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#31
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in
news:q6Hkb.822403$YN5.841029@sccrnsc01: Ow, ow, ow! Stop it -- you're hurting my head! "Just when I thought I was out, they PULL me back in!" ![]() No way. If I ever go back to newspapers, it will be back into the marketing side, period. No more dealing with drunk contract haulers at 2 AM, thank you! ![]() I much preferred my years in marketing, where I never had to actually *do* any work. All I had to do was come up with ideas that *others* had to implement. (And if the concepts failed in the field, it was OBVIOUSLY the fault of the soldiers on the ground who were incapable of properly implementing the plan -- right?) Hey - I LIKE that! I think I'll have to try that sometime myself! ![]() snip Nah... Our stuff works! Besides, many of the papers where we do installations don't have DCs. They go out the window with route-based bundle breaks to "ma and pa" carriers who won't stick around if their stuff is late. They gotta get back home to get their kids off to school, or get to their day job! Must be using employee-run distribution/circulation operations at those newspapers. Newspapers that utilize contract distributors (like my old company) don't give a **** whether the papers go out on time or not -- it isn't *their* problem to deal with the ****ed-off drivers. It's a whole different attitude at newspapers with employee district managers running the carriers! (I've worked in both systems...) Hmm.. I don't know. I don't think I've ever been in a mailroom that didn't give a **** if they were late. At least not on a daily. It's true they don't give a **** if the drivers are late... But they want to meet their own targets, because in many cases they are rated on it. That said, I've seen mailrooms make decisions to allow them to meet their targets, even if they have adverse affects on drivers - like sequence changes to improve inserter productivity. So you end up with a pile of bundles in everybody's way, waiting for a driver who isn't in yet, and a driver who's been standing there 15 minutes waiting another 15 minutes for his bundles because they have a different sized Sears flyer... That kinda **** happens ALL the time. Ouch. Been there, done that. The worst hold ups I've seen were when the Cedar Rapids Gazette brought their new mailroom and press equipment on-line. Although their primary problems were press-related (they actually ended up bringing suit against Goss, it was so bad -- a losing battle, since Goss was bankrupt by that time...), it always seemed that an inserter or conveyor would go down whenever the press was "up". IIRC 17 papers sued Goss. I was doing work for the NY Daily News who were one of the plaintiffs. That was a mess. Amazingly enough, now Goss is talking about buying Heidelberg! We actually had to deliver newspapers at NOON one Sunday -- the papers were NINE hours late, coming off the press. Many of my drivers had to go to their regular jobs, and the ONLY thing that saved us was the fact that it happened on a Sunday -- otherwise we would have lost them all. My stomach churns just thinking about that day. And there were sooo many like that, over the years... Geez! That's bad news! NOON!! Holy cow... I can't even imagine that... I finally just let my Editor & Publisher subscription lapse, after some 15+ years as a subscriber. Now that we've survived 14 months with the inn -- thus far, successfully -- I'm hopeful that I can let the rest of my newspaper skills atrophy... Hey - you still have to distribute the paper to all your guests! ![]() Wow -- they've got 38 products now? Impressive. If you do hit Lee up, be prepared -- they're so tight, they make Gannett look like drunken sailors... :-) Well, we have a Gannett paper already (actually they're the one in Colorado). And to be honest, They were for the most part a pleasure to deal with. Then again, I am heavily sheltered by my key distributor in deals like that. But even they seemed to be pretty happy with things over there. Besides, we got to eat at this INCREDIBLE steak house. Actually, it was more of a sports bar, but the meat there was absolutely out of this world! |
#32
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Must be using employee-run distribution/circulation operations at those
newspapers. Newspapers that utilize contract distributors (like my old company) don't give a **** whether the papers go out on time or not -- it isn't *their* problem to deal with the ****ed-off drivers. It's a whole different attitude at newspapers with employee district managers running the carriers! (I've worked in both systems...) Hmm.. I don't know. I don't think I've ever been in a mailroom that didn't give a **** if they were late. Well, okay -- they SAY they care. But here's the difference: Scenario #1: Independent Distributors. You see the owners of these companies quarterly -- maybe. Papers are late? You deal with phone calls. Scenario #2: Employee District Managers: You see these guys every day. They report to you. You know their families. Papers late? You deal with them and their wives, every hour, of every day. Who you gonna care more about? What's going to make you make the hard decisions necessary to fix the problems? That said, employee district managers don't give half a damn about their jobs, compared to an independent distributor -- since they get paid whether the papers go out or not. Distributors live and die on sales, so newspapers that care about their circulation generally use distributors where they can. That said, I've seen mailrooms make decisions to allow them to meet their targets, even if they have adverse affects on drivers - like sequence changes to improve inserter productivity. God, yes. Internal flow ALWAYS came ahead of common sense in the real world. A great example of this was when the Gazette's new mailroom plan was being implemented, and someone in a Circulation Dept. meeting asked how they were going to send carrier supplies (rubber bands, rain bags, etc.) out on the newspaper bundles. There was a long pause, and everyone stared blankly at each other. Finally one of the mailroom design engineers volunteered "that it would no longer be possible to cap bundles with supplies" -- because there was no room in the conveyor system for a person to actually *do* that! This guy was astounded at the sudden hostility in the room when it became obvious that some moron had sold out the "real world" in favor of some theoretical flow chart. This situation eventually forced the contract drivers -- not the sharpest sticks in the bunch to begin with -- to try to distribute carrier supplies on their trucks. Needless to say, on rainy days there were a LOT more wet papers delivered, simply because carriers couldn't get plastic bags -- and it ALL went back to that stupid mailroom designer... (Of course, the newspaper would never admit that...) The newspaper industry is so old, and so backward in so many ways, that there are literally dozens of examples of this kind of stupidity, as they try to take half-steps into the 21st century. IIRC 17 papers sued Goss. I was doing work for the NY Daily News who were one of the plaintiffs. That was a mess. Amazingly enough, now Goss is talking about buying Heidelberg! No frickin' way! How does a bankrupt organization do *that*? Hey - you still have to distribute the paper to all your guests! ![]() Well, most mornings Mary takes care of that! :-) As much as I hate 'em, I'll always love newspapers. After two decades, they're in my blood, and the morning just isn't right without a cup of coffee and the paper... I've found that (unlike much of the general population) most pilots agree with me on that point. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#33
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![]() Well, if you make it over, my offer to shoot the Hudson corridor is still good. Hey, if you pass thru northern Colorado, I can arrange a mountain flight for you! With a few weeks notice, I can get on the schedule at the gliderport and we can fly the Grob-103 sailplane. Best regards, Jer/ Eberhard, Chief Flight Instructor, EMAIL: -- Poudre Aviation, Ft Collins, CO, USA CELL/VM: 970 231-6325, CELL Message: WEB: http://poudreaviation.com/ "Online Services" "New User" |
#34
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Hey, it just so happens that the Grob 103 is about the only
glider I can fit in. If I fly from the back seat that is... Paul the large. wrote in message ... Hey, if you pass thru northern Colorado, I can arrange a mountain flight for you! With a few weeks notice, I can get on the schedule at the gliderport and we can fly the Grob-103 sailplane. |
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