin subsequently received an MBA from the Wharton School before joining Unilever. During his 13 years at Unilever, Rubin worked in brand building, helping launch Axe body spray and leading the turnaround of their U.S. Hair division. After that, he spent two years at Pinterest as their head of global brand before joining The Times.
During the podcast, Rubin discusses how being a product of the Baltimore public school system shaped the way he builds teams, the Fake News phenomenon, the recent TV-focused work he's overseen in marketing The New York Times, and the paper's shift from an advertising-based business model to one that is subscription-first, and how those two aspects coexist differently now.
“What we find is that the more we grow our consumer base and connection with the end user,” says Rubin, “the better our ad business gets. And that may be counterintuitive, but they come together. Ultimately, what advertisers want is a deeply engaged audience that they can sell their message to in appropriate ways. And The Times has that and has that more than it's ever had. And so, we see the two things as actually more synergistic from a business-model perspective, and that having the consumer-subscription-first mindset lifts all boats.”
Highlights from this week's “Marketing Today” podcast include: 
From Capitol Hill and the Clinton administration to Unilever, Pinterest, and The New York Times, all the roles Rubin has held were meant to create mass impact. (1:20)Rubin talks about the TV spot that launched The New York Times campaign, “The Truth Is Hard." (5:40)“Quality reporting really does matter” — Rubin discusses the impact of the Fake News phenomenon. (11:22)“He said. She said.” Rubin reflects upon the NYT's first extension of “The Truth Is Hard” campaign: “The Truth Has a Voice.” (14:13)Raising the bar each time: The New York Times unveils a more overt message with “The Truth Is Worth It.” (16:59)From advertising-based to subscription-first: the evolution of The New York Times business model. (24:19)Rubin talks cooking and crossword puzzles. (26:37)“Journalism happens in real time, and it's messy.” (29:29)“We seek the truth, and we help people understand the world.” (32:00)Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/marketingtoday
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Become a member today and listen ad-free, visit https://plus.acast.com/s/marketingtoday.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

41 min