David Kaplan of PaidContent.org reports Monday that Forbes has begun to combine its print and online operations into one team.
Kapln writes, “The melding of the editorial sides will be completed early next year. Forbes’ integration of print and online has been rumored for some time. While Forbes.com president and CEO Jim Spanfeller has often been mentioned as the head of the unified print and online mag, the streamlined editorial and ad sales teams will report to an ‘office of the chairman.’ In addition to Spanfeller, that office also includes Steve Forbes, chairman and CEO of Forbes Media and Timothy Forbes, the company’s president and COO, according to a staff memo sent out by Steve Forbes.
“I spoke with a high-level source at Forbes who says that the company is moving on the combo now due to a ‘changing marketplace.’ In the past, magazines could afford to pay ‘lip-service to integration,’ but not any more, was how executives at the magazine company view the decision. The source added that while there will likely be some ‘efficiencies’ identified when the integration is finished, that could mean more layoffs, though no job cuts have been identified yet. On Friday, Forbes.com said its ForbesAutos.com site would be discontinued and its entire staff — no numbers were specified — would be laid off. Additionally, an unspecified number of jobs at ForbesTraveler were also cut, though that site would remain.
“Even with those dismissals last week, the Forbes source claimed that ‘there are more people working here today than a year ago. That’s true of the digital side, in particular. And when the integration is finalized and everything’s in place next year, that will still be the case.'”
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