Regional press group Archant has revealed to shareholders that it cut 11 per cent of its staff in 2017.
More than 100 jobs have gone across the group to the current total of 1,160 full-time-equivalent staff.
The job cuts follow moves to “audience first” publishing announced by chief content officer Matt Kelly last November.
Archant publishes 50 weekly newspapers in the south of England and four East Anglian dailies: the Eastern Daily Press, Ipswich Star, East Anglian Daily Times and the Norwich Evening News. It is also has a number of county magazines and specialist titles.
Under the changes newsrooms were changed to “content rooms” with journalists publishing directly to the web and newspapers mainly compiled from material already published online.
Shareholders of the privately-owned group were told in a presentation that the industry environment remains “extremely challenging – especially post Brexit vote” with property advertising particularly hard hit.
Archant predicts that “local newspapers will continue to exist in print form but revenues from advertising will continue to decline”.
It said that its county lifestyle magazines were in a better position.
The company said that in the “battle for time” local newspapers are “outgunned” by what it described as the “Persuasion Technology Lab”.
This appears to be a reference to tech giants such as Google and Facebook which have made such inroads into local press advertising.
Revenue performance for 2017 was said to be better than the market, but below budget.
Print advertising for the full year is expected to be down 16 per cent and circulation revenue down 7 per cent. Digital advertising (excluding classifieds) is said to be up 19 per cent.