Editor's Corner
Have You Met Our New Editor?
Please join me in welcoming Peter Galuszka to the staff of Virginia Business. Our new
executive editor has a big challenge ahead of him.
Several months ago, the editorial staff
reached a consensus that it was time for a shake up. We wanted to redesign the magazine,
and we needed to rethink our story mix. Serving readers who were doing business at
Internet speed, we adopted a new mantra: more, shorter, tighter. More articles, with more
variety. Shorter articles, taking less time to read. Tighter focus, explaining more
clearly whats in it for the reader.
In my mind, Id imagined a design similar to Business Week, with lots of charts,
maps, tables and informational graphics to help the reader absorb information quickly.
Wed still keep our local focus on the Virginia economy and business community. But
wed put more effort into packaging the information.
Meanwhile, we were grappling with the fact that the Internet has the potential to alter
the publishing landscape beyond recognition. Its already changing our business.
Currently, were working on a sponsored special section and two new annual
publications that were conceived from the start as combined print and Internet products.
In the future, we expect that advertisers may value us as much for our ability to publish
on the World Wide Web as our ability to put ink on paper. Instead of dishing off text and
graphic files to our Web editor, our entire editorial staff must develop the ability to
think in Web terms from the inception of a product.
Thats where we were heading even before our previous editor, Karl Rhodes,
announced his decision to move upstairs to Media General, our parent company. Galuszka
gave us a call soon after. As fate would have it, he ran the Cleveland bureau for Business
Week and reported on businesses in a four-state region. Previously hed covered the
fall of communism as Moscow bureau chief and served as international news editor. Not only
was he steeped in the Business Week editing methodology, he had reported, written and
narrated BW Onlines first Webcast documentary. Most fortuitous of all, he was
seeking to relocate to the mid-Atlantic.
In the conversations that followed, Galuszka and Virginia Business decided that
wed make a good fit. He came on board in late March with three directives: lead the
editorial staff in the magazine redesign; raise the bar for editorial standards; and
reposition the staff to publish both in print and on the Web.
Its a tall order, but Galuszka is the man for the job. Besides his 14 years of
experience with one of the premier business publications in the world, he brings fresh
ideas and perspectives. Like me, hes a Navy brat. Growing up, he lived all around
the country though mostly in the Southeast. Although hes no stranger to
Virginia he wrote for the Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk and the Richmond
Times-Dispatch early in his career hes worked in Moscow, New York and
Cleveland. Exposed to life outside Virginia, hes willing to take a dispassionate
look at some of our parochial conceits and enthusiasms.
Were excited to have him. And after an 18-year absence, hes looking forward
to reacquainting himself with the commonwealth.
|