WSJ Laying Off 50 Staffers Amid Editorial Reorg; Plans To Add 95 Reporters In Coming Months
By David Kaplan - Wed 16 Jul 2008 12:44 PM PST
WSJ is cutting 50 editorial positions as it moves to reform editing functions across print, online and mobile, according to a staff memo written by Robert Thomson, the News Corp (NYSE: NWS). paper’s managing editor. The Global News, Global Copy, Global Pagination, Monitor and the stand alone WSJ.com editing desks “will cease to exist” as the separation between those areas are taken down. The New York offices will be the central editing hub and most of the editorial operations in South Brunswick will be closed. While 50 staffers will lose their jobs as part of the restructuring effort, WSJ will be posting the new editing desk jobs by Friday. The dismissed staffers can apply for the new positions in New York. The editing operations in New Brunswick were created after the attacks on Sept. 11 affected WSJ offices, forcing the company to move some duties and people to that location—which is where most of the job cuts will come from, Thomson said.
The cuts were not blamed on the usual pain associated with the rising costs of running a newspaper or the decline of ad revenue. Thomson’s memo cites investments over the past few months in a “significantly larger newshole” and adding new hires in “long-vacant” reporting posts. Thomson: ”Our new budget includes an ambitious expansion of our web and international operations, both for the Journal and for Newswires, where we are adding 95 journalists over coming months. We also have secured a generous investment in a state-of-the-art editing and publishing system. There is good reason for optimism at Dow Jones amidst the pessimism prevailing in our industry.”
The internal memo from Thomson, below:
-----Original Message-----
From: Thomson, Robert
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 3:30 PM
To: WSJ All News Staff
Subject: Staff Announcement
Colleagues,
With the Journal’s new leadership team in place, we are reforming our editing structure and changing fundamentally the way in which we produce The Wall Street Journal in its manifold forms. The reasons for these changes are strategic, even if some of the benefits are economic. The full memo appears after the jump.
Beginning next month, the news hub in New York will be responsible for editing copy and producing pages across all our platforms – in print, online and on mobile. The Global News, Global Copy, Global Pagination, Monitor and the standalone WSJ.com editing desks as we know them will cease to exist and most of the editorial operations in South Brunswick will be closed.
We will be posting the new editing desk jobs no later than Friday and genuinely encourage all staffers affected by this announcement to apply for these openings in New York. About 50 positions will be lost, but staffers with the highest skill levels and the enthusiasm to acquire new skills will have a distinct advantage during the selection process. A detailed explanation of the new structure will be sent to you shortly.
The reformed structure means that it is essential for reporters and bureau chiefs to ensure that copy filed to the news desk is clean, to length and conforms to our style. Stadium Editing will be a practice of the past and design, for both print and web, will be integral to the evolution of each story and every page.
I realize that this reorganization will be a challenge operationally and, for some of you, personally. It is obvious that the South Brunswick team created in the wake of the September 11 attack is bearing the brunt of these changes. The individuals most affected will be counseled about their options and their opportunities.
Our situation should be put in its contemporary context. In recent months, we have invested in a significantly larger newshole, contrary to the industry trend, and filled long-vacant reporting positions in many bureaus. Our new budget includes an ambitious expansion of our web and international operations, both for the Journal and for Newswires, where we are adding 95 journalists over coming months. We also have secured a generous investment in a state-of-the-art editing and publishing system. There is good reason for optimism at Dow Jones amidst the pessimism prevailing in our industry.
Yours,
Robert
Posted in: Companies, News Corp., WSJ-DJ, Industry Moves, Media, Newspapers





