Looking back at how John Yemma reinvented The Christian Science Monitor

John Yemma, at the far end of the conference table, presides over a news meeting at The Christian Science Monitor. Photo (cc) 2011 by Dan Kennedy.

John Yemma, the retired top editor of The Christian Science Monitor, whose journalism career was long and distinguished, died June 10 at 74. If you’re a Boston Globe subscriber, I recommend this obituary, written by Bryan Marquard wrote. If not, you should read this.

Yemma filled a number of top positions at the Globe, but it was at the Monitor that I got to spend some time with him in reporting a 2009 story for CommonWealth Magazine (now CommonWealth Beacon) about his plans to reinvent the venerable newspaper for the digital age. He struck me as someone who is fundamentally serene and kind, confirmed by the tributes I’ve seen pouring in for him the past few days.

The basics of Yemma’s plan for the Monitor are still in place: a daily email newsletter; a digital-first approach to covering the news; and a weekly print magazine gathering the best of the Monitor’s journalism. The Monitor’s journalistic approach might be described as calm and solutions-oriented, and it remains a first-rate news organization. Here’s what I wrote in 2009.

Second life

The Christian Science Monitor reinvents itself for the digital age

CommonWealth Magazine | Jan. 20, 2009

Sometime this April, one of New England’s most venerable daily newspapers will cease to be a daily newspaper.

The Christian Science Monitor, which marked its 100th anniversary this past November, is beginning its second century as a multi-platform, multimedia news organization. Central to this new identity will be its free website, CSMonitor.com, begun a dozen years ago and now freed from the constraints of the daily print cycle. The website, in turn, will be supplemented by a daily email edition and a weekly, subscriber-supported magazine.

Though the transformation has long been anticipated, it nevertheless represents a signal moment for the five-days-a-week paper, whose circulation exceeded 230,000 at its peak in the early 1970s. (It’s currently around 55,000.) A few small, local papers have abandoned their daily print editions, but the Monitor is the first national paper to do so.

Read the rest at CommonWealth Beacon.

Yemma to step aside at Christian Science Monitor

John Yemma with Northeastern journalism students in 2011
John Yemma with Northeastern journalism students in 2011

John Yemma, who led The Christian Science Monitor from a print newspaper to a digital-first news organization, will step aside as editor next month. According to the Monitor, Yemma will be succeeded by managing editor Marshall Ingwerson.

I don’t know Ingwerson, but I do know Yemma, who worked in various capacities for The Boston Globe between stints at the Monitor. He is a steady hand, with good news judgment and unfailing decency. He has also been very helpful to my students when we have visited his newsroom.

In 2009 I profiled Yemma for CommonWealth Magazine as the Monitor was getting ready to undergo its digital transition. Today the former newspaper has given way to a free website, a paid weekly news magazine and several speciality emails. Readership is up and the subsidy the Monitor receives from the Christian Science Church is down.

At a time when most news organizations have cut back on international coverage, Boston is the home of three interesting projects: GlobalPost, a for-profit company headed by New England Cable News founder Phil Balboni; Global Voices Online, launched at Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center, which tracks citizen media around the world; and the venerable Monitor, begun in 1908 by Christian Science founder Mary Baker Eddy.

Yemma has expressed an interest in returning to writing, according to the Monitor. Best wishes to one of the city’s finest journalists.

Photo (cc) by Dan Kennedy. Some rights reserved.