Pocket Outdoor Media, the Colorado-based market leader in active lifestyle publishing (and OBJ鈥檚 parent company), announced today the acquisition of three new properties: the decades-old climbing magazine Rock and Ice,听Trail Runner, and Gym Climber, all formerly produced by Big Stone Publishing, also headquartered in Colorado.
The deal brings three mainstays of the fitness and outdoor media landscape into the Pocket family, strengthening the categories of climbing and running, which company leaders have identified as verticals primed for significant growth in coming years.
鈥淚t鈥檚 our goal to create the best products in these categories and improve the consumer experience, period,鈥 Pocket CEO Robin Thurston told 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal this week. 鈥淲e don’t want to be average here. We need to be great. To do that, we need scale. This acquisition will help achieve that.鈥
In stark contrast to the deal, earlier this week some of the oldest print magazines in the outdoor industry鈥攊ncluding Bike, Surfer, Snowboarder, and 笔辞飞诲别谤鈥announced an indefinite pause on publication that many interpreted as a death knell, a softer version of folding outright. Thurston says that鈥檚 exactly what he鈥檚 trying to head off for Rock and Ice,听Trail Runner, and Gym Climber听with this new acquisition.
鈥淰ertical publications are under attack because many of them operate on a model based only on advertising, which has been under extreme pressure for the last ten years,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here’s an opportunity to let these brands flourish under a new model that combines advertising, digital subscription, ecommerce, and events.鈥
For Pocket, that new model is Active Pass, the company鈥檚 subscription membership program that includes benefits like event registrations, training plans, and premium content, among other perks.
鈥淎s a consumer, you look at this as a daily destination and say, 鈥楾hey have so much content across this platform, I need access to it,鈥欌 said Thurston. 鈥淚f there’s anything we want to be known for, it’s recreating the model for these active lifestyle brands and breathing new life into them鈥攇iving them a new opportunity to tell important stories and inspire people to do these activities.鈥
Despite the need for scale to make that new model work, the acquisition of the听Big Stone Publishing titles does not amount to blind expansion, Thurston says. The brands听will join the Pocket family to hit very specific targets.
Two Longtime Competitors Finally Team Up
For decades, Climbing (first published in 1970) has battled Rock and Ice (launched in 1984) for market share with few other serious competitors. Combining them, says current Climbing editor-in-chief Matt Samet, can only benefit the editorial capacity of both titles.
鈥淚t will actually be very healthy for the climbing community and for the industry to bring it all under one roof,鈥 said Samet. 鈥淲e won鈥檛 have to worry about what the other guy is doing anymore. We can just focus on the best storytelling possible, which has always been our goal.鈥
Samet says that more consistent editorial leadership over the years has allowed Rock and Ice to produce a wider range of content, including more alpine and mountaineering packages. Reader surveys have consistently indicated mountaineering stories aren’t a priority for Climbing鈥檚 audience, Samet says, so they’re often overlooked. Now that the magazines are working together, the scope of both brands鈥 reporting can expand. And the timing, he says, couldn鈥檛 be better.
鈥淭he sport hit the pause button pretty hard with the pandemic, just like everything else did, but now gyms have reopened and the cliffs are completely booming again,” Samet said. “The good news is that the climbing community is healthier than ever, and I think the timing for this is exciting.鈥
Gym Climber, the leading publication catering to the bouldering community and indoor climbers, will be an especially important property for Pocket in 2021, company leaders says, as gym climbing makes its debut at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
Welcoming New Staff to the Pocket Team
The merger is sure to raise some questions about the future of Duane Raleigh, the longtime editor-in-chief of Rock and Ice and owner of Big Stone Publishing, who resigned in July after admitting in an editor鈥檚 letter that he had coined racist names for climbing routes in the eighties. Thurston confirmed that Raleigh will remain part of the Rock and Ice team with Pocket, though not as editor-in-chief.
鈥淒uane has tremendous experience. I do think he learned from what happened,鈥 Thurston said.
鈥淧eople can be assured that one of my top priorities is being inclusive, representing everybody in the world of climbing. Climbing has been a white sport for a long time. That’s changing and it needs to change. I’m really excited to be part of that,鈥 Raleigh told 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal.
As for Trail Running, Thurston says he鈥檚 bullish on the category and expects participation and media interest to grow exponentially in the next several years.
鈥淎lmost every running brand I know is thinking about trail running as a new growth vertical,鈥 Thurston said. 鈥淏ut again, you have to have scale to make it work. 鈥淲hen we bring Podium Runner, Women’s Running and Trail Runner together, we can attract larger partners who want to collaborate with us.鈥
Some big questions have yet to be answered, but the broad strokes of the deal are clearly defined.听Rock and Ice will merge with Climbing to form a single magazine under the latter’s title.听Pocket plans to retain the听trademark听for the name “Rock and Ice”听and use it in some capacity going forward.
“The new Climbing will combine the best of both brands to create a better product,” said Pocket vice president Sharon Houghton. “This won’t be the Climbing people know today. It will听be better for readers and advertisers alike.”
Thurston confirmed that everyone from Rock and Ice,听Trail Runner, and Gym Climber听will receive an offer to join Pocket.
鈥淭his is a very exciting day, because it allows us to keep building on our core mission, which is the authenticity of our brands and the quality of our content,鈥 Thurston said. 鈥淎t the end of the day, it鈥檚 the quality of our products that will differentiate us. Everything else is built on that.鈥