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":
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'''Sarah Sands''' is married to [[Kim Fletcher]]. She was at one point the editor of The Sunday Telegraph (after being deputy editor for 10 years). She relaunched the Sunday Telegraph as "something lovely"<ref>David Rowan, "[http://www.davidrowan.com/2006/01/interview-sarah-sands-sunday-telegraph.html Interview: Sarah Sands, Sunday Telegraph]", Evening Standard, 18 January 2006</ref> aimed more directly at women. But as David Rowan commented in the Evening Standard,
  
:“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
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:"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."<ref>David Rowan, [http://www.davidrowan.com/2006/01/interview-sarah-sands-sunday-telegraph.html Interview: Sarah Sands, Sunday Telegraph], Evening Standard, 18 January 2006</ref>
David Rowan, Wednesday, January 18, 2006</ref>
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Rowan quotes Sands as saying,  
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:"What I have now is a very attractive package for advertisers."
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After just over eight months in the post, Sands was replaced as one of a string of editors presiding over the ongoing drop in sales.<ref>Ref needed</ref>
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Fletcher blames the crisis on the "dwindling circulation of Sunday papers on the plethora of extra sections now appearing in their Saturday rivals."  "Fletcher, as he admitted in his piece for the MediaGuardian," reported the Press Gazette, "is married to Sunday Telegraph editor Sarah Sands, who has recently presided over a slump in sales. Must be nice to have the old man doing the PR for you."<ref> [http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/article/260106/axe_grinder_270106]</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.
 
Sands is married to [[Kim Fletcher]].
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
 
[[Category:Journalists|Sands, Sarah]]
 
[[Category:Journalists|Sands, Sarah]]

Revision as of 18:56, 6 April 2009

Sarah Sands is married to Kim Fletcher. She was at one point the editor of The Sunday Telegraph (after being deputy editor for 10 years). She relaunched the Sunday Telegraph as "something lovely"[1] aimed more directly at women. But as David Rowan commented in the Evening Standard,

"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."[2]

Rowan quotes Sands as saying,

"What I have now is a very attractive package for advertisers."

After just over eight months in the post, Sands was replaced as one of a string of editors presiding over the ongoing drop in sales.[3]

Fletcher blames the crisis on the "dwindling circulation of Sunday papers on the plethora of extra sections now appearing in their Saturday rivals." "Fletcher, as he admitted in his piece for the MediaGuardian," reported the Press Gazette, "is married to Sunday Telegraph editor Sarah Sands, who has recently presided over a slump in sales. Must be nice to have the old man doing the PR for you."[4]

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.

Notes

  1. David Rowan, "Interview: Sarah Sands, Sunday Telegraph", Evening Standard, 18 January 2006
  2. David Rowan, Interview: Sarah Sands, Sunday Telegraph, Evening Standard, 18 January 2006
  3. Ref needed
  4. [1]