Editor | Judy Farah |
---|---|
Senior Editor | Jennifer Fergesen |
Assistant Editor | Dakota Morlan |
Special Sections Editor | Jessica Laskey |
Categories | Business |
Frequency | Monthly |
Publisher | Comstock Publishing Inc. |
Founder | Winnie Comstock-Carlson |
First issue | July 1989 |
Country | United States |
Based in | Sacramento, California |
Language | English |
Website | comstocksmag |
Comstock's magazine is a monthly business magazine with a focus on the Sacramento metropolitan area. The publication was founded in 1989 by Winnie Comstock-Carlson and features articles on topics of interest to the region's business and community leaders. [1] The magazine employs a network of freelance writers to produce its editorial content, such as business profiles, lifestyle stories and trend issues. [2] Its slogan is "Business insight for California's Capital Region." [3]
Since 2020, Comstock's magazine has been a provisional member of the California News Publishers Association. [4]
The magazine's founder Winnie Comstock-Carlson was born inside a Japanese-run internment camp in the Philippines during World War II. She grew up in Nevada City [5] and moved to Sacramento in 1962. [6]
Comstock-Carlson's first job in the magazine industry was working as advertisement salesperson at Sacramento Magazine for five years. [7] She then worked for another nine years at Executive Place magazine, [8] which later relaunched as California Executive magazine. It shuttered in 1989. Comstock-Carlson was the magazine's publisher for its final months before bankruptcy and said its last issues were profitable, but not enough to cover debts. [2]
A few weeks after California Executive closed Comstock-Carlson got the idea to start her own magazine. She awoke at 3 a.m. to the image of a magazine cover across her entire bedroom wall with the name "Comstock’s" on it along with the number 15. Comstock-Carlson interpreted this as a message from God telling her to start her own magazine. She said the cover in her vision was the same as the one used for the Comstock's magazine 15-year anniversary edition. She also said that the number 15 represented how many years it took before the magazine became profitable. [7] [9]
Lacking funds in 1989, Comstock-Carlson convinced vendors to wait for payment until after publishing the first edition. [7] Comstock-Carlson used a home equity loan to fund the magazine's launch. But six months later the United States entered into a recession. She took on credit card debt to keep the business afloat until it was financially sustainable. [10]
In 1995, Winnie Comstock married John P. Carlson, a marketing consultant who ran his own advertising agency. That same year he became the magazine's executive editor. He held that position until his death from cancer in 2001. He was 61. [11]
In 1996, the magazine launched a northern Nevada edition published quarterly and opened a second office in Reno, Nevada. [12] That same year the magazine considered launching a Fresno, California edition that would cover the San Joaquin Valley. [10] This quarterly edition did launch at some point. [11]
In 2020, the magazine's digital editor Matthew Keys abruptly quit. A few weeks later the publication's YouTube channel was deleted. A judge ruled Keys was responsible and that this action violated his parole. [13] He was sentenced to serve another six months in prison. [14] Keys denied the accusations [13] and in his Substack newsletter claimed Comstock's magazine had violated federal advertising regulations by not properly labeling native advertisements and misled city governments by inflating readership numbers to convince them to buy ads. [15]
Comstock-Carlson decided to use her own name for the magazine partly because of its local historical significance, [2] such as the Comstock Lode in Nevada and the Comstock family who helped develop Sacramento. Businessman William Dutton Comstock served as the city's mayor in 1890. According to the City of Sacramento’s archives, “Mr. Comstock and his family occupy a lead position in social circles and all who pass through the portals of their cultured home enjoy a most cordial hospitality.” The estate of his daughter Sophia P. Comstock helped fund the Pony Express Statue at Old Sacramento State Historic Park. [16]
In fall 2004, two senior editors and another staffer at Comstock's magazine quit to start a rival business publication called Prosper magazine. The new magazine was financially backed by Warren Smith, co-owner of the Sacramento River Cats. [8] [17] [18] Five months after launch, Michael Teel, owner of Raley's Supermarkets, bought a majority stake in Prosper magazine. [19]
Comstock-Carlson said the competition forced her to "write some huge checks" and take on a second mortgage to pay for a circulation audit, new computers, new software and better trained staff. "It was a blessing to us," Comstock-Carlson later said. "We needed a kick in the pants to get to the next level." [20] Prosper shuttered after three years and published its final issue in December 2007. [21] [22]
Comstock's magazine launched in 1989 with a controlled qualified circulation of 15,000. These issues were unsolicited free copies sent to local company executives and owners of businesses who employed at least 10 people and had at least $1 million in annual sales. Comstock-Carlson had a goal of getting to 10,000 paid subscribers. [2]
In 1996, Comstock's magazine had a monthly circulation of 20,000 in Sacramento and another 12,000 for its northern Nevada edition published quarterly. [10]
Comstock's magazine has won several journalism competitions over the years. In 2012, it won two Maggie Awards from the Western Publishing Association. In the category for consumer magazines with circulation under 75,000, Comstock's magazine won "Best Cover" for its January 2011 issue and won "Best Business Finance" magazine. [23]
In 2017, the magazine's founder Winnie Comstock-Carlson was named "Sacramentan of the Year" by the Sacramento Metro Chamber. [24]
Comstock's magazine has won multiple California Journalism Awards from the California News Publishers Association. In 2022, the magazine took home 20 awards [25] and won another dozen in 2023. [26]
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