Ottawa Citizen

Quebecor Media partners with e-commerce hub

Alliance with group-buying site Tuango part of plan to attract more advertiser­s

- SEAN CRAIG Financial Post scraig@postmedia.com

Quebecor Media Inc. is giving Tuango Inc. access to its audience base in return for the e-commerce company’s email list in a barter deal to lure advertiser­s in a struggling media environmen­t.

The Montreal-based broadcaste­r and newspaper publisher — which owns properties including television networks at TVA Group and tabloid newspapers Le Journal de Montréal and Le Journal de Québec — announced Wednesday it is partnering with Tuango to allow its advertiser­s to sell their wares through the group-buying site.

Founded in 2010, Tuango clusters together users who want to buy the same product in order to negotiate deals with retailers and manufactur­ers by offering them bulk sales — usually with a contingenc­y that a minimum number of people sign up for a deal to go through. The firm’s name comes from a shopping practice in China in which a group of consumers arrange to show up at a store at the same time and request a bulk-sale deal. The site has become popular in Quebec competing against global bulk sales sites like Groupon, TeamBuy and LivingSoci­al.

Tuango’s arrangemen­t with Quebecor Media, however, will not see any cash change hands, with both businesses banking that their ad-sales combinatio­n will be an appealing propositio­n to businesses.

Quebecor Media is hoping that the prospect of bulk sales to Tuango’s 1.3 million email subscriber­s will attract advertiser­s at a time its media business is hurting. Tuango gets access to consumers of Quebecor Media’s properties, which the company says almost reaches the province’s entire population each week.

“We share the same values, so this alliance was a natural,” Quebecor Media executive vicepresid­ent Donald Lizotte said on a conference call. “It is based on an innovative new business model that will enable us to offer our existing customers new local and national opportunit­ies, and also to bring in new customers who couldn’t previously afford a media campaign with us. It’s a win-win for everyone.”

In its most recent quarterly results in November, Quebecor Media’s parent, Quebecor Inc., reported a $23.8 million growth in revenues, but that was almost entirely the result of 5.2 per cent growth at its telecommun­ications segment Videotron.

The media segment’s revenues decreased to $34.5 million, down from $42.9 million a year earlier and from $38.7 million in the previous quarter. Quebecor announced at the same time that it would be cutting 220 jobs, or eight per cent of its workforce, at the media division. Quebecor owns an 81.1 per cent stake in Quebecor Media controllin­g stake, while a subsidiary of the provincial pension fund Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec owns 18.9 per cent.

“The industry has been disrupted in Québec as in the rest of the world, and we have therefore made a number of transforma­tional moves in order to adapt to the changes,” Julie Tremblay, CEO of Quebecor Media, said in a statement.

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