Nick Pigott
Nick Pigott | |
---|---|
Born |
Nicholas Pigott 1951 Nottinghamshire |
Citizenship | British |
Genre |
Newspaper Journalist, variously Editor of: |
Notable awards | IPC Media's Specialist Writer of the Year, 2002. |
Nicholas H "Nick" Pigott (born 1951) has been editor of The Railway Magazine, Britain's best-selling rail title, since August 1994. He previously worked in Fleet Street as a journalist for the Daily Express.
Biography
Pigott was born in 1951 in Nottinghamshire.[1]
He trained on the Lincolnshire Standard, Nottingham Evening Post and Birmingham Post [2] before joining the Daily Express in 1975 and, after 12 years in Fleet Street, entered railway journalism. He was Editor of Steam Railway magazine,[3] a post held for four years, and then launch editor of Traction magazine, before moving to his present position as editor of The Railway Magazine in August 1994.[4]
In 2002, he was voted IPC Media's Specialist Writer of the Year and in 2008 was shortlisted in the national Editor of the Year awards held by the British Society of Magazine Editors. On 22 March 2007, The Railway Magazine won the "Magazine of the Year" award at IPC Media's Editorial Awards ceremony.[5] Competition for this award was limited to specialist titles within IPC Media selling up to 40,000 copies per month.[5] One week later, 29 March 2007, the magazine's marketforce team won the Gold Cup awarded by the Association of Circulation Executives.[5]
The Railway Magazine was a long-running monthly railway magazine dating back to July 1897, but in 1988, whilst under the Editorship of the late John Slater (1970–1989), lost its position as "best-selling rail title".[3] That went to a younger competitor, Steam Railway magazine, which had been founded nine years earlier and which, the early 1990s, was outselling The Railway Magazine by upwards of 10,000 copies per month.[3] Slater's successor, Peter Kelly (1989–1994), attempted to reduce the sales gap and that work was continued under his successor, Nick Pigott; who by then had moved over from Steam Railway.[3] In 2008, The Railway Magazine regained its position as Britain's best-selling rail title and has continued to increase its circulation ever since. Its current publisher is Mortons Media, which bought the title from IPC Media at the end of 2010.
Notes
- ↑ Semmens & Pigott 1997, p. 17.
- ↑ Johnson 1997, p. 14.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Pigott 2008, p. 3.
- ↑ Semmens & Pigott 1997, pp. 17–18.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Pigott 2007, p. 3.
References
- Johnson, Andrew (4 April 1997). Inside The Railway Magazine. London: UK Press Gazette.
- Pigott, Nick (May 2007). "Editorial: Magazine of the Year: The RM wins top award". The Railway Magazine (London: IPC Media) 153 (1273). ISSN 0033-8923.
- Pigott, Nick (April 2008). "Editorial: We did it! After 20 years, The RM is once again ... The best-selling railway title in Great Britain". The Railway Magazine (London: IPC Media) 154 (1284). ISSN 0033-8923.
- Semmens, Peter (1996). A Century of Railways: through the pages of Railway Magazine and paintings from members of the Guild of Railway Artists. Sparkford: Oxford Publishing Company. ISBN 0-86093-535-3.
- Semmens, Peter; Pigott, Nick (July 1997). Pigott, Nick, ed. "100 Not Out! The Story of The Railway Magazine". The Railway Magazine (London: IPC Media) 143 (1155). ISSN 0033-8923.