Weather Tonight: 14°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 19°c Light showers

Business

HEADLINES:

WSJ axes 50 editorial staff as production is revamped

Bill Condie
17.07.08

The Wall Street Journal is to axe about 50 editorial staff in a production revamp initiated by editor Robert Thomson, brought in by Rupert Murdoch after he bought Dow Jones, the paper's parent company.

"The reasons for these changes are strategic, even if some of the benefits are economic," Thomson, the former editor of The Times, said in an email to staff.

The restructure involves scrapping at least five editing desks, amalgamating them into one "news hub" in New York.

"We will be posting the new editing desk jobs no later than tomorrow and genuinely encourage all staffers affected by this announcement to apply," Thomson wrote.

"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."

Murdoch bought Dow Jones for $5.2 billion (£2.63 billion) last year amid strong opposition from staff at the Journal who feared an erosion of quality at the flagship.

Thomson said the new budget "includes an ambitious expansion of our web and international operations". He said the firm plans to add 95 journalists at Dow Jones Newswires in coming months.

"There is good reason for optimism," he said in his email.

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
Market Roundup
FRIDAY UPDATE

Miners the bright spot as volatility batters punters

Stock-market investors might have wished for a better start to the second half of the year. As it is they’ve taken something of a battering, with the prospect of further volatility to come

More



City Spy, cityspy@standard.co.uk

Gloves off for BGC vs Tullett fight

Roll up! Roll up! Monday sees the start of what could be a fascinating week in the High Court in the Strand. Case Number One, which may well take all of July, involves City giants Tullett Prebon (prop. Terry Smith) and BGC over alleged poaching of Tullett’s highly paid expert staff

More

City Briefing

The latest top City stories and Market report emailed to you twice a day.

Read the latest bulletin

Mickey Clark
podcasts

on the City Markets


Reader Rewards

Check out today's special offers and discounts for regular readers.

Read More...