Forum Communications Co.’s Case elected leader of Inland Press Association

By Wendy Reuer

The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead

Forum Communications Co. President and CEO Lloyd Case

FARGO, N.D. – Lloyd Case, president and CEO of Forum Communications Co., recently was elected president of the Inland Press Association at the group’s annual meeting in Chicago.

The association provides training, research and consultation for all departments within a newspaper.

“It represents all aspects of the news industry – the revenue side, the cost side, and of course, the news,” Case said. “So the training and the webinars that are put on represent all aspects of our business.”

About 1,200 newspapers ranging in size from small weekly papers to metropolitan dailies belong to Inland Press Association.

Forum Communications owns nine daily and 25 weekly newspapers in North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota, including its flagship daily paper The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead. The company has been a member of Inland Press for decades, but Case is the first from Forum Communications to be named president.

“The organization of Inland is all about representing newspapers of all different sizes, so it fits well with our company,” Case said.

Case said during his one-year-term as president followed by a one-year chairman position, he will continue Inland’s mission of providing quality training to members. He said he expects a focus on the industry’s continuing shift to digital production.

As a company, Forum Communications has bolstered its own production of digital media, online and in video production, but Case said print has not, and will not, fall by the wayside.

“Print still represents 85 percent of our revenue across the country, so there still has to be a balance between print and digital, there’s no question about that,” he said.

To become president, members must serve on the board of directors before they can be selected to serve as an officer, which is a six-year movement through the ranks. The long-term commitment gives candidates knowledge and expertise inside the association, said Tom Slaughter, executive director of Inland Press Association.

“For someone like Lloyd, it’s a real sign of service and commitment to get into the point he is now,” Slaughter said.

Case, a Goodrich, N.D., native and University of North Dakota graduate, worked in public accounting for nearly a decade before joining Forum Communications – then called Forum Publishing Co. – as a controller in 1982.

He was named vice president 10 years later and chief financial officer of Forum Communications in 1992.

He was elected president by the company’s board of directors in 2006 and CEO in 2010.

A summer Inland Press Association board meeting is planned in Fargo to discuss the association’s strategic plan for the future.

“I know Lloyd is excited to get moving on that,” Slaughter said.

Wendy Reuer is a reporter at The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead, a Forum Communications Co. newspaper.

Forum Communications Co. launches news website aimed at the growing ‘Patch’ in western North Dakota

Forum Communications Co. today announced the launch of its newest website, thepatchtoday.com, a general news website designed for those living in western North Dakota's oil patch.

FARGO, N.D. – Forum Communications Co. today unveiled thepatchtoday.com, the multimedia company’s newest information website in its collection of sites that serve the Upper Midwest and beyond.

Thepatchtoday.com, which can be found at the Internet address of the same name, will serve as a general news website to the geographic area in western North Dakota and Eastern Montana that is collectively known as “The Oil Patch,” or “The Patch” for short. The site also aims to keep the residents of that quickly growing section of the country informed about local and state news, features, sports and entertainment. And finally, the site will delve deeply into reporting regarding the burgeoning oil industry that is centered in the region, thanks to new technology that has made tapping into The Bakken Oil Formation possible, company executives said.

“Western North Dakota and Eastern Montana deserve a news presence that caters to the growing information needs of the longtime residents of ‘The Patch,’ in addition to the needs of newcomers who have pursued work in the region,” said Lloyd Case, CEO of Forum Communications Co. “Thanks to our immense reporting resources, Forum Communications Co. is uniquely situated to cover the story of the growth of ‘The Patch,’ as well as the stories of the people, old and new alike, who make their home in ‘The Patch.’”

Thepatchtoday.com is a full-service digital news site that aggregates the vast reporting resources that Forum Communications Co. has in four states, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Content on the site, including breaking news, sports, features and award-winning photography and videos, is updated daily. And the website is fully integrated with Forum Communication Co.’s classified, jobs and display advertising network. Additionally, the site highlights the work of FCC’s highly regarded reporters Teri Finneman and Amy Dalrymple who cover the stories that matter to western North Dakota, Finneman focusing on state government and its intersection with life in ‘The Patch’ and Dalrymple who is based out of Williston, N.D., and covers breaking news and daily features in The Patch.

Thepatchtoday.com is being launched in conjunction with several other Forum Communications Co. efforts that also will focus on western North Dakota, including a monthly printed publication known as The Drill, which will be circulated in communities in region, and a new company news wire service that bolsters the resources dedicated to covering the region’s growth.

“Residents of western North Dakota will see an increased Forum Communications Co. presence in their lives as we ramp up our efforts to meet the information needs of the many calling ‘The Patch’ home,” said Paul Amundson, vice president of Forum Communication Co.’s Interactive Media Group. “There’s an important story taking place in the region and we plan to be there to cover the news as it happens and also to help explain what it means.”

Steve McLister, FCC’s vice president for newspapers added that thepatchtoday.com, The Drill and the company’s new wire service not only will provide ‘Patch’ residents with vital information, but these new efforts also will give ‘Patch’ businesses new avenues to reach their customers, whether locally or beyond on the company’s network of websites, which draws more than 2 million users per month.

“These new publications will give businesses in The Patch unprecedented avenues to reach their customers,” McLister said. “And Forum Communication Co. is proud to offer new ways to partner with local businesses to attract new and loyal customers.”

For more information about thepatchtoday.com, contact site editor Devlyn Brooks at devlyn.brooks@fccinteractive.com or 701.241.5545. For advertising inquiries, contact FCC Digital Sales Director Chris Dorsey at cdorsey@forumcomm.com or 701.451.5740.

Forum Communications Co. is a multimedia information company based in Fargo, N.D. In addition to thethepatchtoday.com, Forum Communications Co. owns dozens of newspapers, websites and television and radio stations in North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Marcil retiring as Forum’s publisher and company CEO; will remain board chairman

Bill Marcil Jr., William C. Marcil

Bill Marcil Jr., William C. Marcil

FARGO, N.D. – William C. Marcil, publisher of The Forum for the past 41 years, will step down on Dec. 1 and hand the reins to his son, Bill Marcil Jr.

WDAY video: Handing over the reigns.

The 74-year-old Marcil is relinquishing his role as publisher and CEO but will remain chairman of the board of Forum Communications Co., The Forum’s parent company. Marcil made the announcement this morning.

In another change, Lloyd G. Case, the company’s president and chief operating officer, on Monday also was named CEO and will remain in that position until 2013, when he too will retire.

William Marcil called the changes “a milestone in the history of this company.” “When you’ve got a family owned business and you’ve got a child that’s capable of coming back and running the business, it just makes everybody feel really happy in the family,” he told Forum employees, Marcil Jr. and Case at his side.

William Marcil became The Forum’s publisher on Nov. 1, 1969, succeeding his father-in-law, Norman D. Black Jr.

With his appointment, 46-year-old Bill Marcil Jr. will become the fifth-generation family member to serve as publisher of The Forum.

He was a photography intern at The Forum in 1987 and served as the newspaper’s general manager from 1997 to February 2000. Later that year he was named development director for Forum Communications.

Lloyd Case

Bill Marcil Jr. has been away from the newspaper’s day-to-day operations for seven years while running his own business, but he said he’s a voracious newspaper reader and has continued to follow industry trends closely.

He said he’s thankful for the opportunity his father and mother, Jane, have given him.

“I’m excited about it. I’m excited about our future and where we’re going,” he said.