Gerhard Zeiler
Gerhard Zeiler (born 20 July 1955) is an Austrian businessman who is the current president of WarnerMedia International, part of WarnerMedia.[1] Before taking up the role at Turner, Mr Zeiler was chief executive officer of the German media company RTL Group and a member of the executive board of Bertelsmann, the media conglomerate that owns the RTL Group.
Early life
Zeiler was born in Ottakring, Vienna, to Hans and Dorothea Zeiler. He was the first born of identical twins.[2]
His early education took place in his native Vienna, after which he studied psychology, sociology and educational science at the University of Vienna.[3]
Career history
Summary
Zeiler has worked in television for 23 years – eight in the public service broadcasting sector; the remainder in commercial television.[4]
His former employer, RTL Group, operates 40 TV channels in 10 countries, and owns FremantleMedia, a content and production company that operates in 25 countries and exports its programming to over 150 countries.[4]
Early years
After graduating, Zeiler began his early career working as a scientific assistant at the Austrian Institute for Occupational Research.[5] After three years at the institute, his career took a change of direction when he began working as a freelance journalist. In 1979 he was appointed press spokesman for the then Austrian minister for education and the arts, Dr Fred Sinowatz. He followed Dr Sinowatz to the federal chancellor's office in 1983, going on to work for federal chancellor Dr Franz Vranitzky.[6]
Television
In 1986, Zeiler became secretary general of the Austrian Broadcasting Corporation (ORF) in Vienna. Despite being only 24, Zeiler had already realised that "television is part of my life".[2]
In 1991, he moved to Munich when he was appointed CEO of German commercial TV channel, Tele 5. In 1992 he became CEO of RTL II. Two years later, in 1994, Zeiler returned to Vienna when he was appointed CEO of ORF.[5]
RTL Group
In November 1998, Zeiler joined RTL Group, being appointed CEO of RTL Television in Cologne. He succeeded Helmut Thoma.[3] The role gave him responsibility for the German television channels RTL Television, Vox, RTL II, Super RTL, and N-TV.
In March 2003 Zeiler became CEO of RTL Group.[5] In 2005, he passed the management of RTL Television to Anke Schäferkordt, so that he could focus solely on the company's international entertainment network.
Zeiler has been a member of the executive board of Bertelsmann AG since October 2005. He is also a member of the supervisory boards of Groupe M6 in France and RTL Television in Germany, and vice chairman of the board of the Greek Alpha Media Group.
In August 2010, Zeiler's contract was renewed until the end of 2015.[2]
Other activities
From 2002 to 2004, Zeiler was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Bertelsmann Stiftung,[7] which holds a majority in Bertelsmann.[8]
Outspoken
Zeiler is often outspoken in his views on the value of television as a medium, despite often challenging evidence to the contrary. In a 2010 interview with Dutch newspaper, NRC Handelsblad, Zeiler commented on the recovery of the television advertising market in 2010. "In Western Europe, our channels are now performing at the same level as in 2008… Other media, such as the publishing sector, have not bounced back anything like as strongly".[9]
He is convinced that advertisers believe in the effectiveness of television – "TV is bigger than ever" – and believes "Television will remain the mass medium – the only medium capable of assembling truly mass audiences".[10]
Zeiler has long been a strong supporter of British television. Speaking at the 2009 worldview address in Edinburgh, he said European television makers had a huge amount to learn from the UK.[10]
He is one of the few non-British recipients of the Royal Television Society (RTS) fellowship,[11] and was chair of the 2008 RTS international conference 'Opportunity Knocks'.[12]
He believes "Britain is an incredible centre for talent, creativity and ideas", and that even the US networks look to the UK for inspiration. He went on to say, "British production companies are the absolute best in the world when it comes to non-scripted, non-fiction formats".
Zeiler has also been outspoken in his support of calls to relax UK product placement rules, to help struggling commercial broadcasters.[13] He believes, "Product placement is a commercial fact of life… Carefully regulated product placement is a legitimate revenue stream and the money raised could be used to support the production of original content – content viewers want to watch".
Summarising his objective for RTL for the future, Zeiler commented: "We are developing our broadcasting operations into digital TV families with a presence on all new platforms. We will systematically meet the rising demand for attractive content and expand our production arm, FremantleMedia, with new talent, new formats and by doing business in new markets".[2]
Recognition
In 2004, Zeiler was voted media personality of the year at the Mipcom audiovisual content trade show in Cannes. The award came at a time when RTL Group continued to set new records, despite the crisis evident in the media sector.[2]
In January 2011, Zeiler will become the first non-American to receive NATPE's Brandon Tartikoff legacy award.[14] Named after arguably one of television's greatest programmers, the award was created to recognise television professionals who exhibit extraordinary passion, leadership, independence and vision in the process of creating television programming.
Zeiler shares the eighth annual award with Dick Ebersol, Mary Hart and Regis Philbin.
Commenting on the award, Rick Feldman, NATPE president and CEO, said, "We believe that Dick, Mary, Regis and Gerhard have remarkably shaped the global television industry on both business and pop cultural levels, and truly embody the spirit of the Brandon Tartikoff Legacy Award".
References
- ^ Plunkett, John (8 February 2012). "RTL chief Gerhard Zeiler to join Turner Broadcasting". the Guardian.
- ^ a b c d e Gerhard Zeiler: a portrait. RTL Group. http://www.rtlgroup.com/www/assets/file_asset/RTLGroup_PortraitGZ_engl_clear_20110102.pdf
- ^ a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ a b Guardian.co.uk. Gerhard Zeiler’s worldview address. Adapting to the new market reality. https://www.theguardian.com/media/2009/aug/30/worldview-address
- ^ a b c Bloomberg Business Week executive profile of Gerhard Zeiler. http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/people/person.asp?personId=1133754&ticker=RTL:LX&previousCapId=1882362&previousTitle=SKY%20DEUTSCHLAND%20AG
- ^ 1 Bloomberg Business Week executive profile of Gerhard Zeiler. http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/people/person.asp?personId=1133754&ticker=RTL:LX&previousCapId=1882362&previousTitle=SKY%20DEUTSCHLAND%20AG
- ^ "Menschen und Märkte: Erlen und Zeiler vervollständigen Kuratorium der Bertelsmann-Stiftung". Die Welt (in German). 30 August 2002. p. 11.
- ^ "Bertelsmann gehört jetzt mehrheitlich der Stiftung". Deutscher Drucker (in German). 14 October 1993. p. 4.
- ^ IP Network Update. http://www.ip-network.com/rd/htm/newsFS.aspx?id=89CAC787A3684B84BCEC24C12B1B1082 Archived 13 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Guardian.co.uk. Gerhard Zeiler’s 2009 worldview address https://www.theguardian.com/media/2009/aug/30/worldview-address
- ^ RTS Annual Report 2007. p. 24. http://www.rts.org.uk/doclib/RTS.pdf[permanent dead link ]
- ^ RTS annual report 2008. p. 11. http://www.rts.org.uk/doclib/RTS_low_res_AR_2008.pdfGuardian.co.uk[permanent dead link ]
- ^ RTL’s Gerhard Zeiler urges UK to relax TV product placement rules. https://www.theguardian.com/media/2009/aug/30/gerhard-zeiler-edinburgh-tv-festival
- ^ Natpe press release. Dick Ebersol, Mary Hart, Regis Philbin and Gerhard Zeiler to receive Natpe’s 8th annual Brandon Tartikoff legacy award http://www.natpe.org/natpe/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&catid=40:press-releases&id=387:dick-ebersol-mary-hart-regis-philbin-and-gerhard-zeiler-to-receive-natpes-8th-annual-brandon-tartikoff-legacy-award&Itemid=72 Archived 1 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine