| |
Bad Company III
For American Businessmen in the
News,
the Defense Never Rests |
Page 4 |
Small Business vs. Big
Business
Two companies make money at the same
business, but one is called "Goliath" and tied to consumers’ "pain,"
while the other is the site of a happy "rags-to-riches story" when
its jobs are boosted – by rising consumer prices. What are the
differences between a hated oil company and a beloved one?
Size and money.
This study showed a marked difference in
reporting on small businesses and bigger ones, and it was obvious
when it came to the oil industry.
"Today, as the price of gas ticked
higher across the country, in Atlanta, David threatened Goliath with
a boycott," declared CBS’s Byron Pitts on April 26. This time
"David" wasn’t just the consumers – who were under the influence of
an oil industry ad campaign, Pitts said, "to convince Americans
their profits have nothing to do with your pain."
This time "David" included a gas station
owner, who mentioned the fat-cat image at the top of his own
industry chain.
"Why are they making so much money when
everybody else is suffering – the people who are pumping the gas, us
as station owners, the consumer themselves?" the station owner said.
"Everybody’s paying that high price so somebody could get big and
fat on the other end."
Pitts piled onto that imagery: "The oil
industry makes no apologies. For some perspective on how big is big,
ExxonMobil can make a record $41 billion in profit by the end of
this year. That’s enough money to give every American man, woman and
child a check for $137."
Of course, as the Business & Media
Institute has pointed out, that $41 billion didn’t go to one person
getting "fat" at the top. ExxonMobil is one of the world’s largest
public companies, meaning its shareholders profit when the company
profits. The company has more than 2.5 million individual
shareholders – and that’s before you count institutional
shareholders, such as retirement plans and mutual funds,
representing even more investors.
The profits from gasoline sales don’t
all go straight to ExxonMobil, either. As the American Petroleum
Institute’s Rayola Dougher explained on "CNN Live" April 27, "the
profits are distributed among the crude oil producers, the refiners,
the distributors, the marketers. All together last year, the oil
industry earned 8.5 cents on every dollar of sales. The rest of U.S.
industry earned about 7.7."
Other industries, too – like the media –
have much larger profit margins than oil companies.
While oil companies might have a 9- to
10-percent profit margin,
CBS had a greater
profit margin than that. In 2006, the company made $1.66 billion
profit – 11.6 percent of their total earnings of $14.3 billion.
And other media companies have even
higher margins. David Carlson, former president of the Society of
Professional Journalists,
wrote that "even in
today’s difficult climate, many newspapers turn an annual profit
greater than 25 percent." That wasn’t even the top. "One national
chain reportedly demands 30 percent profit from each of its
newspapers," he continued.
Media Rules Different for Small Businesses
Oddly enough, in the midst of
anti-Big-Oil stories, ABC produced a positive story about smaller
oil firms – even though they were prospering from the same higher
oil and gas prices.
"With oil prices at near-record highs,
these are boom times for people in the oil business, including
small-time producers scattered across the country," said Elizabeth
Vargas on May 9.
Mike Von Fremd’s report showed
businessmen whose companies had suffered when prices were lower –
shutting down oil wells and laying off workers. Now, the report
said, they were back in business and even drilling new wells. But
instead of bringing on oil critics, the story was positive.
Covering Big Oil’s "Goliath," CBS spoke
of consumers’ "pain"; for Little Oil, ABC obliged with happy "a
rags-to-riches story in America’s oil patch," as Von Fremd put it.
Pitting small businesses against big
ones was a theme in the coverage, which was dominated by the big
guys – 78 percent of the businessmen in the news stories. Twenty
percent came from smaller firms.
That’s interesting when you consider
that small businesses employ about half of America’s private-sector
workers,
according to the Small
Business Administration. The SBA says "small firms generally create
60 to 80 percent of the net new jobs," as well.
Oil wasn’t the only industry journalists
cast in a "David versus Goliath" storyline. In fantasy baseball, the
little guy should be able to play … but what about the cost to the
big guy?
"Charlie Wiegert runs a St. Louis-based
Internet game company that’s now locked in a David and Goliath legal
battle with MLB.com, the Internet arm of Major League Baseball,"
said CBS’s Anthony Mason August 7.
MLB’s arrangement sounded clear enough –
the league "pays the players’ union $10 million a year" for the
players’ Internet rights, Mason said, and then in turn licenses
those rights to other sites for a fee. But fantasy leaguers like
Wiegert apparently didn’t think they should have to pay.
Wiegert insisted "to them this is about
money and about how much money they can make and controlling
everything." Another fantasy leaguer interviewed by CBS said, "I
think Major League Baseball’s trying to make an extra buck."
In business, as this report shows, the
negativity in stories often comes from "trying to make an extra
buck."
But who decides when a buck becomes
"extra"?
Economist and BMI adviser Walter
Williams has explained that "profits are misunderstood, seen as
unearned and sometimes condemned as evil." That could apply to media
coverage, where the role of money is often maligned. Williams said
it is important to remember that profits are a price in the
marketplace.
"Just as workers will not provide their
services without wages, entrepreneurs will not provide theirs
without profits," he
wrote.
Profits keep them in business – and that
sustains jobs, investments, insurance payments, utility consumption,
and all those other pieces of the economy to which each employer –
and employee – contributes.

ow the media had been covering
manufacturing.
When CBS’s Trish Regan asked Owens,
"What surprises you the most about how Americans perceive
manufacturing here in the U.S.?" he responded: "I guess it surprises
me that Americans think somehow we’re losing."
Regan then explained, "We’re not. Last
year America produced $1.79 trillion worth of goods, almost twice as
much as second-place Japan." She credited a "steady increase in
worker productivity."
Principle over Profit
Another positive story wasn’t as
surprising – as media coverage showed disdain for businesses’
bottom-line focus, CBS appreciated one businessman who set that
concern aside once a week.
<Previous
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8 Next>
Or jump to section:
The Defense Never Rests •
‘Oh,
How the Mighty Have Fallen’ – and We Covered it 105 Times
Philanthropy •
Small Business vs. Big Business
• Good Stories
Conclusion •
Recommendations •
Methodology

|