Talent showcased for shareholders in NZME's 2016 annual report include photos of New Zealand Herald investigative reporter Jared Savage, business editor at large Liam Dann and Viva managing editor Amanda Linnell, Newstalk ZB's Hosking, Radio Hauraki's Matt Heath and Jeremy Wells, ZM's Carl Fletcher, Vaughan Smith and Megan Sellers, The Hits' Stacey Morrison and Paul Flynn and Flava's Sela Alo, Pua Magasiva and Tarsh Ieremia.
NZME's former chief executive, Jane Hastings, also left during in 2016, departing after 18 months in the job to "pursue other opportunities".
She was an internal appointment, having run The Radio Network before taking over the broader operation. In 2015 Hastings' total pay packet was A$1.22m, up from A$980,000 a year earlier.
The media group paid $67m to 426 employees on salaries of $100,000 or more, accounting for about 41 per cent of the company's annual wage bill of $161.6m.
Of that, senior management were paid $5.7m in 2016, including just $52,000 of termination benefits, and up from $4.8m a year earlier.
That was in a year when the overall wage bill shrank 1.8 per cent as a round of redundancies totalling $6m in 2016 and $7.2m the year earlier helped reduce labour costs due to the integration of the print, radio and e-commerce units, chief financial officer Mike Moran said in the annual report.
He also said greater automation in the printing process would further reduce the people costs.
A graph on the length of service of NZME staffers indicates it employs about 1700 people, however McNally said 18 per cent of the workforce are casuals, meaning total staff numbers were fluid and that NZME wouldn't release that number.
The company employed 1863 fulltime equivalents as at December 2015, excluding casuals and contractors, according to documents when NZME was carved out of APN News & Media as a standalone entity.
NZME's annual report said the company works hard "to ensure everyone at NZME understands and is aligned with our company's strategic goals (what needs to be achieved) and our values (how these should be achieved)" and that senior leadership was tasked with "translating our strategic goals and providing support to ensure all employees are engaged".
The company is trying to convince the Commerce Commission to approve a merger with rival Fairfax New Zealand to let a combined entity sack staff and spread their coverage, shoring up their balance sheet and putting them on a stronger footing to compete more aggressively for digital ad revenue against the likes of Google and Facebook.
NZME shares rose 3.3 per cent to 94 cents, the highest since August last year.