SmartMoney
Summary
SmartMoney The Wall Street Journal Magazine of Personal Business was launched in 1992 by Hearst Corporation and Dow Jones & Company. In 2010, Hearst sold its stake to Dow Jones. Its first editor was Norman Pearlstine. It is published monthly and its current circulation is 824,327.SmartMoney's target market is affluent professional and managerial business people needing personal finance information. Regular topics include ideas for saving, investing, and spending, as well as coverage of technology, automotive, and lifestyle subjects including travel, fashion, wine, music, and food..
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Martha Stewart downsizes magazines, to cut jobs
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc. is downsizing its magazines and will cut publishing jobs as it increasingly focuses on online video and other digital content.
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Newsweek ending print edition, job cuts expected
Newsweek plans to end its print publication after 80 years and will shift to an all-digital format aimed at online users starting in early 2013. Job cuts are expected.
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The WSJ launches an invitation-only ad exchange that allows real-time budding across web network
The Wall Street Journal Digital Network this morning announced that it would be launching a private ad exchange for its web properties. WSJ AUDEX will be an invitation-only exchange that will offer real-time bidding for its its sites WSJ. com, MarketWatch. com, Barrons. com and SmartMoney. com.
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SmartMoney is confused on wages, inflation
This SmartMoney post on "Why You're Not Getting a Raise" doesn't make sense. The lede: Didn’t get a raise this year? Blame inflation. Hmm, I'd blame the weak economy and excess supply of labor before inflation, which seems more correlation than causation. Corporate profits are, after all, at a record high, so the raise money is there:.
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The Daily cuts 29 percent of its staff, reorganizes publication
All Things D | The Daily The Daily announced that it’s laying off 50 full-time staffers, cutting its opinion section, switching to content partners for sports coverage, and will change to a portrait-only view. The iPad-only publication plans to focus… Read more.
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The Daily Lays Off a Third of Its Staff
The Daily, News Corp. ’s attempt to create a digital newspaper for the iPad age, is laying off nearly a third of its staff.
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More Layoffs at Dow Jones, Following the Sale of Career Website FINS.com
A little more than a week after Dow Jones & Co. announced that about 25 jobs would be eliminated as part of a plan to make SmartMoney digital-only, the financial publisher is handing out yet more pink slips. Twelve more positions are being elim. . .
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What a News Corp. Split Could Mean for Editorial Coverage
Will a News Corp. split have a downside for its entertainment properties? As the media giant mulls splitting off its print business, among the many implications are that its entertainment empire will be further detached from the papers that can bolster the blockbusters churned out by the same entertainment side.
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Daily Must Reads, June 22, 2012
The best stories across the web on media and technology, curated by Lily Leung 1. Twitter dismisses claim that hackers caused its outage (Guardian) 2. Flipboard launches on Android phones around the world (GigaOm) 3. Dow Jones shuts down print edition of SmartMoney, plans to hire for the web (Advertising Age) 4. Wired is reviewing 300 posts written by Jonah Lehrer (Romenesko) 5.
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SmartMoney Magazine To Fold Print Edition
After 20 years in print SmartMoney magazine will cease its print presence with the August issue and direct all of its content efforts to SmartMoney. com. At the same time the Dow Jones publication will expand its digital team (to 15) and report to the managing editor of The Wall Street Journal Digital Network Raju.

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