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Sue Douglas

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Susan Margaret Douglas (born 29 January 1957) is a British media executive and former newspaper editor.

Early life

Born in London, she was educated at Tiffin Girls' School in Kingston.[1] After graduating with a first-class Honours degree[2] in Physiology and Biochemistry from Southampton University,[3] she began her career in 1978 with management consultants Andersen Consulting.[1] She then became a medical journalist with Haymarket Publishing. In South Africa (1979–81) she worked for the South African Sunday Express and The Rand Daily Mail.

Career

Returning to Britain in 1981, she began writing for the Daily Mail and News of the World, and in 1982 she joined the Mail on Sunday. Initially a medical correspondent, she was promoted to associate editor of the newspaper, then assistant editor of the Daily Mail in 1987.[1] Joining The Sunday Times in 1991, she became deputy editor. Douglas launched the newspaper's Style & Culture sections, relaunched The Sunday Times magazine, ran the Insight investigative team and introduced many writers and columnists including Julie Burchill, Jeremy Clarkson, Taki, Melvyn Bragg and Douglas' (then) husband, historian Niall Ferguson.

At the beginning of 1996, she took up her appointment as editor of the Sunday Express,[2] then owned by Lord David Stevens. Just under two years later, Clive Hollick bought the Express group and rolled the Sunday into the Daily title, rendering all Sunday Express journalists redundant.

Douglas was chosen by former Sunday Times superior Andrew Neil to assist in relaunching The Scotsman, Scotland on Sunday and the Edinburgh Evening News. At the same time, she diversified into magazine publishing, working on the US launch of men's magazine Gear, then the UK websites Vogue.com, Traveller.co.uk and after she helped launch the new title, Glamour, in the UK, she ran the contract publishing division of Condé Nast, with titles such as tate, Trader, Mandarin Oriental, Harrods and the Post office magazine. Glamour was one of the most successful magazine launches ever, and Douglas, as President of New Business with Condé Nast, became a director.

Later career

After a severe horse-riding accident which led to a brain haemorrhage,[4] she became a freelance executive and in 2008, joined literary agency PFD as a director and engineered the management buyout by Andrew Neil. The acquisition ultimately led to Douglas being forced to leave. Consultancy deals with Harper Collins, Future publishing and television company, Luxe.tv and Lingospot followed.[5]

Douglas, as part of a consortium, was reported in January 2013 to have been in talks with Trinity Mirror to purchase a majority stake in Sunday People and rebrand it as The News of the People (Douglas had attempted to buy the News of the World after its closure).[6][7] In May 2013, these plans were reported to have been dropped, although Phoenix Ventures, her company, remained in talks about other collaborations.[8]

Early in the following month it emerged that she was to head a wholly owned subsidiary of Trinity Mirror called Sunday Brands. The leading publication would be the Sunday People, with other titles from the group, but these would not include the Sunday Mirror.[9] The Sunday Brands was soon dropped, with Douglas' role changing to offering a digital version of the Sunday People. In the end, the new website, launched in November 2013, did not meet Trinity Mirror's financial targets and closed in January 2014 when Douglas left the company.[10]

Personal life

Douglas is divorced from historian Niall Ferguson[11] with whom she has three children.

References

  1. ^ a b c Dennis Griffiths (ed.) The Encyclopedia of the British Press, 1422–1992, London and Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1992, p.207
  2. ^ a b Rebecca Fowler "Is hers the toughest job in Fleet Street?", The Independent, 6 February 1996
  3. ^ "Sue Douglas", The Asha Centre
  4. ^ "'I set out on a beautiful day to ride my horse. It nearly cost me my life'", The Scotsman, 5 February 2007
  5. ^ Sophie Morris, "Sue Douglas: My Life In Media", 8 August 2005 Archived 14 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Sweney, Mark (10 January 2013). "Sue Douglas in talks to pay up to £10m for majority stake in Sunday People". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077.
  7. ^ Rushton, Katherine (10 January 2013). "Sue Douglas in talks to take over Sunday People from Trinity Mirror". ISSN 0307-1235 – via telegraph.co.uk.
  8. ^ Sweney, Mark (10 May 2013). "Sunday People bid shelved by Phoenix Ventures". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  9. ^ Mark Sweney "Sue Douglas to head Trinity Mirror subsidiary, including Sunday People", guardian.co.uk, 3 June 2013
  10. ^ Sweney, Mark (28 January 2014). "Sue Douglas leaves Trinity Mirror as People.co.uk closes". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077.
  11. ^ "Niall Ferguson and Ayaan Hirsi Ali - Corrections, News - The Independent". independent.co.uk. London. 25 February 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
Media offices
Preceded by
Ivan Fallon
Deputy Editor of the Sunday Times
1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Editor of the Sunday Express
1995–1996
Succeeded by