Gannett Co.,
McClatchy Co. and Tribune Co. are considering joining forces to create a
national advertising sales team to sell display advertising for their vast
network of Web sites. The unified sales effort is intended to streamline the
cumbersome process of negotiating national advertising deals and thus tantalize
companies with a large national presence. Gannett, McClatchy and Tribune, known
as GMT, are the owners of CareerBuilder, but the big question on employers’
minds is whether or not this initiative will encompass help-wanted
ads.
GMT is being
guarded about releasing details of the project, code-named Open Network,
indicating that negotiations are ongoing. At this point, however, many options
appear to be on the table.
“It is too
premature to give a definitive yes or no about anything,” says Tara Connell,
vice president of corporate communication for Gannett. “We are taking a careful
look at all types of display ads right now.”
Tribune
spokesman Gary Weitman would only confirm that the company is pursuing
discussions about developing a national sales team alongside Gannett and
McClatchy. A unified sales staff would be a strong tool for attracting national
advertisers and give the industry a much-needed shot in the arm, according to
experts in the field. Chain-type corporations are often put off from using
newspapers for their national advertising needs because it is complicated—they
have to negotiate deals with each newspaper entity involved—and costly. They are
likely to get a better bargain by buying from a single source, like a national
magazine.
For its part,
McClatchy—which became a joint owner of CareerBuilder after its acquisition of
Knight Ridder last year—declined to comment. While GMT is being tight-lipped,
that hasn’t stopped industry experts from speculating about what the future
might hold.
Jim Townsend of
Classified Intelligence believes it would make good sense to include
CareerBuilder in this process.
“It is a perfect
cornerstone to build a national network,” he says.
CareerBuilder is
a portal unto itself and would give national advertisers the type of large-scale
exposure that they desire.
Despite the buzz
around the GMT project, it will be some time before employers learn for sure
whether they will have a new source for recruiting.
“We are still in
the early stages of negotiating,” Connell says. “A lot can
happen.”
—Gina
Ruiz