Categories: Journo Jobs

WSJ seeks management and careers bureau chief

The Management & Careers Bureau Chief of The Wall Street Journal drives daily and long-term coverage of corporate management and workplace issues across industries, bureaus and continents. He/She will drive news and enterprise coverage with a strong focus on scoops and exclusives, delivering fully publishable packages to the Corporate Coverage Chief.

Tasks/Responsibilities

Content

  • Collaborate with the Corporate Coverage Chief to develop and implement a daily coverage plan for all platforms.
  • Oversee and manage a rigorous story-pitch and story prioritization process to select the journalism that is to be pursued by the management and careers team.
  • Deliver ready-to-publish story packages on the article-page level, collaborating with the graphics, photo, video and social teams to create well-rounded packages, and ensure the packages are optimized for mobile audiences.
  • Ensure that all components are of the highest quality, adhere to WSJ standards and are ready for publication as a complete article page.
  • Understand and use audience data to drive coverage decisions and proactively test the success of published packages.
  • Track key performance indicators with the Analytics & Audience Editor. Provide regular and actionable feedback to staff to improve overall journalistic quality and workflow efficiency.
  • Work across bureaus, looking for opportunities for collaboration, using the totality of the Journal’s resources to create compelling and original management and career content.
  • Work closely with the Spot Desk to make sure breaking news stories are receiving the proper input from beat reporters.
  • Work with the Newsletter Editor, the Digital News Editor and the Planning Editor to serve readers of digital products generated within the coverage area. Track KPIs and optimize.

Leadership

  • Directly manage management and career reporters.
  • Manage direct reports’ development as reporters, working with the Writing Chief and Editing Chief to improve quality and increase writing and editing skills.
  • Identify high-potential members of the team and ensure they are effectively developed.
  • Inspire our journalists to produce their best work on all platforms and drive the team to produce distinctive stories for the Journal.
  • Contribute by attitude, example and encouragement to a culture of creativity, enthusiasm, motivation, ownership and professionalism.
  • Set standards for individual and team performance – ongoing and in regular performance reviews.

Key Attributes/Knowledge/Experience

  • Strong knowledge of corporate management and workplace issues.
  • Superb news judgment with extensive experience editing and writing.
  • Deep understanding of the brand values and mission of The Wall Street Journal — digital and print — and how our journalism should be selected, executed and presented in line with those values.
  • Deep understanding of the audience and membership structure, and how to use insight research and analytics to continually refine this understanding.
  • Equally at home in digital media environments and print, with demonstrated excellence in writing and editing in both. Solid grasp of video as a content format.
  • Know how to select and present the best, most relevant journalism in various digital formats. Also know what does not work and make qualified calls.
  • Understands and applies creatively modern and innovative journalism and storytelling techniques.
  • Excellent communications skills. Know how to delegate, brief and give constructive feedback.
  • Sound organizational abilities: setting the story pitch process, managing packages, maintaining a slate of forward planning that is crucial for implementing the bureau’s strategy.
  • Innovative and creative thinker, leader and manager.

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.

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