Axios is hiring a newsroom audience specialist to grow and engage readership for our business coverage.
Why it matters: This person will be responsible for broadening and deepening the audience reader experience across platforms, including in newsletters, and on the web and social.
- You will understand the differences in how users engage with our web vs. newsletter content and will take on a leading role in shaping our coverage to meet those specific needs.
- You will have instincts on what will travel on distributed platforms.
- You recognize how Axios business coverage distinguishes itself from competitors and have a clear sense of what makes it a must-read with our audience.
Responsibilities:
- Take ownership for the web performance of business stories, building processes to ensure that coverage with potential to win site audience is thoughtfully planned.
- Point person for identifying business stories that are well-suited to be adapted and shared through other Axios distribution points — including Local and social video.
- Develop coverage plans for upcoming, anticipatable news moments — including economic data releases, major hearings and leadership announcements — to meet expected audience demand. Win the buy-in of the business editor and newsdesk to execute an optimal plan.
- Interpret, contextualize and communicate actionable performance data to business editors.
- Advise on how best to translate coverage in newsletters to the web.
- Generate ideas for reader-service stories. These pieces will be targeted to a broader audience and often will be more explanatory than what readers find in Axios newsletters. Be open and able to write these stories.
- Develop and execute tactics to grow the public profiles of our most conversation-driving business reporters
- Develop and execute experiments to cultivate niche audiences in targeted online communities that align with Axios subject matter experts.
Skills:
- Enthusiastic about building expertise in business media and curious about learning the competitive landscape, identifying the top reporters in the ecosystem and understanding the rhythms that dictate business news cycles.
- Has a sophisticated understanding of performance metrics in order to surface meaningful, actionable insights from the data.
- Adaptable and diplomatic in pursuing goals while managing relationships with internal stakeholders on the Business, Essentials, Newsdesk, Visuals and Communications teams.
- Just as effective working collaboratively in a group as you are handling the duties of the job independently.
- Possesses strong writing and editing skills in order to occasionally byline stories that meet audience and vertical goals.
Starting salary for this role is in the range of $79,000 – $88,000 and is dependent on numerous factors, including but not limited to location, work experience, and skills. This range does not include other compensation and benefits.
To apply, go here.
Chris RoushChris Roush was the dean of the School of Communications at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut. He was previously Walter E. Hussman Sr. Distinguished Professor in business journalism at UNC-Chapel Hill. He is a former business journalist for Bloomberg News, Businessweek, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Tampa Tribune and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. He is the author of the leading business reporting textbook "Show me the Money: Writing Business and Economics Stories for Mass Communication" and "Thinking Things Over," a biography of former Wall Street Journal editor Vermont Royster.