Dec 20, 2009 19:04
The NYT once said there was no such thing as irony, but here it is:
December 17, 2009
Dear colleagues:
As we celebrate the holiday season, I want to take a moment to thank you for all of your tremendous work and support for Gannett in 2009.
It has been a difficult year on many fronts but we are closing out the year on a far more positive note than how it began. Our company is much stronger and better positioned, we are seeing encouraging signs that advertising is coming back and our revenue results so far in the fourth quarter are the best we have had all year. During the course of the year, in an extraordinarily challenging economy, we maintained a healthy level of profitability, moved our core media properties forward and continued to invest and build out our digital businesses. Not many companies have been able to achieve what we have this year and this is testament to your hard work, commitment and talent. I know it has not been easy and I greatly appreciate all that you have contributed and sacrificed during a very trying time.
We head into the new year with good momentum - but also with some caution and pragmatism about how the economy will perform in the early months of the year. Thanks to your efforts and the disciplined way we approached this year, Gannett is strong and able to continue moving ahead in what we hope will be a year of greater economic stability.
Thank you again for your good work. I wish you and your families a very happy and safe holiday season and the very best in the new year.
Sincerely,
Craig
"It has been a difficult year on many fronts but we are closing out the year on a far more positive note than how it began." Yeah, we're positive that all of us will have to take a one-week furlough again the first quarter of 2010.
Related to which, someone who I don't talk to in the newsroom wanted to know if I knew someone at ETS, because a friend of his, who used to be an editor for HNT, was interested in getting a job there. First of all, I don't know you. Secondly, I don't know your friend. So I don't have a pressing obligation to help.
Not to mention which, ain't nobody helping me in finding another job. And with the job market the way it is, I'm not inclined to help someone else find a job. So why should I help you?