News

The first Black woman publisher of the Baltimore Business Journal, Rhonda Pringle, is moving to American City Business Journals to oversee diversity programs.

Rhonda Pringle has served as the publisher and market president of the Baltimore Business Journal since 2017. She recently received a promotion to lead diversity business initiatives for the American City Business Journals, BBJ’s parent company.

Baltimore Business Journal (BBJ) publisher and market president Rhonda Pringle is set to leave her post and join the publication’s parent company, American City Business Journals (ACBJ). She will become the media company’s director of diversity business initiatives.

Pringle will take over the position on Oct. 16. In the new role, Pringle will be responsible for developing new programming focused on diversity and leadership with the aim of expanding ACBJ’s audience.

“We know that as demographics evolve, we certainly need to widen our audience. Our audience is largely White, largely male and it’s older. It reflects the current business community,” said Pringle. “If we want to stay relevant, we’re going to have to attract a more diverse audience, more people of color and younger business leaders. My role is to look at the content that we’re doing, develop content that appeals to those diverse audiences and find ways to monetize it as well.”

Her first project will be to launch a podcast that will feature stories from leaders across the country with a special focus on younger adults and minorities.

“I’m also going to be working with companies to provide an opportunity to support the podcast, so there is a revenue component as well as a content component,” said Pringle. “I think this publishing hat, working closely with the newsroom and advertising team, makes this a very comfortable role for me.”

Pringle said to some extent, she always had an interest in publishing. This interest was sparked by her affinity for writing.

Initially, she dreamed of being an author. Pringle even received a writing scholarship from her hometown newspaper, the Florida Times-Union, to study advertising and journalism at the University of Florida.

Pringle started her career as a staff writer for the Florida Times-Union but, when a colleague informed her about an open advertising position with the newspaper, she decided to take it.

“I happened to be in an elevator with someone who was from the advertising side, and she mentioned there being an opening. She and I would always ride the elevator together and talk about our days, and she seemed to be having so much more fun,” said Pringle. “My assumptions were incorrect, but back in those days, it seemed like the advertising people didn’t really work that hard to make a lot more money. I thought I’d try it.”

Before coming to the BBJ, Pringle’s most impactful professional experience was serving as a strategic advertising sales manager for The Arizona Republic, a Gannett newspaper in 2010.

“Gannett runs a very tight ship. I had never been at a company that did more training,” said Pringle. “I feel like they helped me to develop substantially as a leader.”

Christine Lorello, advertising account manager for Columbus Business First, worked under Pringle at this time. Lorello was responsible for arts, entertainment and sports accounts.

“It’s a very unique desk. It requires imagination. It requires you to be able to scrutinize budgets and make sure that you’re doing a lot with very little, especially when working with nonprofit arts groups,” said Lorello. “Rhonda was fantastic in that creative space. She taught me how to make sure that you’re getting the best value, extending the best solution to the client and putting guidelines in place.”

Lorello also remembered Pringle instilling friendly competition in the workplace.

“She always had incentives where she wanted everybody to be better and to do their best. She would do games; and every year around the holidays, she would buy gifts out of her own pocket,” said Lorello. “Then, we would earn tickets or points, and we would go shopping in Rhonda’s holiday store.”

After leaving Gannett in 2015, Pringle first joined the business journals’ system in Phoenix as an advertising director. But in 2017, she headed back to the East Coast and became both BBJ’s first woman and African-American publisher.

Coming from Phoenix, Pringle said she was grateful for the city’s diversity. But, she was disappointed to learn that that diversity was not represented in Baltimore’s corporate spaces.

“From a business perspective, I was surprised it wasn’t as diverse in boardrooms and in corporate suites as I expected,” said Pringle. “I’m not sure why I expected it because I know what the landscape of Corporate America is across the country.”

The general lack of diversity in positions of power was a significant challenge for Pringle throughout her career.

“I think one of the biggest challenges—not just for me but for any person of color or woman in this space—is walking into a room where you’re dealing with largely White men and still being able to be authentic and heard,” said Pringle. “There’s always a sense that I have to over-prove myself. I would over-research before going into a meeting and I made sure I was up to date because I felt like I needed to know more about everything than anybody else in the room.”

She said at some point, people have to make the decision to be authentic in spite of the risks.

“You never know if you go into a room who thinks less of you just because of the color of your skin,” said Pringle. “Instead of letting that dictate the way that you engage, you just have to say, ‘I’m going to be me, and I’m going to let the chips fall where they may.’”

Related Posts

PETER VAN ONSELEN: The rot at the core of Team Albo has been exposed by these shady last minute acts – including a startling admission about the misinformation bill

The poor priorities and inconsistencies of Anthony Albanese’s government are nearly summed up by the political manoeuvres taking place as we enter the final parliamentary sitting period before the summer break. They are tangible evidence for why Labor is floundering in the polls in just its first term in power. On the one hand, Labor spent months telling us its misinformation bill was a vital reform aimed at stamping out… you guessed it, misinformation in public discourse.

Labour is a risk to Britain’s national security and it’s ‘deeply’ worrying, a former MI6 chief claims

A former MI6 spy chief has accused Labour of putting national security at risk following its ‘deeply’ worrying cuts to defence spending. Sir Richard Dearlove, who was head of MI6 between 1999 and 2004, has claimed the new government is showing no urgency in the face of international crises. In words reported by the Daily Telegraph, Sir Richard said: ‘I’m deeply worried about aspects of this new Government, particularly when it comes to national security – and these are ultimately issues of national security.

Father who pleaded with pediatrician ex-wife not to ‘chemically castrate’ their son, 9, is dealt crushing blow

A Texas father who tried for years to stop his ex-wife from allowing his pre-teen child, who now identifies as ‘Luna,’ to be chemically castrated has been dealt a blow in California court. Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mark Juhas ruled that Jeff Younger’s ex-wife Anne Georgulas would be granted full custody of his 12-year-old son James and would be able to allow him to transition. It comes as a blow to Younger, 59, who announced on X that he ‘lost all parental rights’ over his twins and wished his children goodbye.

Ben Fordham left stunned as top professor exposes what Australia got wrong during Covid

A visiting UK professor of medicine stunned radio host Ben Fordham by delivering a blistering takedown of Covid lockdowns, quarantine, masks, and vaccines. Angus Dalgleish, a professor of oncology at London’s St George’s University who also sits on the European Commission Cancer Board, told Fordham Australia’s Covid response was ‘absolutely appalling’, ‘madness’ and ‘disgraceful’. His unconventional views go against the recent Covid Response Inquiry verdict that ‘Australia fared well relative to other nations that experienced larger losses in human life, health system collapse and more severe economic downturns’.

Trump plans to kick transgender troops out of the military with 15,000 service members to be ‘medically discharged’ on his first day in office, report claims

President elect Donald Trump reportedly plans to issue an executive order on his ‘first day in office’ to ban transgender members of the military. The controversial order would cause as many as 15,000 active service members to be ‘medically discharged’ – deeming them unfit to serve, according to The Times. Trump seeks to issue the executive action on January 20, 2025 or Day 1 of his term, the Times said, preventing any transgender people from enlisting in the military as all branches continue to struggle with recruitment.

Revealed: How ‘Morrisons Four’ stole £120k of goods from British supermarkets on orders of international crime gang

A gang of shoplifters dubbed the ‘Morrisons Four’ by police stole £120,000 of goods from British supermarkets on the orders of an international crime gang, an investigation has found. The shoplifters were ordered to steal from more than 50 branches of Morrisons by gangs from Romania, who then resold the goods through a wholesaler and car boot sales. A new Channel 4 Dispatches documentary, Britain’s Shoplifting Gangs Exposed, lays bare how dozens of retailers appear to have been targeted in this way.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *