Some 20 per cent on the job cuts will be in editorial, with about 150 of those losses to come from the metropolitan mastheads unit including The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, Canberra Times over the next two to three months. In a staff briefing, the company said it would call for voluntary redundancies and has not ruled out compulsory cuts. Fairfax announces an overhaul of its operations. Credit:Michel O'Sullivan "The period ahead will be difficult as we move through the redundancies," Mr Hywood said. A shift to online by audiences around the world has undermined traditional business models for many media companies, with newspaper firms particularly hard hit. Rival News Corp is expected to reveal job cuts of its own within days, with as many as 1000 positions in Australia expected to go. Fairfax Media also said it had other options if revenues continued to fall sharply.

"If the print circulation and revenues change materially we have the option to move to a digital-only model," Mr Hywood said. Today's job cuts will also include the loss of about 10 per cent of staff at the Financial Review Group, which includes the AFR, over the coming three months. The FRG's headcount is about 275. Separately, Fairfax also revealed today it had sold 15 per cent of its New Zealand-based Trade Me online auction site, trimming its controlling stake to 51 per cent. The sales proceeds, worth about $166 million, will help offset part of the $248 million in one-off costs resulting from the job cuts and other changes. Fairfax shares jumped, rising 4.55 cents, or 7.4 per cent to 65 cents. Earlier today, the company said it had sold the 15 per cent holding in its Trade Me subsidiary, raising $NZ211 million ($166 million). Before today, shares in Fairfax had dropped 87 per cent over the past five years.

Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance house committee member Ben Schneiders said journalists wanted to produce independent journalism and wanted to hear from management about how that would happen with job cuts. “We want urgent talks with management on where cuts will fall and we want to ensure all cuts are voluntary.” “We are worried that media ownership is already very concentrated,” he said. Rinehart move Mining magnate Gina Rinehart also confirmed she had upped her stake to 18.6 per cent of the company, making her the largest single shareholder.

Mrs Rinehart has been demanding at least one seat on the Fairfax board and is understood to be aiming for at least a 19.9 per cent holding in the company. City Index head of dealing Peter Esho said today's announcement probably won't be "a game changer in the battle between Gina Rinehart and the Fairfax board". "Taking an axe to the metro legacy printing presses and consolidating the format is very unfortunate as it will see large job losses, but it was expected and probably a bit too late," he said. "The decision to sell down an interest in Trade Me and use the proceeds to reduce debt suggests that Fairfax is not at least for the time being contemplating a discounted rights issue," said Mr Esho. "It might be forced to if its current strategy doesn't work and earnings continue to sink further but at least for the time being, say three to four months, it seems to have bought more time."

Print closings Today's reorganisation will also entail the closure of the printing facilities in Chullora in NSW, and Tullamarine in Victoria by June 2014. Printing will be transferred to ''surrounding sites,'' the company said. The one-off costs associated with the plant closures and staff cuts will be $248 million on a net basis, including the proceeds of land sales, the company said. The cash costs of the two printing sites would be $40 million, excluding the expected land sales worth $63 million. The cost of the other changes, at $208 million, amounts to about $109,400 per employee made redundant. Communications Minister Stephen Conroy told reporters in Canberra that the Fairfax job losses were "terrible", adding that the company had made some tough decisions.

"It's always disappointing when any Australian is losing their job," he said. "What you can see, though, is that there is a future." Senator Conroy appeared to rule out any federal government support for Fairfax. "We are already supporting two national broadcasters and I can't see us changing that," he said. Opposition communications spokesman Malcolm Turnbull, meanwhile, told ABC TV that Fairfax should have moved faster to transition to digital journalism but it "could have done a lot worse". Mr Turnbull said the problem for Fairfax was not a lack of readers but that revenue had migrated on to other platforms.



He cautioned that editorial quality had to be maintained amidst the cost-cutting but also downplayed the case for government assistance.

'Legacy' media Fairfax will reveal its plans for charging for online access to the metropolitan titles' websites at the end of this year. The company's AFR.com.au site has been behind a paywall for years, a strategy that is increasingly popular with websites around the world as media firms attempt to generate new revenue flows. The smh.com.au and theage.com.au will operate a so-called "metered" model, in which a base level of articles and other content will remain free. The two websites have been relatively successful, reaching more than 5 million people last year. Smh.com.au was also the most popular news website in Australia in April.

The job cuts come as management pushes for full integration of its online, print and mobile platforms. The so-called "digital first" model aims to increase the sharing of editorial content, such as articles, across platforms and regions. Fairfax said that the two main websites were launched when "almost all" of the metro media departments' content was delivered through printed newspapers. "They have legacy presses with significant surplus capacity, which is no longer required," Mr Hywood said. "The changes announced today have been selected after considering the merits of a full range of structural alternatives, including a demerger," Mr Hywood said. "The package of strategic initiatives is bold, and several are difficult, particularly as they will impact on some of our people.



"However, we believe that they are in the best interest of Fairfax, our shareholders, and ultimately the majority of our people," he said.



"They are necessary to ensure Fairfax retains its position as a leading independent media company and a key voice in our markets," Mr Hywood said.

Without today's changes, the Metro Media division's costs would rise from a forecast $600 million for the year to June to about $660 million by the end of the 2015 financial year. Instead, the new cost target for three years' time will be about $550 million for the division. Unions response Fairfax staff at The Age plan a stop work meeting this afternoon to discuss the job cuts, with similar gatherings expected at other newsrooms. Loading Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA) acting federal secretary Paul Murphy said the cuts contradicted Fairfax chief executive Greg Hywood’s recent statement to the stock exchange that the company would invest in quality journalism and editorial standards would not be compromised.



‘‘Any further loss of editorial positions will clearly damage these newspapers’ ability to produce quality journalism regardless of whether that journalism appears in print or on digital platforms,’’ Mr Murphy said.



‘‘Readers and employees alike are entitled to know precisely how Fairfax Media intends to ensure that these two great mastheads will continue to produce quality journalism when fewer journalists are left to actually go out and hunt out news stories.’’



The Australian Manufacturing Workers Union (AMWU), meanwhile, slammed the company over the way it announced plans to close two printing presses, saying shocked workers were disappointed and angry.



‘It’s a terrible way for a major company to make a major announcement like this,’’ AMWU NSW secretary Tim Ayres told reporters in Sydney.



‘‘This announcement has driven a stake into the hearts of 210 printing workers here."

BusinessDay, with Judith Ireland