Tuesday, September 5, 2017

RIFs Hit Sheridan Broadcasting Networks


The New Pittsburgh Courier is reporting that Sheridan Broadcasting Corporation has eliminated its News and Sports content division, causing roughly 10 employees to lose their jobs at its Downtown headquarters on Penn Ave.

Ron Davenport
“We weren’t able to generate the revenue we wanted,” corporation COO and general counsel Ron Davenport Jr. told the Courier in an exclusive interview. The Courier reported in 2016 the dissolved business relationship between Sheridan and American Urban Radio Networks (AURN). The two companies, who had worked in tandem for years, went their separate ways — confirmed by CEO Ron Davenport Sr. in the May 2016 Courier story. Davenport Sr. later said, “Sheridan Broadcasting Network and Sheridan Broadcasting Company are fine, and are looking for new worlds to conquer.”

But Ron Davenport Jr. told the Courier Aug. 29 that the revenue just wasn’t coming in. “It’s a little more difficult than selling cars or something,” Davenport Jr. said about the art of selling national radio. “It’s a unique skillset, so we’ve been searching for some time and we have someone who has been working on our behalf and he’s just been unsuccessful, unfortunately, and we’re not able to continue.”

Sheridan Broadcasting Networks had been providing news and sports broadcasts to 60 radio stations nationwide before the Aug. 29 announcement. Sheridan Broadcasting Corporation will continue to operate its Pittsburgh-based Sheridan Gospel Network, which currently airs on 30 stations nationwide, ownership of a radio station in Atlanta, and a new venture, tele-streaming, explained as a “simultaneous audio-visual stream of an over-the-air radio broadcast,” according to Davenport Jr.

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