Early days in Visakhapatnam Eenadu was launched from
Visakhapatnam on 10 August 1974 by
Ramoji Rao, a businessman who had previously achieved success with Priya Pickles and Margadarsi
Chitfunds. At that time, the
Andhra Prabha, owned by
the Indian Express Group, was the leading regional newspaper. Initially, the circulation of
Eenadu was limited. When launched in the city of
Visakhapatnam, it was not able to sell more than 3,000 copies a week.
Eenadu found itself struggling to become a daily publication among publications. However, it was popular in certain regions and rivalry was still an issue.
Eenadu hired a new set of directors to be part of its key decision and management group which drove it towards what it is today: the most highly circulated newspaper in the region.
Expansion to other regions Eenadu began with a print order of 4,000 copies, composed by hand and produced using a second-hand printing press. But by the time it was admitted into the
Audit Bureau of Circulations in 1976, its circulation had already reached a readership of 48,000. By 1978,
Eenadu surpassed
Andhra Prabhas circulation and, by 1995, two other rivals
Andhra Patrika and
Udayam folded, leaving
Eenadu with over seventy-five percent of the audited circulation of Telugu dailies. Its expansion has partially been attributed to its use of regional dialects, colloquialisms, idioms and sarcasm in its reporting, as well as colorful pictures with captions. When
Eenadu expanded to
Hyderabad in 1975, it divided the city into target areas, recruited
delivery boys three months in advance and handed out the paper freely for a week. During the 1980s, technology-enabled
Eenadu to spread over larger areas beyond only the main cities. Earlier, it was difficult to manage even the three editions of the 1970s (the
Visakhapatnam,
Vijayawada and Hyderabad editions) because the only communication facilities available to the publication at the time were the
telegram, telephone, and
teleprinter, all of which had limited presence in rural Andhra Pradesh. By 1979, the newspaper expanded to include
Sitara, a weekly film magazine,
Vipula, a monthly magazine with short stories,
Chatura, a monthly novel and
Annadatha, a farmer's monthly. However, the magazines stopped circulation in 2017 due to lack of demand in favour of web content.
Political impact and TDP support Support of the
Telugu Desam Party (TDP) by
Eenadu has been recorded since the party's foundation in 1982. This has been attributed to Ramoji Rao's disdain for the
Congress government, to the point that he planned to create a regional party on his own accord, and a personal rapport he formed with the party founder and leader
N. T. Rama Rao, who he had first doubted but eventually saw political potential in. Another factor that has been cited is
caste politics, with both
Eenadu and the TDP being perceived as
Kamma-oriented organisations and both Raos being Kammas themselves, although this view has been challenged. During the
1983 elections, the party and the paper formed a symbiotic relationship as
Eenadu not only publicised, promoted and ran positive stories on Rama Rao's campaign, but also gave more direct support, such as utilising its network of journalists to inform and advise Rama Rao on local issues for his stops and designing party advertisements through Ramoji Rao's marketing agency. This coverage led to a massive increase in subscriptions, with
Eenadu going from a circulation of 230,000 copies to 350,000 in the six months of Rama Rao's electoral campaign and becoming one of the state's most popular newspapers. The TDP would go on to successfully sweep the election, making Rama Rao the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, and over half a million copies were printed of
Eenadu to declare this victory. When Rama Rao and his government faced crises and parliamentary revolts in the 1980s,
Eenadu continually supported him and clamored for his restoration to power. Despite Rama Rao's growing unpopularity in the later part of the decade due to perceptions of failed promises, the paper refrained from criticising him before expressing some concerns about his leadership in response to his continued loss of public support and the Congress victory in the
1989 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election. In the 1990s, as fissures developed between Rama Rao and his son-in-law and prominent party leader
N. Chandrababu Naidu,
Eenadu ultimately took Naidu's side, publishing mocking portrayals of Rama Rao depicting him as being manipulated by his new wife
Lakshmi Parvathi, and eventually played a key role in the internal party coup by supporting Naidu's power grab. This paved the way for Naidu to become the next chief minister and ensured a friendly relationship between the paper and his administration. During the reign of Congress governments,
Eenadu went on the offensive and became their "chief critic"; both
Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy and his son
Y. S. Jagan Mohan Reddy would "fight back" during their time in power. This took on multiple forms, from the 2004 investigation of Margadarsi for irregular financial practices to the launch of
Sakshi in 2008 under Jagan Mohan Reddy's ownership as a "counter" to what his father, the CM at the time, claimed was "biased news" from traditionally TDP-supporting papers.
Further publications With the introduction of
offset printing,
photocomposing software and computers,
Eenadu was able to launch editions in smaller towns like
Tirupathi in 1982. From the 1980s, the news editor of
Eenadu oversaw an enormous local-based news gathering and disseminating organization from his Hyderabad office. By the end of the 1980s, there were six substantial Telugu dailies running, and the business was highly competitive. In 1989
Eenadu introduced "district dailies (
tabloid edition)" to carry its presence not only into
district towns like
Rajamahendravaram,
Karimnagar,
Guntur and
Adilabad, but also
taluka towns like
Suryapet and
Tadepalligudem. Each publication center required forty engineers to run its printing presses.
Eenadus district dailies were based on
market research asserting that heavy local content would generate new groups of readers and boost
advertising revenue. Currently, the district dailies print
local news specifically for each major location in the area, thereby negating the need for any separate
local daily. Few special sections are published every day of the week. To support the local tabloid dailies,
Eenadu hired "
stringers" working for the commission who coordinated their reporting with editors over the telephone and contracted
bus companies to transport their reports back to the district headquarters for publication. Additionally, to increase revenue, the newspaper recruited salespersons to convince local businesses to buy ad spots.
Eenadu later ventured into other markets such as finance and
chit funds (e.g. Margadarsi chits), foods (Priya Foods), film production (
Ushakiran Movies), film distribution (Mayuri Films), and television (
ETV). All the businesses are organized under the
Ramoji Group. == Ownership ==