BusinessWeek editor Stephen Adler explains in an Editor’s Memo in the latest issue the weekly business magazine’s overhaul that includes a new redesign and changes in its content.
“So in all our reporting and analysis, we’ll be focusing on sorting, clarifying, and illuminating. Also, we’ll be opening our doors to an Internet-type model of aggregation—that is, offering other smart perspectives from around the world alongside stories that we develop. In this way, we’ll share ideas that we have found worthwhile, even if they weren’t invented here.
“You’re weary of the glitzy sales pitch, style over substance, cleverness over clarity.
“So, our cleaner, more understated design features stories organized into straightforward sections with utilitarian names and clear purposes: The Business Week, News, In Depth, What’s Next, Personal Business, and Opinion. You’ll find our columnists in this final section, along with a now-weekly feature, Feedback, where we can air your views more fully and highlight the best of the online conversations at BusinessWeek.com.”
Read more here.
With a portfolio of 18 newsletters and hundreds of thousands of subscribers, Reuters has a…
Kitty Donaldson, UK political editor for Bloomberg News, is leaving the news organization for a…
Melara Enterprises seeks a business journalist to join our team in developing and producing original content…
Joanna Sullivan, the editor in chief of the Baltimore Business Journal, writes about the redesign…
Fortune has won the the Best Editorial Package award in the annual Digiday Media Awards…
Washington Bureau Chief Margaret Collins announced that Kate Davidson will become managing editor of economic…