Newspaper, online alliances make for better bedfellows
By Marcelo Duran
Associate Editor
ORLANDO,
Fla. — What a difference a year makes for newspapers and their online partners.
Twelve months ago, newspaper
execs wondered if their partnerships with the likes of Google, Yahoo and Monster
would take root. Today, all of the energy is focused on what’s next.

Photo: Newspapers & Technology
Left to right, Stephanie Davis, head of publisher business development, Print
Ads, at Google; Mark Earner, director of business development at Zillow; Greg
Schermer, vice president of interactive media at Lee Enterprises Inc.; and Tom
Mohr, president and chief executive officer at LeadLogix Inc.
Case in point: Yahoo, which
now boasts more than 630 newspapers in the HotJobs consortium first launched in
late 2006.
“The Yahoo consortium
partnership has been a very significant and wonderful experience for myself and
a lot of our newspapers as well,” said Gregory Schermer, vice president of
interactive media for Lee Enterprises.
Lee was one of the
consortium’s original members, along with Hearst, MediaNews Group, Belo, Cox
Enterprises, Journal Register Co. and E.W. Scripps.
Schermer said the potential to
tap new opportunities led Lee to participate in the consortium, a goal that was
reached last year when the partnership expanded its mandate to include content
slated for MyYahoo’s Local module.
Next up is the introduction of
a national graphical ad network, designed to let newspapers take advantage of
Yahoo’s ad-serving, targeting and inventory management capabilities. The
network, now being tested at two newspapers, will be rolled out later this
spring with final deployment expected this year.
Zillow expanding
Google, meantime, is expanding
the features it provides newspapers through its Print Ads program, including the
introduction of an ad creation tool and a forthcoming analytics app (see related
story, page 58).
Finally, Zillow.com is
planning to strengthen its newspaper alliance. The real estate Web site last
year struck a deal with Lee and several other publishers to advertise selected
listings both on Zillow and in papers’ classified ad pages.
“When we were looking at a
newspaper partnership six to eight months ago it became pretty clear to us that
we could work well together,” said Mark Earner, Zillow.com’s director of
business development.
The company has approximately
150 people on staff, of which more than 100 are engineers dedicated to writing
code for the site’s various real estate features. A partnership with newspapers
is ideal for Zillow because it ties the company with a local sales staff and a
trusted name in the community.
“We got this technology and
asked what can a newspaper do,” said Earner. “In our conversations with local
brokers (we discovered) there was one person they trust and it’s their
newspaper.”