Difference between revisions of "Sarah Sands"

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[[Sarah Sands]] was at one point the editor of The Sunday Telegraph (after being deputy editor for 10 years) who relaunched the Sunday Telegraph as "something lovely":
 
[[Sarah Sands]] was at one point the editor of The Sunday Telegraph (after being deputy editor for 10 years) who relaunched the Sunday Telegraph as "something lovely":
  
:“aimed more directly at women, circulation is playing a distinctly depressing tune. Last month, after a launch buoyed by marketing and a free DVD, sales fell back by more than 10 per cent to 642,000 copies, of which just 249,000 were bought domestically at full price. “What I have now is a very attractive package for advertisers”" <ref>[http://www.davidrowan.com/2006/01/interview-sarah-sands-sunday-telegraph.html]</ref>
+
:“aimed more directly at women, circulation is playing a distinctly depressing tune. Last month, after a launch buoyed by marketing and a free DVD, sales fell back by more than 10 per cent to 642,000 copies, of which just 249,000 were bought domestically at full price. “What I have now is a very attractive package for advertisers”" <ref>[http://www.davidrowan.com/2006/01/interview-sarah-sands-sunday-telegraph.html Interview: Sarah Sands, Sunday Telegraph] Evening Standard
 +
David Rowan, Wednesday, January 18, 2006</ref>
  
 
After just eight months and 20 days in the post, Sands was replaced as one of a string of editors presiding over the ongoing drop in sales.
 
After just eight months and 20 days in the post, Sands was replaced as one of a string of editors presiding over the ongoing drop in sales.

Revision as of 08:56, 29 February 2008

Sarah Sands was at one point the editor of The Sunday Telegraph (after being deputy editor for 10 years) who relaunched the Sunday Telegraph as "something lovely":

“aimed more directly at women, circulation is playing a distinctly depressing tune. Last month, after a launch buoyed by marketing and a free DVD, sales fell back by more than 10 per cent to 642,000 copies, of which just 249,000 were bought domestically at full price. “What I have now is a very attractive package for advertisers”" [1]

After just eight months and 20 days in the post, Sands was replaced as one of a string of editors presiding over the ongoing drop in sales.

Sands is married to Kim Fletcher

Notes

  1. Interview: Sarah Sands, Sunday Telegraph Evening Standard David Rowan, Wednesday, January 18, 2006