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Google search listing reveals sponsorship of Reuters news story.
Google search listing reveals sponsorship of Reuters news story. Photograph: Screen grab
Google search listing reveals sponsorship of Reuters news story. Photograph: Screen grab

Reuters carries sponsorship of its US presidential coverage

This article is more than 8 years old

News agency’s reports underwritten by German software company but Thomson Reuters executive stresses that sponsor does not compromise its independence

Reuters, the world’s largest English-language news agency, is running sponsored coverage of the US presidential election.

Its campaign reports and photographs are carrying a statement that says:

“SAP is the sponsor of this content. It was independently created by Reuters’ editorial staff and funded in part by SAP, which otherwise has no role in this coverage.”

SAP is a German multinational software corporation. Its sponsorship was noticed by a former Reuters editor and revealed by The Baron, the website dedicated to reporting material “of interest to Reuters people past and present.”

The editor told the website: “I’ve never seen such a thing on Reuters. Of course there is sponsored content - I believe ‘native content’ is the term - out there in a lot of publications. But to farm out an entire slice of one’s news file?”

So The Baron sent a list of questions about the sponsorship to Reuters editor-in-chief Stephen Adler:

“What’s the deal? Does SAP pay for the entire cost of Reuters coverage, eg travel, hotels, staffer/stringer sustenance? Or is it a contribution towards part of those or other costs? How is the story independent of Reuters’ news coverage of the campaign?

Does the journalist writing sponsored content also produce unsponsored copy on the same or related subjects? Does SAP or any other sponsor pay for coverage of other news stories aside from political ones, eg business, economic or financial news?”

Adler evidently discussed The Baron’s inquiry with David Crundwell, Thomson Reuters corporate affairs vice president, who sent The Baron a statement.

It began by asserting that the agency’s “principles of independence, integrity and freedom from bias are at the heart of everything that Reuters News does.” He continued:

“A company associated with a news report that is labeled as ‘sponsored’ is no different from any advertiser wanting to be associated with a great news site or news publication.

An advertiser, or ‘sponsor’, has no involvement in the content of any Reuters news article; advertising and sponsorship is a commercial proposition which can bring in funds that allow Reuters to cover a wider range of topics, or deliver that content to a wider audience, that may not have been economically viable otherwise.

All aspects of our editorial decision making however remain consistent with the Trust Principles whose safeguarding is our top priority.”

The Baron is an independent website founded and edited by Barry May, a former Reuters correspondent, editor and manager.

Source: The Baron

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