Wednesday, January 26, 2011

“BBC online axes hundreds of job as corporation halves its website operation”

“BBC online axes hundreds of job as corporation halves its website operation”


BBC online axes hundreds of job as corporation halves its website operation

Posted: 21 Jan 2011 03:39 PM PST

By Paul Revoir
Last updated at 1:36 AM on 22nd January 2011

The BBC is to slash hundreds of online jobs as part of swingeing cuts which will halve the size of its website operation.

A number of popular gardening, cookery and lifestyle websites will be axed or dramatically scaled back, the corporation will announce on Monday.

Earlier this year the BBC's outgoing technology chief, Erik Huggers, revealed that the corporation would have to lose at least half of its 400 websites by 2012.

Cuts: Hundreds of staff at BBC Online are to lose their jobs as parts of corporation cutbacks

Cuts: Hundreds of staff at BBC Online are to lose their jobs as parts of corporation cutbacks

BBC Online's £126.7million annual budget and 1,600 staff will also be slashed by a quarter.

The cuts come following last year's strategy review and after years of concern from commercial rivals about the growing dominance of BBC Online and its 'creeping' into areas which have nothing to do with its core public service remit.

Among the sites to have closed already or are expected to shut are Street Doctor, Key Skills, Film Festival, Strictly Dance Fever, Celebdaq, Sportdaq and The Last Millionaire.

Instead of having costly individual websites for shows they will now be grouped on a generic site.

The BBC will also attempt to make itself friendlier to rivals by providing links to other media websites.

An insider said: 'This will directly address the concerns of creep and also concerns that the BBC has become too big. It is about addressing the size and scale of the operation.'

The job losses risk further industrial action from unions following last year's 48-hour walkout over changes to BBC pensions.

Earlier this week, Richard Deverell, chief operating officer of BBC North, suggested BBC One or Two could move to the corporation's new centre, Salford Quays, by 2015.

The move, which he insisted was 'no more than a guess', could mean hundreds of extra BBC jobs moving to Salford beyond the 2,300 already announced.

In 2009, it was revealed that the corporation paid its staff £17.5million in bonuses as Britain suffered its worst economic crisis for a generation. 

The payments to 9,777 of the BBC's near-21,000 staff also coincided with hundreds of job cuts and budgets being squeezed on many of its shows.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php
Five Filters featured article: Collateral Damage - WikiLeaks In The Crosshairs.

0 comments:

Post a Comment