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Vice Media is reportedly laying off up to 15% of its staff amid missed revenue and a traffic slump
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Vice Media is reportedly laying off up to 15% of its staff amid missed revenue and a traffic slump

Nancy Dubuc

John Sciulli/Getty Images

  • Vice Media CEO Nancy Dubuc, who took over for Shane Smith in March is cutting some staff at the digital publisher, The Wall Street Journal reports.
  • The Brooklyn-based company is reportedly shedding 10 to 15% of its workforce and is on track to miss its revenue goals for this year.
  • Vice Media had 27 million unique visitors in September, down from 49.1 million in March 2016, according to comscore.

Nancy Dubuc, Vice Media's CEO who replaced Shane Smith in March, is making cuts at the digital publisher.

According to a report from The Wall Street Journal, Brooklyn-based Vice Media is shedding 10 to 15% of its workforce and is on track to miss its revenue goals for this year.

To make the cuts, Dubuc ordered a companywide hiring freeze six weeks ago and plans to cut staff through both the freeze and other gradual cuts.

Vice Media had 27 million unique visitors in September, down from 49.1 million in March 2016, according to comscore. In addition to measuring traffic to Vice's websites, its comScore number also includes traffic from websites like SEO-focused Ranker, Metalinjection.net and ModernFarmer.com.

Per the report, Vice Media is expected to make $600 to $650 million this year, which is flat with its 2017 revenue. The company reportedly is on track to lose more than $50 million this year in addition to losing $100 million in 2017.

Vice Media did not respond to press inquiries.

Vice's web audience is shrinking

Vice Media has built scale in digital media by focusing its coverage on specific verticals like Noisey (which covers music), Broadly (for women), Munchies (for food) and Vice News. Duboc reportedly plans to fold several of its existing verticals together to form three to five core verticals, according to The Wall Street Journal's sources.

Instead of focusing on web publishing, Vice Media plans to beef up its television and movie business to make third-party programming.

Vice's in-house agency Virtue (formerly Carrot) is also a priority.

Virtue recently signed a deal with entertainment brand El Rey to launch an agency catering specifically to the US Hispanic market.

According to a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Vice Media is preparing to launch a live news show called "Viceland Live" on Viceland, the channel operated by A+E Networks. Vice's current weekly show on HBO is also in the process of winding down this season.

Duboc came into Vice Media earlier this year amid sexual-harassment allegations and financial concerns over whether or not the digital media company can live up to its $5.7 billion valuation, including a $450 million investment from private equity firm TPG last year.

"Of course, there's pressure," Duboc told The Hollywood Reporter. "Like any good Hollywood story, people look for the Caped Crusader. The reality is never as simple."

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