Full-Time

AP seeks a general assignment biz reporter

The Associated Press seeks a journalist with an instinct for trending news to join our team as a general assignment reporter based in New York. This journalist will join our global newsgathering team to help cover trending business news that will help people understand how economic forces impact their lives. They will work with our teams covering markets, the global economy, energy, inequality, autos, travel, technology, retail and consumer affairs, along with AP’s journalists in regions around the globe, to tell stories that are approachable, practical and shareable.

Responsibilities: In this role, you will find opportunities to produce explanatory and trending stories. We’re looking for someone who’s energized by the opportunity to shift from crypto to personal technology to food trends as the news cycle demands, and who is curious about how economics influences everything around us. We want a reporter who is passionate about covering stories that will resonate in the lives of news consumers. Most importantly? You should see this broad assignment as a chance to have fun and create some of AP’s best-performing stories, and you should be excited to tell business stories that intersect with sports, entertainment, general news and more. Your work will serve a global, digital-first audience, and you will be part of a reporting staff who can jump on breaking business news in collaboration with other departments.

We’re looking for someone who will:

  • contribute to the daily spot report in traditional and non-traditional story forms.
  • write about complex topics in a way that can be easily understood and will resonate with diverse audiences around the world.
  • eagerly collaborate with teams and colleagues around AP
  • work with a diverse team of journalists to pitch stories across all formats – text, photo, video, audio, digital/social, interactive and graphics – collaborating from a story’s inception to its publication.
  • have a great news sense, with the ability to communicate stories that people will want to share on social media.
  • pursue innovative and inclusive coverage strategies while maintaining AP’s standards for integrity and objectivity.

Qualifications: Applicants must be able to explain complex stories in clear and compelling ways and do so swiftly and accurately on tight deadlines. You should be comfortable working in multiple media formats, from the field and from the desk, reporting on breaking news as well as beat-driven enterprise. You must be able to work effectively as a member of a team and should have at least two years of full-time experience at a daily newspaper, broadcast station, online or digital news outlet, or an AP bureau or regional desk.

We will consider strong candidates who do not meet every listed qualification. You may use a cover letter to describe the unique qualifications you would bring to this role.

Other qualifications:

  • Bachelor’s degree or equivalent experience.
  • All applicants must be able to work in the U.S. or be able to gain permission to do so.
  • Advanced-level professional competency in written and spoken English.
  • Professional competency in a language besides English is a plus.
  • Basic proficiency in using an iPhone for photos and video is required. Advanced proficiency is a plus.
  • Strong interpersonal, organizational and planning skills, with the ability to juggle multiple projects across formats and deliver success on complex, challenging story lines.

The anticipated salary range for this position is $66,657 – $80,714 contingent on experience and other job-related factors. Employees are eligible to participate, according to the terms of the official plan documents, in a 401(k) plan, employer-sponsored health insurance plan, and are eligible for paid time off and holidays in accordance with AP policy.

Application deadline is January 24, 2023 11:59 p.m. (ET)

To apply, go here.

Chris Roush

Chris 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.

Recent Posts

Hadi becomes chief deputy at NY Times biz department

New York Times business editor Ellen Pollock sent out the following: I’m excited to announce: Mohammed Hadi…

2 hours ago

NY Times’ Dreier, Reuters coverage of Musk win Pulitzers

Hannah Dreier, an investigative reporter at The New York Times, won a Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting…

3 hours ago

Washington Biz Journal hires Peters to cover real estate

The Washington Business Journal has hired Ben Peters to cover commercial real estate. He has been the…

5 hours ago

Bloomberg Radio seeks a video and audio producer

Bloomberg Radio has a rare opportunity for a motivated, hardworking Producer to contribute to it's…

7 hours ago

WSJ reporter Sebastian among Asia layoffs

Wall Street Journal reporter Dave Sebastian was among the layoffs last week when it reorganized its Asia…

7 hours ago

Wirecutter hires Builder as deputy editorial director

Wirecutter editorial director Lauren Sullivan sent out the following: I’m elated to announce that Maxine Builder, a…

1 day ago