Tag: businessmen
Media Ethics 101
A memo that was followed by a resignation, handed in by Fatemah Farag, the chief editor of Al-Masry Al-Youm’s English Edition:
Dear Mr. Sherif Wadoud, Vice CEO,
CC: Mr Salah Diab, CEO30 May, 2010
This is to inform you – on the record – that the English Edition of Al-Masry Al-Youm, which I have been privileged to establish and run during the past year and a half, has in recent weeks been increasingly besieged by incoherent, slapdash and institutionally irregular practices and interventions in editorial operations by the organization’s business management.
To make matters worse, the chain of responsibility and accountability within the organization has become increasingly random and blurred.
This has created an untenable situation.
Let me first set down a few reminders:
1. In October 2008 I was asked by Mr. Salah Diab to draw up a blue print for the development of an English Edition for Al-Masry Al-Youm.
2. Al-Masry Al-Youm hired me at the end of December 2008 in the capacity of Chief Editor for an English Edition, to be built from scratch and in accordance with my blue print.
3. Since that date, and in spite of the serious and continuing technical shortcomings that had beset the project, I succeeded in meeting not only my initial project objectives, but moved forward to develop an even more ambitious vision for the development of the English Edition of Al-Masry Al-Youm.
4. In the past few weeks alone we have been breaking our traffic records, moving clearly beyond the 6000/day mark; the site is increasingly visible on Google News as well as on the radar sites of major think tanks and specialized interest groups.
5. Towards the building of a sound English Edition for this organization I have put together – again from scratch – a unique, highly qualified and dedicated team of professional journalists and editors who have worked organically to develop it into the success that it is today.Let me remind you as well that in so far as I report to you, ex officio, I have submitted to you regular status reports on the development and progress of the English Edition, the latest of which was on 9 May and to which you did not respond. The last you responded to was that of December and you gave very positive feedback at the time.
Two weeks ago, I wrote requesting a meeting with you to discuss a number of irregular interventions from the business side of the Al-Masry Al-Youm management, which request you have yet to respond to.
As such I feel obliged to set down what I believe are the bottom-line requisites for the proper running of a newsroom in the professional manner worthy of Al-Masry Al-Youm:
1. Management simply does not interfere in editorial content on a day by day, link by link, story by story basis – ever, anywhere.
2. Management relationship with Editorial is conducted via the Editor-in-Chief, and in accordance with a clear, formal and institutionally delineated chain of command.
3. Management relationship with Editorial is conducted in a professional, business-like manner and takes the form of regular meetings; feedback to reports submitted by Editorial, engagement with Editorial in strategic discussion and planning; coordination with Editorial in promoting the financial viability and sustainability of the venture, etc.
4. Management does not intervene in editorial operations by attempting to create an alternative chain of editorial command, bypassing the Editor-in-Chief; neither does it do so in a haphazard, informal and institutionally irregular manner.
5. Neither does proper and professional management include trying to avoid facing up to its own shortcomings and slapdash decisions of by “passing the buck” onto Editorial.
6. Decorum and a minimum degree of courtesy is, needless to say, a necessary requisite for proper and professionally conducted interaction between management and editorial. Garrulous, curt and even threatening communication is not – especially when it is also incoherent and thoughtless.
7. People get paid what they signed on to, and in accordance with what management committed itself to offering. I was never paid what was stipulated in the Letter of Agreement you signed with me. Further, in December you committed to raising my current salary by 15 per cent, effective January. To date, and in spite of several text messages and email reminders from me, this is yet to be put into effect.Fatemah Farag
Chief Editor
English Edition
Al-Masry Al-Youm