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INMA appoints Stuff leader as vice president

The International News Media Association has announced Stuff Group owner and publisher Sinead Boucher as its first vice president.

Boucher, the first Kiwi to be appointed to INMA’s board in 2022, will subsequently become president in 2028 – the same year that the association celebrates its 100th year of operation.

She will serve her two-year vice president term under new president Siv Juvik Tveitnes, CEO of Schibsted in Norway.

Supporting news media organisations

Other appointees to the INMA Board include executive leaders from the Boston Globe, Axel Springer in Germany, the Financial Times in United Kingdom and The Quint in India.

INMA equips news media organisations to grow audience, revenue and brand in a fast-changing industry. It has a global membership of more than 26,000 senior media executives from 900 companies in 103 countries, with offices in Dallas, Antwerp, Nairobi, New Delhi and South America.

A genuine commitment

INMA executive director and CEO Earl Wilkinson says the association is thrilled to welcome Boucher.

“Sinead brings something rare to this role: deep operating experience, a journalist’s instincts, and a genuine commitment to the global community of news publishers. Our members will benefit enormously from her judgment, and I look forward to working alongside her in the year ahead.”

The vice president and president work closely together on agenda setting, board management and strategic priorities for INMA.

The business of journalism

Boucher says INMA’s global community is an exceptional talent pool of business leaders who are strategically focused on helping media organisations to thrive.

Joining its executive committee as VP is an opportunity to help shape the industry at a time of profound market change.

“INMA works on the business of journalism so that all publishers can deliver the impactful journalism that is so needed in the world today,” she says.

“Journalism is a cornerstone of democracy here in New Zealand, and around the globe. Being able to scrutinise the powerful and hold them to account is why INMA, and its members, exist.

“I am extremely honoured to have been appointed to these roles with a Board of such formidable executive leaders, and to be able to lead the organisation as it celebrates 100 years of operation.”

Boucher began her career as a reporter in a branch office of The Press in Canterbury before moving to London where she worked for the Financial Times and Reuters. She became CEO of Stuff Ltd in 2013 before buying the business from Australia’s Nine Entertainment in 2020.

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