Business
The New York-based company has hired the investment bank Waller Capital
to seek potential buyers for the papers, said the person, who asked not
to be named because the plan isn't public.
Struggling dailies are abandoning their grand old buildings. Why that’s not a bad thing.
After a burst of initial announcements of private exchanges, followed by a lull in activity, private marketplaces are getting another look by premium publishers as the technology has improved and programmatic buying gains traction.
Brainworks Software, a leading provider of innovative advertising, CRM and circulation software to the media industry, today announced the acquisition of Morcor Solutions, Inc. of Napanee, Ontario, Canada. Morcor is a leading provider of innovative Ad Tracking and Management technology.
News is almost a commodity – but the trick is to work out what you've got that will make people want to pay.
The Texas Tribune is getting into the niche newsletter business. The Tribune’s new twice-a-month newsletter, In the Flow, takes a look at water issues and related topics like droughts and fracking.
There is much talk of paywalls at the moment, but don't forget the other side of the payfence: there is a huge opportunity in ad-supported free media and MailOnline is showing the way forward.
The founders of the website The Good Men Project predicted early on that their lean operation would turn a profit from ad sales once it started attracting about a million unique visitors per month.
You may have missed the news in early February that Google has established a $60 million Euro (about $80 million) fund to support a group of French publishers in their digital enterprises.
Buyouts and benefits cuts aside, times were good for Washington Post Company execs and Graham family members employed by the company in 2012, according to a new Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
Two years after their merger, seated side by side in a corner conference room at AOL’s (AOL) Manhattan headquarters on March 20, Chief Executive Officer Tim Armstrong and Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington say they couldn’t be happier.
News Corp
on Wednesday closed at $30.23, having gained 19% in 2013 while boosting
the stock's valuation to 19.3 times earnings.
Newspapers big and small have a similar goal: economic survival.



