From: JNugent73@mail.com
On 31/07/2025 09:16 PM, Jethro_uk wrote:
> On Thu, 31 Jul 2025 17:10:35 +0100, Martin Harran wrote:
>
>> On Fri, 18 Jul 2025 15:30:21 +0100, JNugent wrote:
>>
>>> On 18/07/2025 01:51 PM, Mark Goodge wrote:
>>>> On Thu, 17 Jul 2025 16:03:49 +0100, Roland Perry
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> In message , at 13:59:10 on Thu, 17
>>>>> Jul 2025, JNugent remarked:
>>>>>> On 16/07/2025 06:49 PM, billy bookcase wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> "JNugent" wrote in message
>>>>>>> news:mdq2h5FotucU1@mid.individual.net...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> You snipped it (for your own rasons), but can you posit an
>>>>>>>> innocent reason for BBC vacancies being advertised in The
>>>>>>>> Guardian, but not The Times or The Telegraph?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Even assuming that the claim is true
>>>>>>
>>>>>> It is.
>>>>>
>>>>> And not the slightest bit un-usual. Back in the day, jobs for senior
>>>>> managers in the IT industry (amongst others) were normally advertised
>>>>> only in The Sunday Times. Quite irrespective of the paper's politics.
>>>>>
>>>>> Similarly jobs for senior schoolteachers, only in the TES (Times
>>>>> Educational Supplement).
>>>>>
>>>>> Why waste your money advertising elsewhere, when virtually all your
>>>>> target audience will be assiduously scanning the one appropriate
>>>>> publication every week?
>>>>
>>>> Indeed. It works both ways. Cornering the market for a particular type
>>>> of paid content (eg, job adverts) is a very good way of also
>>>> increasing the views of your own content (reportage) and other paid
>>>> content (general advertising). And once you have a reputation for
>>>> being the place people will look for these adverts, then the
>>>> advertisers will focus on putting them in your publication.
>>>>
>>>> Another one which used to do that very effectively, pre-Internet, was
>>>> the Evening Standard with its rental adverts. If you wanted to rent a
>>>> flat in London, you needed to buy the Standard, because that's where
>>>> all the adverts were. And if you had a flat you wanted to find a
>>>> tenant for, you had to advertise it in the Standard because that's
>>>> where everybody was looking.
>>>
>>> They were private sector adverts, placed most of the time by private
>>> individuals.
>>
>> Not sure if it's still the case but back when i was working in Northern
>> Ireland (70s to 90s), firms generally placed employment ads in both a
>> 'Catholic' paper and a 'Protestant' paper so as not to run foul of fair
>> emplyment legislation.
>
> NI is a special place for the equality act. As a few recruitment systems
> have discovered to their cost.
Is there any good reason why discrimination forbidden and policed in
Northern Ireland should be allowed - and even encouraged - in the rest
of the UK?
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
|