Media Giant Announces Major Restructuring Amid Challenging Market Conditions
Southern Cross Media Group has confirmed plans to eliminate between 250 and 300 full-time positions by the end of June 2026. The announcement, made on June 11, comes shortly after the completion of a significant merger involving Seven West Media and Southern Cross Austereo. The company cited materially weaker-than-expected advertising market conditions as the primary driver for the decision.
The cuts represent one of the largest single rounds of redundancies in Australian commercial media in recent years. Most positions affected are on the television side of the business, though impacts are expected across radio and newspaper operations as well. Southern Cross Media owns the Seven Network, radio assets including the Triple M and Hit networks, and print titles such as The West Australian.
Background to the Merger and Leadership Changes
The current structure of Southern Cross Media stems from the recent combination of Kerry Stokes-linked Seven West Media with the radio-focused Southern Cross Austereo. The merged entity began operating under unified leadership in early 2026. Rohan Lund was appointed chief executive in the period following the transaction, bringing experience from previous media roles.
Earlier in the year, there had been a surprise departure of the previous chief executive, Jeff Howard, which occurred amid efforts to realise merger synergies. The board emphasised the need for swift action to address performance pressures. These developments set the stage for the latest cost-reduction programme.
Financial Guidance Downgraded Alongside Job Losses
In the same announcement to the Australian Securities Exchange, Southern Cross Media lowered its full-year 2026 forecasts. Revenue is now expected in the range of $1.86 billion to $1.87 billion, while underlying earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation are guided at $185 million to $190 million.
The company also recorded a substantial write-down related to legacy television content contracts. Management described the advertising slowdown as more severe than previously modelled, particularly in the television segment where agency bookings in April showed sharp year-on-year declines.
Scale and Focus of the Redundancies
The 250 to 300 positions targeted for removal equate to a significant portion of the workforce. Internal communications indicate the majority of roles will come from the former Seven West Media operations, with television newsrooms and production areas expected to bear the brunt.
High-profile departures already confirmed include veteran reporter Chris Maher and newsreader Natarsha Belling. The company has stated that a formal consultation process is underway, encompassing both voluntary and compulsory redundancies. A restructuring charge of approximately $20 million will be recognised in the current financial year.
Broader Pressures Facing Australian Media
The job cuts reflect ongoing structural challenges across the sector. Traditional free-to-air television advertising revenue has been in multi-year decline as audiences fragment across streaming platforms and digital channels capture a growing share of marketing budgets.
Industry data shows television advertising spend continuing to contract even as catch-up and ad-supported streaming options expand. Print newspaper advertising has also faced sustained pressure, with revenues falling sharply over the past decade. Radio has proven somewhat more resilient but is not immune to the shift toward digital audio and podcasts.
Company Strategy for Cost Reduction
Southern Cross Media outlined a comprehensive programme expected to deliver up to $150 million in annual run-rate savings once fully implemented. The initiative builds on earlier merger-related synergies already achieved.
Beyond headcount reduction, the company is reviewing discretionary spending, programming costs and corporate overheads. An internal AI tool for converting television news content into web-ready formats is reportedly being deployed, raising questions within the organisation about the pace of automation.
Reactions from Staff, Unions and Industry Observers
Media unions have expressed concern over the scale of the redundancies and the potential impact on news quality and regional coverage. Staff in affected newsrooms have described the process as abrupt, with some prominent on-air and reporting roles eliminated.
Industry analysts note that the merged entity faces intense competition from both domestic rivals and global technology platforms that dominate digital advertising. Share price reaction was negative, with Southern Cross Media shares falling more than six per cent on the day of the announcement to multi-week lows.
Implications for Journalism and Local News
Reductions in television news staffing raise questions about the future depth of coverage, particularly for state-based bulletins and investigative reporting. The West Australian newspaper, also under the group umbrella, may see workflow changes as resources are consolidated.
Regional radio operations, historically important for local information, could face further pressure if cost targets require additional efficiencies. Observers warn that sustained job losses across commercial media may accelerate the decline of public-interest journalism in smaller markets.
Market Context and Advertising Trends
Advertising expenditure data for 2025 and early 2026 shows overall softness, with television and print segments recording the steepest falls. Political advertising cycles provided temporary relief in prior periods, but the absence of major elections in the current cycle has removed that buffer.
Digital platforms continue to attract the majority of new marketing spend. Forecasts for 2026 anticipate further contraction in traditional television advertising, albeit at a moderating rate compared with recent years.
Outlook for Southern Cross Media and the Sector
Company management has expressed confidence that the leaner cost base will position the business for improved profitability once advertising markets stabilise. The focus remains on delivering merger benefits and adapting content strategies to changing consumption habits.
Longer term, the sector is expected to continue consolidating as scale becomes increasingly important to compete with international streaming and social media giants. Further efficiency measures cannot be ruled out if revenue pressures persist.
Photo by Ratapan Anantawat on Unsplash
Stakeholder Perspectives and Next Steps
Investors are monitoring execution of the cost programme closely, with particular attention on whether savings materialise without compromising revenue-generating capabilities. Employees are being offered support packages as part of the redundancy process.
Regulators and government bodies have not indicated immediate intervention, though ongoing scrutiny of media diversity and local content obligations remains a feature of the policy landscape.
