Mail Online maestro Martin Clarke joked that the website was an âovernight successâ that took â13 years of blood, sweat, quite a lot of cigarettes and quite a lot of boozeâ in a 15-minute leaving speech on Wednesday.
Clarke bid farewell to his Mail Online colleagues after leading the website for 13 years and playing an instrumental part in building it into one of the biggest in the world.
Clarke said in December that he was leaving his role as publisher to âpursue new challengesâ but that he would âremain availableâ to the company until the end of 2022 to support it in its search for a new leader.
DMGT chairman Lord Rothermere announced on Thursday that UK editor Danny Groom will next week become acting global editor of Mail Online overseeing its UK, US and Australian editorial operations.
Clarke told staff on Wednesday to give Groom and his team âthe same commitment and loyalty that youâve given me over the yearsâ.
Clarke, who has been a professional journalist for 37 years and an editor for 27, joked that âbeing an editor does make you a monster. Or in my case more of a monsterâ.
Former Scottish Daily Mail and Scotsman editor and Daily Record and Sunday Mail editor-in-chief Clarke said leading Mail Online had made for âthe best professional years of my lifeâ but that it was not a job he had actually wanted at the start.
âI assumed when they foisted it on me that I was being shafted,â he said. âAnd maybe I was. But anyway, pretty quickly I realised that all that reader data you get instantly in real-time gave me, as an old-fashioned newspaper editor, superpowers.
âAnd I was addicted, and pretty soon so were the readers. I couldnât imagine, within a few months, ever going back to a world where I produced one paper a day, or where you have to be pigeonholed as a broadsheet or a tabloid, or we have to guess what the readers actually wanted to read rather than instantly knowing for a fact.â
Clarke said that Mail Online is still like a newspaper, however, in the sense that âthe vast majorityâ of its readers come directly to its homepage and app, which combined bring in 80% of its revenue â making it more âstableâ than others that rely on Google and Facebook.
In 2019 Mail Onlineâs search traffic halved after Google changed its algorithm, while last year the site claimed it was being downgraded in search results.
âEvery now and again, they tweak the algorithms,â Clarke said. âSome win, some lose; we usually lose if itâs Google. But it doesnât matter to us. So long as we can keep people coming back to that homepage every single day over and over and over, youâll be in jobs.â
Clarke paid tribute to David English, who was editor of the Daily Mail when he first joined the paper in the 1980s, and his successor Paul Dacre who has worked alongside Clarke during his time at the top. Dacre is now in an advisory editor-in-chief position for the Mail, Metro and i titles.
Clarke said the pair were âfor my number, the best two since the warâ before joking: âI donât think either of them are here. At least David English has the good excuse of being dead.â
Recalling when another colleague tried to âstrangleâ him in the pub after he started at the Daily Mail in 1987, Clarke added: âPaul Dacre was also already on the Daily Mail. He didnât strangle me, but Iâm pretty certain he wanted to on many occasions since.â
Clarke praised Lord Rothermere for taking DMGT private at the end of last year after nearly a century on the stock market. He told staff: âI think you should also bear in mind that heâs just underlined his and his familyâs commitment to the business of journalism by taking the company private and I think thatâs a great thing to do.â
He said Lord Rothermere had âstood byâ Mail Online even when there were âa few people who were doubters, who maybe thought we were going down the wrong roadâ.
He later added: âNow, we had to get over a few humps to get here. We had to design the website from scratch. I know every website looks a bit like us now, but they didnât when we started.
âI remember when we redesigned the website and launched it, everyone laughed. All the people at The Guardian, in the trade press, I forget what they said but it wasnât very complimentary. And I kind of panicked a bit and I thought âshit what have I doneâ, but then the traffic started just like that. And now, as you know, everyone copies us.â
He noted âhaving designed the website, we couldnât find a content management system to make it work, so we had to build one from scratchâ and said âit also took a lot of work to get our commercial strategy rightâ.
âUnder the leadership that weâve now got⊠Weâre now properly profitable. And so after 13 years of blood, sweat, quite a lot of cigarettes and quite a lot of booze weâre an overnight success, apparently.â
Clarke went on: âWeâre actually building a good reputation for breaking proper exclusives. And thatâs something that must continue.
âYou all know, I hope, that if you visit any newsroom anywhere in the English-speaking world really, on half the screens in the newsroom, youâll see Mail Online, youâll see us.
âWe not only survived Covid but we actually thrived. Itâs an awful thing to say but we came of age during Covid, I think, you all did amazingly. And the fact that we did it from home when we had to without there being any real notable difference in the product. I think itâs amazing. It wasnât what I expected, I can tell you that.â
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