A PUBLIC BENEFIT CORPORATION SERVING JOURNALISM:
A PUBLIC BENEFIT CORPORATION SERVING JOURNALISM:
Public Benefit Corporations operate like regular corporations with one major exception: Corporations are legally required to maximize profits for their shareholders as their reason for existence. Public Benefit Corporations are allowed to legally add an additional reason for existence that serves a social or environmental need - allowing them to serve both purposes. “Certified” Public Benefit Corporations meet even higher standards that prove (or certify) they are doing the things they claim to be doing - or at least trying.
We have chosen Journalism as the cause we want our business to serve.
Public Benefit Corporations operate like regular corporations with one major exception: Corporations are legally required to maximize profits for their shareholders as their reason for existence. Public Benefit Corporations are allowed to legally add an additional reason for existence that serves a social or environmental need - allowing them to serve both purposes. “Certified” Public Benefit Corporations meet even higher standards that prove (or certify) they are doing the things they claim to be doing - or at least trying.
We have chosen Journalism as the cause we want our business to serve.
A Public Benefit Corporation
"The team is totally dedicated to finding and building solutions for our core needs."
-Jennifer Napier-Pearce
Editor, Salt Lake Tribune
TOWN HALL:
World Table CEO with Salt Lake Tribune executives at a recent Silicon Slopes TownHall discussing "How Tribune is Fixing Their Comments."
World Table CEO, Bryan Hall, joined the Salt Lake Tribune's owner, Paul Huntsman, editor, Jennifer Napier-Pearce, and online manager, Kelly Cannon, at a recent Silicon Slopes Town Hall to discuss how the Tribune is using World Table's software and innovative approaches to aggressively and proactively fix and improve their comment sections.
WATCH FULL VIDEO HERE:
World Table CEO, Bryan Hall, listens as Tribune publisher, Paul Hunstman, explains why the Tribune chose to partner with World Table.