Company News - Rough Draft Atlanta https://roughdraftatlanta.com/category/company-news/ Hyperlocal news for metro Atlanta Sat, 13 Dec 2025 10:08:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://roughdraftatlanta.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/cropped-Rough-Draft-Social-Logo-32x32.png Company News - Rough Draft Atlanta https://roughdraftatlanta.com/category/company-news/ 32 32 139586903 Publisher’s Note: 20 years later, home again https://roughdraftatlanta.com/2025/12/13/publishers-note-20-years-later-home-again/ Sat, 13 Dec 2025 09:52:28 +0000 https://roughdraftatlanta.com/?p=332396 Reporter Newspapers celebrates two milestones: the City of Sandy Springs' 20th birthday and the newspaper's own 5th anniversary, during which it has achieved record revenue and readership.

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The most recent issue of Reporter Newspapers marked two significant milestones. 

As you can read in the printed pages and online here, the City of Sandy Springs is celebrating its 20th birthday. While many of the city’s intrepid founders, including newly reelected Mayor Rusty Paul, like to say that the push for independence from Fulton County began decades earlier, there is no question that Sandy Springs set the stage for the cityhood movement that has reshaped Metro Atlanta. 

Credit: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

I wasn’t much older than 20 when I left Sandy Springs, a decade before Eva Cohn Galambos and crew would achieve their goal. Truth be told, I couldn’t wait to spread my wings and experience other places. I needed independence, too, and getting away from my childhood home was how I felt I would achieve it.

That’s what makes the second milestone so poignant, if not slightly ironic. 

A crazy, lucky idea

Five years ago this month, I bought Reporter Newspapers and its portfolio of trailblazing local newspapers whose (declining) revenue came almost exclusively from print advertising. While the endeavor thrilled me, it was, admittedly, an odd time to do so. Media was being upended by technology, and some people were still spraying their mail with Lysol, let alone picking up printed newspapers. 

TELL US WHAT YOU THINK: Take our reader survey here.

The gamble has worked out beyond my expectations. In addition to creating the perfect job for myself, we are closing 2025 with record revenue, and readership approaching one million people each month across print, web, newsletters, and social media.

I don’t take any of this growth or success for granted. As you have read here before, industry headwinds remain fierce, and macroeconomic uncertainty is a constant threat to advertising investment.

I know we are reaching more and more people every week. In fact, a young journalist recently told me that “Even my friends who don’t follow the news read Rough Draft,” and I blushed and beamed simultaneously, pride fighting its way through my imposter syndrome. 

People are reading Rough Draft in print, online, and via email because the work our team puts out day after day is some of the best in town. Not only do I hear it from other local journalists, but I see it in our readership numbers and in the feedback from neighbors who tell me that they rely on our publications to stay informed. 

Our goal is to give you a mix of the news you need (local government, public safety) and the stories you crave (food, arts, real estate), and five years into this local media adventure, I’m really proud that we are hitting that mark. 

Please keep your feedback coming via email (keith@roughdraft.news) or via our year-end survey (it will take you less than two minutes). 

Coming home again

At a recent dinner to talk about the state of Black-Jewish relations in the wake of October 7 and George Floyd, I sat at a table where four people had grown up in Sandy Springs and fled as young adults, only to make their way “home” in the last five or six years. We shared similar stories, but all agreed that we were happy to be where we were. 

Real talk, as the kids say: I never thought I’d be engaged again in the community, let alone own the newspaper that has given me a front-row seat from which I can proudly say, “yeah, I grew up in Sandy Springs. It’s pretty nice, isn’t it?”  

Happy Holidays! Here’s to another 20 years of prosperity for the city and for local journalism.

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Get your newsletter as a Reel https://roughdraftatlanta.com/2025/11/08/rough-draft-morning-newsletter-instagram/ Sat, 08 Nov 2025 15:37:03 +0000 https://roughdraftatlanta.com/?p=327838 Rough Draft's morning newsletter is available as an Instagram Reel, featuring a selection of content from the past week.

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Rough Draft’s morning newsletter (subscribe to the email here) is also available as an Instagram Reel.

Here’s a selection from the past week, and you can follow us on Instagram @RoughDraftATL.

The videos are also available via YouTube Shorts on our YouTube Channel @RoughDraftATL.

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Publisher’s Note – Mid-October updates https://roughdraftatlanta.com/2025/10/19/local-journalism-thriving-atlanta/ Sun, 19 Oct 2025 16:25:56 +0000 https://roughdraftatlanta.com/?p=324750 Georgia Voice has seen success in the past few weeks of Q3, with a 31% increase in print pages and a 58% ad-to-editorial ratio, while Rough Draft's Associate Editor Sammie Purcell has been making strides in film criticism.

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The last few weeks of Q3 were a whirlwind, but here we go with another Publisher’s Note giving a behind-the-scenes look at the local media business and the people who make it happen.

This note is part reflection, part field report, a dispatch from the trenches of trying to help local journalism thrive in Atlanta.

Read this post on Substack.


Biz bits

The seeds we’ve been planting over the past four and a half years are bearing fruit. We just closed our biggest print quarter ever: 332 printed pages, a 31% increase over average, with a 58% ad-to-editorial ratio. This number, while very inside baseball, is important because it fuels our ability to continue investing in quality local journalism.

Even though Georgia Voice, and the LGBTQ+ media sector as a whole, has faced a steep decline in ad dollars (our national rep firm said this is their worst year in 37 years), we just published our biggest issue of 2025, released an annual travel guide with the ACVB, and our newsletter continues to grow as an engaging, independent voice, which is more important than ever for the LGBTQ+ community and its allies.

Our revenue mix remains steady, with 72% from print, 27% from digital, and 1% from reader revenue. I’m optimistic we’ll finish the year more than 15 percent higher than last year.

A note on reader revenue: support from readers — whether through subscriptions or voluntary contributions — is one of the most important ways local media stays alive today. The future of local journalism won’t be one-size-fits-all, but every experiment adds to the playbook.


Let me clarify on print

I received a lot of thoughtful feedback from my previous newsletter, including the particularly passionate text message above. While my thoughts on print and the AJC’s decision to stop printing haven’t changed, they deserve a bit of clarification.

Atlanta is about to become the largest U.S. city without a daily print newspaper. It’s because daily print doesn’t work anymore. The audience isn’t large enough, and the logistics are increasingly difficult. Designing, printing, and delivering papers to a shrinking number of driveways is a losing proposition.

There is a lot of buzz about the print revival because of publications like The Onion, Racquet Magazine, and my friends at The Bitter Southerner. But these are all relatively niche, and none of them print daily papers.

Yes, the AJC print edition may have been profitable, but a small and shrinking profit and long-term sustainability are two very different things. The AJC’s resources are better spent on products that have actual growth potential, like audio, video, and events.

My friend Patricia Murphy is a true journalistic treasure in Atlanta, but as I told her when I saw her at a recent Atlanta History Center event, I’m confident her mom can print out her AJC column and put it in a scrapbook with much less impact on the environment.

Ending daily print, while painful to some of our parents, is the right move for the AJC. That said, don’t be surprised if they eventually launch a weekly or fortnightly print edition, delivered through the mail, that provides value for advertisers and the lean-back reader experience we know works through Rough Draft’s print products.


Hands holding a film clapperboard beside bold text promoting Scene by Rough Draft, a weekly Atlanta entertainment newsletter.

Meet Sammie Purcell, Associate Editor @ Rough Draft

I want Rough Draft to reflect the cultural heartbeat of our region. That includes covering film, arts, and entertainment, which aren’t just nice to have coverage; they are economic engines and community shapers.

Sammie Purcell joined Rough Draft in early 2021 as our Brookhaven and Dunwoody beat writer. She was always clear that she wanted to pursue entertainment writing, specifically film criticism, something she’s done for us since late 2022. In fact, I’m pretty sure she’s the only full-time film critic at an Atlanta publication.

In our first behind-the-scenes look at our staff, I asked Sammie a few questions, including why she wanted a career in journalism.

I knew I wanted to write and tell stories through that writing. When I took an arts criticism class in grad school, it really solidified to me that criticism and arts journalism would be the best spot for my talents.

What was the first movie you ever reviewed for Rough Draft, and how do you feel about that review looking back now?

As far as I can tell, the first movie I reviewed was Sean Baker’s “Red Rocket.” It’s not my favorite Baker (a filmmaker I generally like), and I still stand by my thoughts, although I’d like to give it another watch. I actually don’t think the review is half bad – and I was ready to hate it – but I think I have come a really long way in terms of developing my voice as a critic. I think I’m far more voice-y now than that review would lead one to believe.

What does your writing process actually look like?

I love a good coffee shop – Rev and Bellwood are my preferred faves – and that’s definitely where I am my most productive. If I’m at home, I tend to go back and forth between a desk and the couch. A desk is preferred for interviews, the couch is preferred for writing (and there’s usually a dog snuggled up there, so that’s nice).

Do you ever get nervous publishing a strong take, knowing that someone out there will absolutely disagree with you?

Not really. The thing that I get the most nervous about is when I feel like my own take isn’t quite settled yet. Which, unfortunately, usually happens when the movie is really interesting. I often only get to watch movies once before I review them, and there have been more than a few instances where I’ve gone back to a movie after a review has been published and realized I missed something, or had a new thought that I wish I could have included.

What’s an upcoming film that you’re excited about?

I’m unreasonably excited to see the new Richard Linklater film “Blue Moon,” which follows songwriter Lorenz Hart on the opening night of his former musical partner Richard Rodgers’ new musical, “Oklahoma!” I love, love, love musicals, and with this story in particular, it feels like Linklater took a peek inside my brain and decided to make a movie just for me!

Sammie’s Top 4 Films:

  1. “All That Jazz” (Bob Fosse, 1979): Had to pick a musical, and this is one of the most audacious ones you’ll ever see. (Bonus musical answer: ‘Singin’ in the Rain’)
  2. “Little Women” (Greta Gerwig, 2019): A stone-cold classic about girlhood and a masterclass of adaptation.
  3. “Notorious” (Alfred Hitchcock, 1946): I love noir, and this is maybe one of the best, starring two of the hottest people who ever lived in Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman
  4. “Before Sunset” (Richard Linklater, 2004): This is, definitively, the most romantic movie ever made.

Read Sammie’s work on Rough Draft and subscribe to her weekly Scene newsletter.

The above interview was lightly edited for space and clarity.


Chatterbox

I’ve been pretty active on the speaking and podcast front lately.

  • Brian Morrissey, a former colleague from over 20 years ago (!!), invited me to be a guest on his influential industry podcast, “The Rebooting.”
  • Jamie Levitt Corry and I discussed “The New Playbook for Local Publishers” at the Beeler.Tech Base.Camp Savannah event (Oct. 7).
  • Along with Moni Basu of UGA, Janel Davis from the AJC, and Evan Newton from the Covington News, I was part of the “Local Journalism: Needed Now More Than Ever” panel at the Emory Ideas Fest (Oct. 18).
  • On Oct. 20, I’m speaking on the “What It Takes to Sell Local Ads Like a Pro” panel at the Business of Local Conference in Salt Lake City.
  • On Oct. 28, I’ll be speaking at the National Trust for Local News Innovation Summit in Atlanta.

Objects in the mirror

What we are working on:

  • It was our first Atlanta Pride as owners of Georgia Voice. The weekend was exhausting but invigorating, and we added 500+ email subscribers and met hundreds of readers.
  • A 20th Anniversary issue for the City of Sandy Springs.
  • Sarra Sedghi is expanding her work with us to include culture and events related to the FIFA World Cup 26.
  • Summer Evans, a familiar voice to Atlanta public radio fans, has joined us to produce a daily Instagram Reel based on our morning newsletter. LMK what you think!

Things nobody asked

What I’m thrilled about:

What I’m reading:

Where I’m eating:

  • Oaxaca – The guac is a piece of art you can eat.
  • Avize – Don’t get thrown off if you don’t know what “Alpine cuisine” is. The NYT agrees enough to name it the only Georgia restaurant on its Top 50 list for 2025.
  • Anis – Go for the salad nicoise and fries, stay for the affordable, fun wine list.
  • Waffle House – Because I’m getting self-conscious that my list is too bougie.

What I’m watching:

  • “Black Rabbit” – Based on the now-disgraced Spotted Pig (where I spent way too much time in my 30s).
  • “Hightown” – Watching “Hunting Wives” again seemed excessive.
  • If you missed it, go back and watch Cliff Drysdale’s farewell from the US Open.

What I was surprised to learn:


Until next time, thanks for reading!

– KP (keith@roughdraft.news)

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How to keep Rough Draft out of your spam folder https://roughdraftatlanta.com/2025/10/15/rough-draft-atlanta-email-settings/ Wed, 15 Oct 2025 20:03:40 +0000 https://roughdraftatlanta.com/?p=324359 To ensure Rough Draft Atlanta's emails land in your Inbox, add their addresses to your contacts and mark them as "Primary" or "Not Spam".

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Rough Draft Atlanta delivers a clever, curated, and concise dose of local news each morning. To make sure it lands in your Inbox — not your spam or promotions folder — take a minute to whitelist our addresses and adjust your email settings.

📨 Step 1: Add us to your contacts or safe sender list

Add both of these addresses to your contacts:

This simple step tells your email provider we’re friends, not spam.

💻 Step 2: Mark us as “Primary” or “Not Spam”

Here’s how, depending on your email client:

① Gmail (Mobile)

  • Tap the three gray dots in the top-right corner of the email.
  • Tap “Move to” → “Primary.”

② Gmail (Desktop)

  • Hover over our sender name at the top of the email.
  • Click “Add to Contacts.”
  • (Optional) Drag our email from “Promotions” to “Primary.” When asked, select “Yes” to make it stick.

③ Apple Mail (iPhone, iPad, Mac)

  • Tap or click our address at the top of the message.
  • Choose “Add to VIPs” or “Add to Contacts.”

④ Outlook / Hotmail

  • Right-click our message in your inbox.
  • Select “Junk” → “Never Block Sender.”

⑤ Yahoo Mail

  • Open our email, then click the three dots in the upper right.
  • Choose “Add Sender to Contacts.”

⚡ Bonus tip:

If you ever find Rough Draft in your spam or junk folder, mark it as “Not Spam” — that helps train your provider going forward.

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New Google feature allows users to prioritize content from Rough Draft https://roughdraftatlanta.com/2025/08/28/rough-draft-atlanta-google-news/ Fri, 29 Aug 2025 03:34:05 +0000 https://roughdraftatlanta.com/?p=317112 Google has introduced a new feature that allows users to customize their search experience to see more content from their favorite local news sources, such as Rough Draft Atlanta.

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Want to see more news from Rough Draft? A new Google feature allows readers to customize their search experience to see more from their favorite local news sources.

Earlier this month, the tech company announced it will let you “select your favorite sources and stay up to date on the latest content from the sites you follow and subscribe to — whether that’s your favorite sports blog or a local news outlet.”

Here’s how to add Rough Draft Atlanta to your “preferred sources:”

How to add Rough Draft Atlanta

For readers who want to add Rough Draft Atlanta as a preferred source, you can either use this shortcut or follow the steps below:

Screenshot of a “Source preferences” settings page with a dark background. The text explains that users can add or change preferred sources for searches. In the search bar, “roughdraftatlanta.com” is entered, and below it, the Rough Draft Atlanta logo with the site name and URL is shown. A blue checkmark box is selected on the right.
Adding Rough Draft as a preferred source means you’re more likely to see our content in your Google search results.
  • Search for a topic that’s in the news and click on the icon to the right of “Top Stories”
  • Search and select your “preferred sources” — Rough Draft Atlanta
  • Refresh your results and see more from your favorite sites

This helps ensure you’re getting metro Atlanta’s best local journalism whenever you search for news about our communities.

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