The Wall Street Journal is seeking a senior video journalist to join its Features video team based in New York.
In this role, the senior video journalist will prioritize booking newsmakers, CEOs and industry leaders for standalone interviews and feature videos. Ideal candidates are confident and proactive producers who can create high-quality videos around engaging interviews.
Top candidates will have a professional background in video journalism, with proven experience cultivating relationships with sources, booking high-profile interviews, working with talent and commanding shoots. Because this is a global news operation, candidates need to be effective communicators with solid news judgment and excellent interpersonal skills.
All interested candidates should submit a cover letter clearly outlining how their skills and experience meet or exceed the key candidate requirements. Please include links to five videos that demonstrate your ability to book newsmakers and engaging characters for interview segments and feature stories.
The role will report to the Executive Producer of the Features & Explainers team.
Primary responsibilities:
- Identify and pitch a diverse, engaging slate of interview subjects for both short-term and long-term projects
- Develop and maintain key relationships within core industries; handle outreach and aggressively pursue interviews
- Conduct in-depth pre-interviews and research, and help prepare thoughtful, engaging questions for the interviewer
- Lead shoots confidently in the studio and field. Includes managing talent and PR reps, making assertive, split-second decisions and troubleshooting issues.
- Craft strong scripts with solid structures, engaging visual scenes and thorough fact checks; apply feedback accordingly in re-writes
- Collaborate regularly with top WSJ reporters and editors across a variety of coverage areas to identify and produce impactful interviews that are visually distinctive and of interest to the WSJ audience
- Manage multiple projects at various stages of production and maintain a pipeline of work that includes features stories and standalone interviews
- Experiment with different, innovative storytelling techniques and formats
- Ensure all journalistic and legal standards are followed at all times
- Ability to work long hours and weekends both as part of a on-call weekend rotation and as news developments may warrant
- Complete additional duties as assigned
Qualifications:
- 5+ years experience booking and working with high-profile subjects, preferably at a top-tier news organization
- A proven ability managing every aspect of video production from start to finish, delivering high-quality results efficiently and often under tight deadlines
- Effective communicator with exceptional writing skills and careful attention to detail
- Strong organizational and time-management skills
- Team player who has ease working with freelancers, senior leadership and talent
- A deep understanding of, and interest in, The Wall Street Journal’s core topic areas
- Demonstrated experience with multiple camera setups, including but not limited to the Sony FX and FS lines and/or the Canon C500 or C300
- Professional-level understanding of Adobe Suite, with expertise in Premiere and basic knowledge of After Effects, Photoshop and Illustrator
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.