THE GOOD NEWS COMES FIRST
Young Publishers Have Shore Covered
By CLAUDIA VAN NES
Courant Staff Writer
Published on 5/11/2001
A pool is for swimming, a garbage can for trash. Unless you have a vision. Then an inverted
garbage can at the bottom of a swimming pool, weighed down with rocks, becomes a
submarine you can crouch inside until the trapped air becomes a bit thin. In which case, you
face the problem of resurfacing.
Thankfully, the submarine inventors James Warner and Ryan Duques figured out how to
escape an underwater garbage can, ensuring they would be around to take on the newspaper
world.
"We were always building things," says Warner, who moved to Duques' Madison
neighborhood in the fourth grade and formed and instant partnership with him likeminded
new pal.
They're still building things.
A decade after their first meeting, Warner and Duques remain partners, and the once very
young entrepreneurs have turned into young entrepreneurs who just added another newspaper
to Shore Publishing, their growing chain of weeklies based in their hometown Madison.
Last year, the two 25-year-olds grossed $1.3 million and expect to do considerably better
this year; the frames photo of the company outing in Duques' office is crowded with smiling
employees, and Warner just bought himself a $269,000 house in Branford.
You'd be more likely these days to find ambitious young adults making bucks off the
computer-or trying to-but these two guys were always most interested in marketing.
Back in the sixth grade, for instance, they figured out how to transfer home movies to video,
using a movie projector in the Warner basement and sold the service around town. They
went on to a T-shirt dying operation, this time in the Duques basement, which left their hands
purple for months, remembers Duques.
When they were in high school, the two actually formed a marketing company doing just
about anything anyone asked. They drew up a business plan for a restaurant using a computer
program and arranged the grand opening for a pizza shop where a friend hired to appear in a
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle costume failed to show.
"I had to be the Ninja Turtle," says Duques. "It was fun, actually."
They also compiled local restaurants' menus in a booklet they'd distribute to businesses that
could use the menus to order lunch.
In the summer of Duques freshman year at UMass and Warner' senior year at Hand High
School, the owner of a Madison Restaurant jokingly told the guys, the local newspaper was
getting so bad even they could do a better job at it.
The challenge fed their healthy egos and youthful optimism, and they worked on the concept
every spare moment, meeting in Duques dorm room at UMass and in a spare bedroom in his
parent's home during breaks.
They has no capital for their newspaper, which was to cover Madison and be called the Source,
so they had to sell ads in advance. When they'd sold enough to get by, they put out their first
issue. That was five years ago.
They wrote the thing and laid it out on Duques' dorm room floor, hiring a guy who worked in
production at the UMass newspaper for $770 to whip it into shape; a student two doors
down proofread and friends from high school gave their time and talent to the effort. In a couple
of cases, "staff" members turned out to do nothing more than contribute their yearbook pictures
to paste on the masthead.
"We made a couple of hundred dollars on the very first issue," says Warner, and "quadrupled
our sales the next issue."
The Source was published quarterly and mailed to every household. "People loved it," says
Duques.
"We had a real variety of things there-columns by the local people and stuff by readers. It
made people feel proud of their town," he says. That is still the aim of the Source and the
other papers which have joined it over the ensuing
years.
The partnership has been without trouble, both say, but the ride hasn't always been on the
crest of the wave. Duques and Warner almost drowned, in fact, on their second venture-
another paper, the Sound, covering Branford, this one sold by subscription.
They opened an office in Branford, put a small staff there and commuted from their respective
colleges to run the two papers.
Soon enough, they discovered advertisers weren't so interested in a paper with not many
readers and that a duplication of staffs was a financial drain; so much so, they shut down the
Branford paper, laid off the staff and re-grouped.
"We couldn't close down all together, we were too much in debt," says Warner.
The partners, with a single staff in one office in Madison, went back into Branford with the
Sound several months later and have been holding their own there ever since.
The next year, they launched the Harbor News, covering Old Saybrook, Clinton and
Westbrook and, still in college, also started the Guilford Courier.
Duques graduated in '98; Warner the next year, and they've been building their newspaper
empire ever since. They papers now all come out weekly, and the latest one to join the chain is
the Valley Courier covering Essex, Chester and Deep River.
There are now about 20 people on staff-it's hard to count because some are part time, some
free-lance, some with other arrangements. But the operation is still out of one office on the
second floor of the New Haven Savings Bank on Main Street, though nowadays there's a
receptionist, advertising director, sales manager, editor, assistant editor, production staff and
sales people.
The two owners wear crisp shirts and ties to work; their hair is short and Duques' office has a
matching couch and chair, wall-to-wall carpeting, a cabinet behind his desk with framed
pictures of his family. One shows him in a tux and his girlfriend in an evening dress.
It could easily pass for a high school prom picture, but it was taken this winter. Although
Duques looks young enough to be president of a high school Future Business Leader's of
America chapter, he's just been invited to join the board of Madison Chamber of Commerce.
"I can't help looking so young," he laments.
But not so young in outlook. Both he and Warner make sure their newspapers aren't too
flashy or offensive. Their aim is to satisfy their readers by offering them what they want.
This can mean a sizable distinction between, for instance, the paper you're reading at the
moment, and one of Shore Publishing weeklies.
When a mother and two of her three young children were killed last winter in Guilford,
Duques decided not to run a recent photo the paper had happened to take of all three children
at a Christmas pageant.
"We don't want readers to feel bad about their community. People in Guilford knew we had
the photo and asked we not run it for the sake of everyone, especially the family," says Duques
.
The editor, Ethelene DiBona, who oversees a staff that writes the stories for all the newspapers,
appreciates this kind of sensibility. "This is a great place to work," she says. "We get a lot
done, but it's relaxed. They're not afraid to try new things and invest in new ideas."
Marisa Nadolny, who came aboard as the office manager after college and a year later became
assistant editor, is equally enthused as it is the advertising director Michelle DiPetro who
commutes from Manchester each day and would travel longer if necessary. "I love this place,"
she says.
She also says selling ads isn't hard. At least not to Wilson Ford of Branford, which takes out a
full-page color ad every week.
"They're very effective. It's the biggest advertising we do. We're very satisfied," says Wilson
Ford's sales manager, Steve Hill, who says he is convinced the ads at Shore Publishing's
newspapers sell more cars than the ads Wilson used to place in the Journal Register papers.
Those papers include the New Haven Register and the Shoreline Newspapers, another string
of weeklies in the same readership area as Shore Publishing.
The partners aren't terribly concerned about their competition, which also includes Main Street
News, covering some of the same towns. These weeklies and the dailies in the area are all
subscription.
Shore Publishing mails to 61,000 homes for free, and it's this total market penetration which
assures happy advertisers, say Duques and Warner.
They won't say how much their each making these days themselves, but they do say their
careers are still as exciting as sinking that submarine in the pool 10 years ago.
"It's the perfect job," says Duques. |