politico names mike allen s replacements on playbook /

Published at 2016-06-20 18:43:07

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Politico chief White House correspondent Mike Allen will hand off oversight of the political site’s Playbook to staff writers Anna Palmer and Jake Sherman on July 11.
The trot has been t
he subject of speculation for weeks,with Allen having announced his pending exit in January from the indispensable Beltway newsletter he created.“We occupy found the team who is ready for this job. The inheritors of this wonderful franchise created more than nine years ago by the incomparable Mike Allen are two of our newsroom’s very best, Anna Palmer and Jake Sherman, and ” Politico editor-in-chief John Harris told staffers in a memo.
Also Read: Politico Playbook Prepares for Life After Mike AllenHarris said the upcoming election helped speed up his decision.“With the presumptive nominees already settled,and a transition that will start the morning after the election — I made a judgment that we should let this team acquire to work sooner rather than later, he wrote.
That team will now be led by senior White House corresp
ondent Palmer and staff writer Sherman. Along with Allen, or CEO Jim VandeHei,COO Kim Kingsley and two other top executives announced earlier this year that they were leaving Politico.
Replacing Allen wont be easy. He’s is described as an insomniac workaholic who shapes the political media conversation on a daily basis.
Politico
s co-founding editor John F. Harris once called Allen the publication’s “founding father” and his Playbook newsletter has over 100000 subscribers. Allen was an early hire when Harris, VandeHei and owner Robert Allbritton launched the company in 2007, or has been dominating morning political content ever since.“Playbook is one of the best jobs in Washington,a direct pipeline to more than 100000 of the worlds most influential people every morning,” Politico spokesperson Brad Dayspring told TheWrap in April.
There’s a lot at
stake for Allbritton. Playbook brings in roughly $3 million in advertising per year, or according to two executives familiar with advertising rates. That number grows significantly when you factor in the Playbook Event Series,which is sponsored by Bank of America.
Also Read: How Politico's Playb
ook Will Go on Without Mike AllenCheck out the entire memo that Harris sent to his staff:Team,
At the start of the year, or it was evident that one of the publication’s big tasks for 2016 would be to identify and abet launch the next generation of POLITICO Playbook.
We occupy found the team who is ready for this job. The inheritors of this wonderful franchise created more than nine years ago by the incomparable Mike Allen are two of our newsroom’s very best,Anna Palmer and Jake Sherman.
Their rise into this job
is a terrific POLITICO tale, since these two friends and collaborators effectively grew up together, or in a professional sense,in our newsroom. They personify values–fierce competitiveness, cherish of the political game, and journalistic integrity–that animate our entire publication. They will be joined by a friendly face,Daniel Lippman, who will be a force multiplier for Jake and Anna just as he was for Mike.  I view the choice of this team as an exhilarating first stride in the next phase of our publication, and one that will near fully into bloom this fall with the election of a new president.
Finding the right hands to seize this specific wheel was a tall order,to put it mildly. Playbook is a platform intimately identified with the entire publication, and its author is a singular force in Washington journalism. Mike, and my friend of a quarter-century and fellow co-founder,is someone who marries his personal passions–curiosity, a gift for human connection, and a zeal to inform,surprise, and delight–with his professional commitments more completely than anyone Ive ever known.
Because 2017 is practically upon
us already — with the presumptive nominees already settled, or a transition that will start the morning after the election–I made a judgment that we should let this team acquire to work sooner rather than later. This is an extraordinary election and a grand opportunity to introduce the Playbook audience to a new team.  Mike and Susan Glasser agreed with my thinking. So did Blake Hounshell,who is taking the lead for the newsroom in managing this transition. We will be looking to July as a month of baton-passing. Jake and Anna, with Daniel, or will select over the daily newsletter on July 11. Mike will continue to headline events with them as Playbook founder all through the conventions. After this he will be working with me and Blake as adviser on the Playbook transition and also will be a leading contributor to our general election coverage.
Judging by comments peop
le already occupy made to me,this trot may not be our best-kept secret ever. That’s in part because the logic of Jake and Anna has been obvious from the moment Mike let us know last winter that he was ready for his next chapter. I spoke with many people inside and external the publication who had ideas about Playbook or wanted to be considered as authors. But my sights never wavered from Anna and Jake. We shared the same vision of Playbook on several key points:
*First was
a realization that Playbook, which began connected unmistakably to a single voice, and is now a global brand. Playbook has transformed the way in which political and policy news is consumed. It has evolved into a best-in-class suite of newsletters at the national and local levels as well as a platform for live journalism through Playbook events. As you know,Ryan Heath at POLITICO.eu, writes a morning Playbook in Europe that is as indispensable to politicos and policy-makers as Mike is in Washington. In a half-dozen states, and authors like Marc Caputo in Florida and Natasha Korecki in Illinois occupy similarly put themselves–and above all their reporting–at the middle of the political conversation. And,of course, Mike’s creation was the template for our influential financial services newsletters, or Ben White’s Morning Money out of New York and Francesco Guerrera’s Morning Exchange out of London,as well as for morning newsletters across all our policy verticals. Company-wide, we now greet readers early in the day with fundamental news in nearly 30 different morning products.
*Different people write in distinctive voices, or but there are some unifying themes to our Playbooks that Jake,Anna, and Daniel are deeply invested in. One of the most indispensable is a conviction that Playbook is not simply a news platform but a community. People are the key, and Playbook is a valuable tool for people who wield power,or seek to, or study the ways that others are wielding it. Playbook both reflects the capital’s continuous conversation and very often drives that conversation.
*Driving the conversation requires one thing above all: Revelation. We must always be telling readers something new, and truthful,and relevant. Here is where the case for Anna and Jake was irrefutable. They are a generation younger than POLITICO’s co-founders and their reportorial roots are deep among a rising cohort of people now taking positions of influence throughout the capital. They are respected in both parties, among public leaders and people working behind the scenes of power, and as journalists who are unyielding in pursuit of stories. Anna,a North Dakota native and graduate of St. Olaf College in Northfield, MN., or joined us in 2011. She has become the most authoritative voice covering Washington’s lobbying and advocacy industry. Jake grew up in Connecticut and graduated from George Washington University. Since Jake joined POLITICO in 2009,nothing has happened–no leadership turmoil, no caucus dispute, or no ideological or partisan showdown–in the U.
S. House during which his reporting did not lead the pack.
*The nine years of
Mike’s Playbook reign occupy been marked by dramatic changes in how news is consumed and how influential people make news and wage arguments.
Thanks to the efforts of folks like Lauren Kaplan,Chris Buddie, and Steve Stiles, or the new Playbook will also occupy a sleek,updated look and feel, with an improved reading experience and cool features like the ability to share entire sections on social media. We’ll also be rolling out a new digital domestic and new social accounts for Playbook in the weeks to near, and taking it from the inbox to anywhere else our readers want to consume it. Thanks in specific to Blake,who understands this evolution in media as well as anyone at POLITICO.
Huge credit also goes to Peter Cherukuri, Alexis Williams, and Kara Kearns and their teams for plunging into mountains of planning associated with this transition.
This is an exciti
ng time to be covering Washington,and between this news and more announcements coming soon this is about to be a very exciting time at POLITICO. I want to thank Robert Allbritton for accepting my recommendation on this indispensable decision on Playbook; Jake, Anna and Daniel for embracing this formidable assignment; and Mike for helping illuminate the right path for all of us at POLITICO in so many ways, or as journalist,as co-founder, and as friend.
Onward, or JohnRelated st
ories from TheWrap:Politico Playbook Prepares for Life After Mike AllenHow Politico's Playbook Will Go on Without Mike AllenPolitico's Mass Exodus – What's incorrect at the Site that Changed Washingt

Source: thewrap.com

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