Monday, September 17, 2018

Entercom CEO: Retooling Is Over

David Field (Philly Inquirer photo)
Entercom Communications Corp. CEO David Field says the radio giant's retooling is over and now revenues are projected to grow for the first time since the CBS Radio deal closed in late 2017.

"We have accomplished essentially everything we set out to accomplish and we are extremely happy with what we have been able to do to date," Field said in a recent interview with the Inquirer and Daily News.

According to to philly.com, the 55-year-old Field declined to comment on what he called the "worst-kept secret" in the region — Entercom's plans to relocate its headquarters and broadcast studios to one location in Philadelphia. Entercom, which owns 235 radio stations nationwide, is based in Bala Cynwyd, and its local CBS Radio studios are scattered throughout the city and the suburbs.

Entercom expected to relocated here
Controlled by the Field family for decades, Entercom has gone largely unnoticed in the local media and the Philadelphia business community because of a portfolio of radio stations in mid-sized and smaller cities. But CBS Radio catapulted Field and Entercom into big-time radio, adding Philly stations KYW, WIP, WOGL, WPHT, and WTDY, in addition to CBS Radio stations in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago, to its holdings. (Entercom also bought the independently owned WBEB in Philadelphia this year.)

Field was bullish on radio and Entercom/CBS Radio, even as he made dramatic changes while Wall Street punished the company's stock.  Seeking to energize the company, Entercom replaced 17 of the 48 Entercom/CBS Radio market managers around the United States, reformatted seven stations to boost ratings, and launched both a new app and the Entercom Radio Network, with Proctor & Gamble, Walgreens, and Indeed.com as advertisers.

It was "the proverbial 'the bus is going 100 miles an hour and you are changing the tires,' " Field said.

In addition, Entercom reached deals to sell surplus property in Los Angeles and Chicago, and is preparing to close on the sale of eight radio stations to the Mormon Church-controlled Bonneville International Corp. The divestiture was required by antitrust attorneys at the U.S. Justice Department as part of the approval for Entercom to acquire CBS Radio.

The property and Bonneville deals are expected to generate $200 million in after-tax cash for debt reduction. Entercom says that it expects to easily comply with loan covenants on almost $1.9 billion in debt.

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