Roger de Weck, new SSR CEO in January 2011

Bern, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – Swiss Public Broadcasting Corporation, SSR, will be tightening its belt in January by streamlining its administrative structure. The company will be acting on the advice of Roger de Weck, who takes over in January as chief executive officer, to reduce the senior management team from nine members with four “paticipants” to seven members, with the four participants used as consultants on an occasional basis.

SSR owns TSR television, RSR radio, WRS radio and the swissinfo web site in the Lake Geneva region as well as several other media, in several languages, throughout Switzerland.

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SSR cost-cutting part of the deal

Bern, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – Billag, the company that charges households a Swiss television and license fee which forms a key component in the budget of SSR, Swiss public broadcasting, will bill only once a year starting in 2011, the Swiss government has decided. The annual fee for private households is a little over CHF460.

Billag currently bills quarterly, sending 12 million bills annually for total annual fees of CHF1.4 billion. The shift will provide administrative cost savings of CHF9-10 million, mainly for printed paper, that can be passed on to SSR, says Bern.

SSR has lobbied heavily for higher license fees and greater freedom to advertise, in order to meet the growing cost of continuing to produce original material. The Federal Council in June 2010 approved a budget of CHF134.5 million, but it refused to accept SSR’s proposals for CHF14m to improve the state of the pension fund, CHF16m to increase its capital and CHF3.5m for various expenses. It called on SSR to economize in order to cover these and other costs, but it also relaxed some of the public media advertising restrictions slightly.

The June decision also emphasized a stronger role for French media programmes, insisting that some of the budget be deployed to create more original material in French.

One part of the budget cuts proposed by SSR has been to eliminate swissinfo, but a spokeswoman at the federal communications office confirmed to GenevaLunch that the move would require the approval of the federal government. World Radio Switzerland is also part of the SSR family, as are TSR television and RSR radio.

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Roger de Weck, new head of Swiss public broadcasting

Bern, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) - Roger de Weck has been named the new head of SSR, Swiss Public Broadcasting, the group announced Tuesday.

De Weck, 56, succeeds Armin Walpen 1 January 2011, upon Walpen’s retirement. The new director is a well-known journalist in Switzerland but he is particularly well-known in Geneva as the president of the Graduate Institute.

Roger de Weck has a multilingual, multicultural Swiss background that will stand him in good stead as he leads a monopoly organization that has been operating in the red for some time.

He is based in Zurich but works in Geneva, was born on the language divide in Fribourg, grew up in Geneva and Zurich, took an economics degree in Saint Gallen, then studied business and publishing in Hamburg, Germany. He later earned a doctoral degree from the University of Lucern.

He has worked for Edipresse’s Tribune de Genève and 24 heures, as well as the German-language publications Weltwoche and Die Zeit. He was later editor-in-chief of Tages-Anzeiger and a member of the management team at Tamedia, also editor-in-chief at Die Zeit, then worked independently before being named to his position at the Graduate Institute.

SSR press release (Fre)

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Bern, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – SSR, Swiss public broadcasting company, will lose its director general, Armin Walpen, and its deputy director general, Daniel Eckmann, at the start of 2011. Walpen has confirmed that he will retire 31 December 2010 and Eckmann earlier announced that he will leave at the end of January 2011, a month later. SSR will begin the search for its new senior management team at the end of August 2009.

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Bern, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – SSR, the Swiss public broadcasting company, will combine TSR and RSR, its television and radio units in French-speaking Switzerland, as well as its television and radio in German-speaking Switzerland. The move is designed in part as a response to a group 2008 financial loss of CHF79 million, reports TSR, citing an SSR press release, but also as a longer term response to changing audience habits and technical developments in journalism.

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