We weren’t created to be another newspaper. We were created because every community deserves a trusted place to grow.
Not just the big cities. Not just the headlines that make national news. The Little League game. The restaurant that opened after years of saving. The teacher who stayed late every day for thirty years. The veteran who never asked for recognition. These stories matter — and they deserve a place to live.
The business owner who sponsors the Little League team, who hires neighbors, who stays open when things get hard — they’ve spent years building something real. They shouldn’t have to fight a national algorithm to be found by the people two miles away. If a business is good enough to serve this community, it’s good enough to be known by this community.
The corporate newsrooms pulled out. The free weeklies ran out of money. The Facebook groups became noise. But the need — the genuine human need to know what’s happening in your own town — never went away. We didn’t fill a gap in the market. We filled a gap in the community.
“We didn’t build the Neighborhood Gazette to sell advertising.
We built it to build something that matters.”
A spotlight at the right moment can change the entire trajectory of a business, a family, a career. When someone who’s been grinding for years sees their name in print — sees their story respected, their work documented — something shifts. That’s not advertising. That’s community.
Most advertising is noise people learn to ignore. We wanted to build something different. Something people open. Something they keep on the kitchen table. Something they hand to a neighbor. When a business is featured in the Gazette, it doesn’t interrupt the reader’s day — it’s part of it.
We didn’t build the Gazette to compete with national media. We built it because South Jersey doesn’t need a national newspaper to tell its stories. It needs a neighborhood one. One that knows the difference between Cherry Hill and Haddonfield. One that covers high school sports. One that publishes the name of the food bank volunteer who’s been showing up every Saturday for five years. Your town. Your community. Your people.
Read the full founder’s story, meet the newsroom, or find out how your business can be part of it.
From the Publisher → Meet the Newsroom → Grow With Us →