Times Colonist

Rogers sells Maclean’s, other flagship magazines

- DAVID PADDON

TORONTO — The publisher of Toronto Life, Weddingbel­ls and Fashion Magazine will acquire the last of Rogers Media’s consumeror­iented print and digital publicatio­ns.

Seven print and digital titles — including Maclean’s and the French and English versions of Chatelaine — will move from Rogers Media to St. Joseph Communicat­ions, a privately owned printing and publishing company based in Toronto.

Tony Gagliano, the executive chairman and CEO of St. Joseph Communicat­ions, said he sees untapped opportunit­ies with consumers and advertiser­s by adding the Rogers titles. “What we have done — I think what we’re good at — is finding new revenue opportunit­ies, where sometimes traditiona­l advertisin­g has fallen by the wayside,” Gagliano said Wednesday in an interview.

Its Toronto Life, he said, has had double-digit revenue growth “and more than that in profitabil­ity growth” for the last two years.

In part, that growth was fuelled by more special events and through a membership benefit program, he said.

“Because of that, the brand becomes very important to them. The more important the brand comes the stronger revenue opportunit­ies we have, the stronger profitabil­ity opportunit­ies we have,” Gagliano said.

“Data is very important to us as well,” he said. “That’s a new model that is very different from a traditiona­l advertisin­g model.”

By analyzing the interests and behaviours of readers and audiences — a technique used by search engine and social media companies — traditiona­l publishers and broadcaste­rs are offering advertiser­s more targeted access to consumers.

By adding the Rogers titles to its own, St. Joseph will add data about a number of important market segments such as fashion and beauty, parenting, and current affairs.

St. Joseph’s deal with Rogers Media includes Today’s Parent and Hello! Canada, as well as the digital publicatio­ns Flare and Canadian Business, which no longer have print editions, and a custom content business.

Gagliano said he thinks there’s been too much emphasis on digital media over printed magazines, books and catalogues, which have the advantage of providing a selection of portable content without extensive internet searching. “I think it’s going to come back in favour of print in time when people see the benefits of it,” he said. “I think there’s obviously room for both.”

The companies said St. Joseph will offer jobs to all current employees of Rogers Media Publishing. They account for about 125 full-time positions within Rogers Media, which has about 2,650 full-time employees overall.

The transactio­n comes a year after Apple Inc. acquired the Texture magazine app and service from Next Issue Media LLC, a partnershi­p formed years earlier by Rogers Media, Time Inc., Hearst and Conde Nast.

In November, Rogers Media sold its MoneySense personal finance website to Ratehub, a Toronto-based company that owns an online comparison site for financial products

That was followed by months of unconfirme­d reports that the media arm of Rogers Communicat­ions Inc. had been negotiatin­g with various groups to sell its remaining consumer publicatio­ns.

Financial terms of the Rogers St. Joseph deal weren’t disclosed.

 ??  ?? Tony Gagliano, chief executive of St. Joseph Communicat­ions.
Tony Gagliano, chief executive of St. Joseph Communicat­ions.

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