FT eyes 60 possible layoffs

LONDON - The Financial Times could axe about 60 staff, the majority of them from its commercial division, as the business newspaper's owner Pearson looks to streamline operations.

John Ridding, FT chief executive
John Ridding, FT chief executive

It is thought that the FT currently employs approximately 1200 people in the UK, and 1600 globally.

John Ridding, the Financial Times chief executive, said: "We are continuously looking to streamline our organisation, to make it as efficient as possible and to adapt it to the rapidly changing media industry.

"This has involved creating a global management structure, integrating print and online, and bringing our acquisitions more closely into the FT. We are now assessing further steps in this process."

The publisher is in consultation with staff across advertising sales, finance, IT, conference, marketing and the editorial library. No journalists are to be made redundant as the part of the cuts.

Pearson has defied the recent woes of rival newspaper groups and last week its FT Group subsidiary, which publishes the newspapers, said that sales are up 11% year on year, with advertising revenues 1% ahead of 2007.

The move follows similar cut-backs across the commercial departments of News International and Daily Mail & General Trust. Up to 90 jobs could be on the line following plans to merge the sales department of the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday announced this week.

 

Market Reports

Get unprecedented new-business intelligence with access to ±±¾©Èü³µpk10’s new Market Reports.

Find out more

Enjoying ±±¾©Èü³µpk10’s content?

 Get unlimited access to ±±¾©Èü³µpk10’s premium content for your whole company with a corporate licence.

Upgrade access

Looking for a new job?

Get the latest creative jobs in advertising, media, marketing and digital delivered directly to your inbox each day.

Create an alert now

Partner content