Jaideep Vaidya

Website: www.jaideepvaidya.com
Contact

Professional Experience

I'm a freelance journalist based in Mumbai, India, and I focus on the business of sport. I have written for publications such as The Guardian, Quartz, Mint, Scroll.in, Firstpost, and Bleacher Report.

Expertise

Reporter
7 Years
Content Editor (online)
7 Years
Writer
7 Years

Specialty

Sports & Recreation
7 Years
Business (general)
2 Years

Industries


Online/new media
7 Years
Newspaper - National

Total Media Industry Experience

7 Years

Media Client List (# assignments last 2 yrs)

Scroll.in (10+), Quartz (3-5), The Guardian (1-2), Firstpost (1-2), Bleacher Report (10+)

Technical Skills

Content Management System, SEO, Google Analytics, Chartbeat, Hootsuite, Buffer, Qwaya, iMovie, Filmic Pro

Foreign Language Skills

French - Beginner (spoken and written) Chinese (Mandarin) - Beginner (spoken) Arabic - Beginner (spoken and written)

Showcase

General

Decathlon Sports India is reportedly India’s second-largest single-brand retailer, behind Chinese electronics major Xiaomi. At the heart of the French company’s success is a unique business model, at least in Indian sports retail.
India is currently the biggest fanbase for tWWE outside the USA, with 335 million unique television viewers annually. What's with this craze?
Sprinter Dutee Chand shattered a glass ceiling in India by revealing she is in a same-sex relationship. While she has received widespread support in the media, will Indian brands and sponsors also be open to associate with her?
Daily fantasy sports is the way to go in India and giving users the option to put money on their teams has worked wonders for the companies.
The IPL’s new broadcaster for the next five seasons has promised that the focus of its coverage will solely be on the cricket.
The relationship between the media and professional sport is bound to be fiery at times but in India, it has taken a turn for the worse.
English has traditionally been the language of cricket commentary in India, but that is fast changing.
The state-run broadcaster’s programming continues to be poor in original content, quality of production, and sporting knowledge.
Only a handful networks still run a daily sports bulletin, with politics and controversy taking centerstage.
The Indian football jersey costs as much as that of Chelsea Football Club and Rs 200 more than those of Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain, all of whom are manufactured by Nike.