• NEWS
    • Agencies
    • Brand Marketing
    • Creativity
    • Digital
    • Programmatic
    • TV / Video
    • FEATURED
    • Challenger Brands
    • Inside the Brand
    • Ad of the Day
    • Op-Eds
    • CMO Report
    • Partner Experts
    • Sponsored
  • EVENTS
    • FEATURED
      • Elevate AI 2019
      • March 21, 2019
        New York
    • COMING SOON
    • Adweek Media All-Stars
    • Fastest-Growing Agencies
    • Elevate: Creativity
    • View All Events
  • WEBINARS
    • FEATURED
      • Your Toolkit for More Successful Decision-Making
      • Tues., March 26, 2019
        1 PM EST
    • COMING SOON
    • Invest in Lasting Influencer Relationships
    • How Brooks Running Perfects Its Ecommerce
    • View All Webinars
  • CONNECT
    • Media Kit
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Agency Memberships
    • Group Subscriptions
    • Newsletters
    • Contact Us
    • ADVERTISE WITH US
    • Brand Awareness
    • Thought Leadership
    • Lead Generation
    • Sponsored
    • Partner Experts
    • ADWEEK NETWORK
    • AgencySpy
    • MarketerMoves​
    • Social Pro Daily​
    • TVNewser
    • TVSpy
  • ADWEEK JOBS
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
    • CURRENT OFFER
    • Unlimited Job Postings
My Account Log Out Sign In Subscribe

Hot List

These Print And Digital Publishers Are Redefining What It Means to Be a Media Brand in 2018

The New York Times, Bustle, Vogue and Axios are among those named to this year's Hot List

By Adweek Staff
|
October 14, 2018
Adweek’s 2018 Publishing Hot List, from Hottest in Travel to Cover of the Year to Hottest in Sports
Share
By Adweek Staff
|
October 14, 2018
Share

It’s been a remarkable year for journalism and storytelling, as legacy media outlets continue to find their new identities in this rapidly evolving digital era. Others have had to nimbly reimagine themselves after being acquired by new owners, all while strategizing for the future with new revenue streams.

We’ve seen great leadership from media executives from Bob Cohn, president of The Atlantic, who has seen revenue increase across all sectors (total revenue is up 13 percent), to Adweek’s Editor of the Year Dean Baquet, who has lead coverage of some of the most important stories out of today’s fast-paced news cycle as executive editor of The New York Times.

Here are our Hot List winners in publishing for 2018:

Publishing Executive of the Year
Bob Cohn

Daniel Lombroso / The Atlantic

The news media business isn’t easy, which is why news of an ambitious period of growth at The Atlantic announced earlier this year was met with surprise. (“You read that right,” The New York Times quipped.)

Led by president Bob Cohn, who oversees editorial, revenue and operations on all platforms, the 161-year-old publisher is seeing one of its best years ever by leaning into its ever-diversifying business while maintaining the editorial excellence that is key to The Atlantic brand. It helps that the philanthropic Emerson Collective, which is run by Laurene Powell Jobs, just bought a majority stake in the magazine, too. Cohn, a longtime journalist who spent five years on The Atlantic’s editorial side before becoming president, said he’s proud revenue is growing across all sectors—year over year, total revenue is up 13 percent—all while The Atlantic has preserved and strengthened its editorial ethos.

“We’ve really completed our transformation from being a magazine, which we have been for 161 years, to really being a multiplatform media company,” Cohn tells Adweek. “That transformation has been years in the making, but I feel like in the last year we can say that we’ve really turned the corner.”

Part of that transformation has involved three new podcasts, a growing events business that leans into flagship events like The Atlantic Festival and the hire of more than 100 new staffers, half of whom will be on the editorial side. Cohn says the magazine is about halfway finished with those hires, who include former ESPN commentator Jemele Hill, culture and health writer Amanda Mull and former Facebook executive Alex Hardiman. The latter will lead consumer revenue opportunities, audience experience and product.

As the end of 2018 approaches, Cohn says he’s looking for opportunities to bring The Atlantic’s journalism to television and to home voice assistants, along with expanding paid content options, to continue steering the publication forward.

“Wherever an Atlantic audience wants to consume Atlantic content—whether it’s in print or digital, social streams, audio, video, live events—we want to be there, and we want to turn to our partners and find ways to partner up and deliver advertising in those spaces,” Cohn says. “That’s what we’ve done, and some of our greatest and most reliable partners have come with us.”

Magazine of the Year
The New Yorker

From ground-shaking reporting on people who sit at the upper echelons of business, entertainment and government to incisive cultural commentary, The New Yorker is having one of its best and most consequential years in its 93-year history. Ronan Farrow and Jane Mayer’s reporting on sexual harassers and abusers toppled powerful men and fueled the #MeToo movement, with Farrow’s reporting on the disgraced movie producer Harvey Weinstein resulting in a Pulitzer Prize (shared with The New York Times) for public service. The power of the publication’s journalism is translating on the business side, too, including an all-time-high circulation of 1.23 million, 264,000 new subscribers to the magazine in the last year and an average of 13.9 million U.S.-only monthly uniques on NewYorker.com in the second quarter, up 22 percent year over year. —Kelsey Sutton

Cover of the Year
Time — ‘Stormy’ covers

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6

Click for more from this issue
This story first appeared in the October 15, 2018, issue of Adweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.
Share
https://adweek.it/2yrDCHf

Adweek Staff

Popular Now

  • 1
    This Canadian Sex Toy Ad Might Be the Best-Written Billboard of 2019
  • 2
    Disney Completes Its $71.3 Billion Purchase of Fox, Massively Transforming the Industry
  • 3
    Instagram’s Long-Awaited Checkout Feature Is Finally Here
  • 4
    At This Trivial Pursuit Hotel, You Pay for Everything by Answering Questions
  • 5
    The 25 Best Ads of 2018

Featured Jobs

Advertising Inventory Analyst
DraftKings
New York, New York
Director of Technology
Tribune Media
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Social Media Buyer
22squared
Tampa, Florida
Manager, Consumer Marketing
Guardian News & Media
New York, New York
Vice President of Marketing
Blue Federal Credit Union
Cheyenne, Wyoming
See More Jobs
Adweek Adweek Adweek

EDITOR'S PICKS

Publishers & Platforms

Disney Completes Its $71.3 Billion Purchase of Fox, Massively Transforming the Industry

by Jason Lynch

AdFreak

At This Trivial Pursuit Hotel, You Pay for Everything by Answering Questions

by David Griner

Influencers

How the Stars of The Bachelor Turn Their Instagram Accounts Into 'QVC on Steroids'

by Diana Pearl

Agencies

After a Female Executive Claimed Pregnancy Discrimination Against BMF, More Women Have Come Forward

by Lindsay Rittenhouse

Publishers & Platforms

Facebook Is Revamping Its Targeting for Housing, Employment and Credit Ads

by David Cohen

Brand Marketing

Who Is Today's Top Advertiser? Vote Your Brand Picks in Adweek's March Adness Bracket

by David Griner

AdFreak

This Canadian Sex Toy Ad Might Be the Best-Written Billboard of 2019

by David Griner

AdFreak

Maya Rudolph Sings a Soulful Ballad About Why Trees Shouldn't Die to Wipe Your Butt

by T.L. Stanley
View Latest News >
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Sponsor Content
    • Jobs
  • Subscriptions
    • Subscription Options
    • Digital App
    • Newsletters
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Customer Service
  • Awards / Honors / Events
    • Awards and Honors
    • Adweek Events
    • Webinars
    • On-Demand Webinars
    • Trophies / Awards / Seals
  • Publications
    • Adweek Network
    • RSS
    • Backissues
    • Reprints / E-Prints
  • © 2019 Adweek, LLC. - All Rights Reserved
  • About Adweek
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy