Reader’s Digest is on the brink of going in to administration today after a funding deal for its pension scheme failed.
More Press articles
Advertising revenue at regional publisher Newsquest was down 17.9% year on year in the thirteen weeks to 27 December 2009, according to results from US parent company Gannett.
Guardian.co.uk once again broke records and remained the most popular national newspaper website over the month of December.
The London Weekly, a free newspaper set up to fill the gap left by the London Lite and thelondonpaper, is due to released on February 5.
Newsline columnist Raymond Snoddy explains why The Guardian “can’t see the point of choking off digital growth in return for the relatively modest sums that they believe pay walls would produce” …
In the first of a series of pieces for Newsline, the National Readership Survey’s (NRS) chief executive Mike Ironside gives an introduction to the survey and outlines some new developments.
Condé Nast’s latest GQ iPhone application is proving to be a hit with consumers in the US.
The New York Times is to charge readers for full access to its website from next year
Just 10% of television will be viewed on-demand this year as linear TV continues to dominate, according to a new forecast from Deloitte.
The Periodical Publishers Association (PPA) has appointed the former Smash Hits editor Barry McIlheney as its new chief executive.