Type | Online (formerly print) newspaper during UK university term time |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | Career Gateways Limited |
Founded | 2007 |
Political alignment | Economic Liberalism |
Language | English |
Headquarters | London United Kingdom |
Circulation | c 30,000 and 60,000+ website hits monthly |
Website | The Gateway |
The Gateway newspaper was a business and careers online newspaper, formerly print and digital and then exclusively digital, read by students and graduates. It was popular with students at a range of UK universities and had readers around the world. The Gateway produced analysis, career advice and employer insights, as well as profiling paid internship opportunities and graduate jobs.
First published at Oxford University in October 2007, The Gateway was often dubbed "the student FT" due to being printed on the same light salmon paper as the Financial Times. Published by Career Gateways Limited, The Gateway specialised in making the world of business and finance accessible to students pursuing a career in the city. [1]
The Gateway was conceived by three Oxford University students, Mawuli Ladzekpo (Exeter College), Max Lewis (Pembroke College) and Chris Wilkinson (Lincoln College) in the summer of 2007. The trio aimed to fill the apparent niche for a publication that combined business and financial news with independent careers advice, and sought to take advantage of the growing graduate recruitment marketing industry that centered around Oxbridge. [2] The first issue of The Gateway was released on 8 October 2007 with a circulation of 6,000 at Oxford University.
In November 2007, The Gateway received commercial backing when the London based boutique recruitment consultancy, OxbridgeGroup, bought a stake in Career Gateways Limited. [3] This injection of capital allowed for an increased distribution of The Gateway to include an additional fourteen universities in the United Kingdom. It also resulted in The Gateway shedding its student workforce recruited by its founders, to be replaced with a team of full-time staff based at The Gateway's headquarters in the London Docklands. The company remained managed, in part, by its student founders.
The Gateway Online newspaper and website were shut down in around 2018/19.
Year | Readership as a proportion of final year students |
---|---|
2010 | 6% [4] |
2011 | 10% [5] |
2012 | 16% [6] |
2013 | 18% [7] |
The Gateway worked closely in particular with the following fifteen top universities in the United Kingdom, based loosely on the Russell Group.
Oxbridge is a portmanteau of Oxford and Cambridge, the two oldest, wealthiest, and most famous universities in the United Kingdom. The term is used to refer to them collectively, in contrast to other British universities, and more broadly to describe characteristics reminiscent of them, often with implications of superior social or intellectual status or elitism.
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The Doctor of Engineering, or Engineering Doctorate, is a degree awarded on the basis of advanced study and research in engineering and applied science for solving problems in industry. According to the National Science Foundation in the United States, it is a terminal research doctorate. A DEng/EngD is equivalent to a PhD in engineering, but different in that it has a solid industrial base and an additional taught element. The degree is usually aimed toward working professionals.
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The Sutton Trust is an educational charity in the United Kingdom which aims to improve social mobility and address educational disadvantage. The charity was set up by educational philanthropist, Sir Peter Lampl in 1997.
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