Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
E-Marketing

Gannett Adds Eggs to CareerBuilder Basket

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Gannett Adds Eggs to CareerBuilder Basket

As newspapers struggle to find their place in a world that's increasingly dominated by the Internet, one major player -- Gannett -- is turning to online job listings as a potential source of ad revenue. The publisher's acquisition of another 10 percent stake in CareerBuilder gives it a controlling interest in the site.


Tips to Integrate Social Media into Your Day-to-Day Media Monitoring
Is social media part of your PR and marketing strategy? This white paper is filled with tips on how to listen to conversations about your brand in the media (social media, print, TV and internet) using the latest tools and techniques. Download Now.

Gannett has increased its stake in CareerBuilder, acquiring another 10 percent of the Web site from the Tribune Company for US$135 million.

Gannett now has a 50.8 percent controlling interest in the site. Other stakeholders are the Tribune, now with 30.8 percent, The McClatchy Company, with 14.4 percent, and Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), with 4 percent.

Gannett now has three seats on the six-seat CareerBuilder board of directors. Tribune and McClatchy have one seat each, and the chief executive officer of CareerBuilder has one seat.

It is obvious why Tribune, which was taken private last year in a $8.2 billion buyout, divested itself of this asset: With nearly $13 billion in debt, the company must give up stakes in several business endeavors to lighten its load.

Gannett is not immune from the woes afflicting most newspapers in the U.S. -- namely, declining revenues and circulation. Whether it can leverage its growing stake in CareerBuilder to counter these downward trends remains to be seen.

Many Paths

Just about every major newspaper has an online presence now, as well as bloggers producing content strictly for the Web. The transition, though, has been a clumsy and piecemeal process for many media outlets, especially since the subscription model failed to catch on among online readers used to getting content for free.

"It has been hard for mainstream media to develop an organic online strategy," observed Kel Kelly, founder and CEO of Kel & Partners.

Besides making the necessary culture shift, she told the E-Commerce Times, they had to experiment with new models that had no clear path to revenue.

The biggest media gamble on an online property was, of course, News Corp's acquisition of MySpace in 2005. Depending on whom you asked, it was either a savvy or blindly optimistic acquisition. MySpace's online creds were rising at the time, but then as now, it was unclear how it could be effectively monetized. Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) later provided the answer when it agreed to pay $900 million for the long-term rights to deliver advertising to the site. There are still challenges, though. MySpace's audience is evolving, and it has many competitors.

While MySpace is hardly the only model for media outlets seeking to expand their online operations beyond news reporting, it does represent a threshold of sorts, with the acceptance of ad-based strategies.

Redefining Content

Now, media outlets are pursuing properties like CareerBuilder in order to position themselves as content syndicators, Newsgator VP Jeff Nolan told the E-Commerce Times.

"This is a game-changer for a lot of media organizations," he said. "What Gannett wants to do is build its own consortium of papers through which it can syndicate content, much like what Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) is doing with Hot Jobs" -- that is, syndicating the job information to 400-plus media sites.

"Newspapers get the whole digital world -- they understand very acutely what is happening to them," Nolan continued. "They are now in a free content model, and their advertising base is becoming more performance-oriented."


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Erika Morphy


More by Erika Morphy

Windows 7 Flies Off the Shelves
November 06, 2009
Early sales figures on Windows 7 boxed software suggest a high level of consumer enthusiasm for the OS. Unit sales were a whopping 234 percent higher than Vista's out of the gate. The revenue haul was not as impressive, as Microsoft offered sharp discounts to spur presales. Also, sales of PCs with Windows 7 preinstalled have been lackluster -- but October is historically a weak month for PC sales.
Southwest Doesn't Fool Around
November 06, 2009
Either Southwest Airlines had better deals for my favorite route than its competitors or its superior Web site tools made it easier for me to ferret them out. Either way, kudos to Southwest. In the not-so-hot department were the airline's long list of what passengers weren't allowed to do and its very short list of what Southwest was obliged to do for them. Left me feeling a little chilly.
Commerce Search Puts Google Inside Retailers' Catalogs
November 05, 2009
Google has launched a new cloud-based search tool targeting enterprise-level e-commerce operations, just in time for the 2009 holiday selling season. Commerce Search provides a set of features designed to improve the relevance of results for consumers searching a retailer's own product catalog, while boosting cross-selling opportunities.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network