The New York Times is hiring: Data Editor in New York
The New York Times, New York, NY, United States, 10261
The mission of The New York Times is to seek the truth and help people understand the world. That means independent journalism is at the heart of all we do as a company. It’s why we have a world-renowned newsroom that sends journalists to report on the ground from nearly 160 countries. It’s why we focus deeply on how our readers will experience our journalism, from print to audio to a world-class digital and app destination. And it’s why our business strategy centers on making journalism so good that it’s worth paying for.
Job Description
Data journalism has become an essential driver of our news coverage at The New York Times.
Data illuminates subjects like Covid hospitalization rates and helps to explain events like the latest jobs report. It fuels enterprise and investigative journalism, revealing the hidden prices of health care, an increase in pedestrian deaths at night, and the punishing reach of racism.
Ongoing projects like our coronavirus case tracker and our data-driven weather trackers have demonstrated how data journalism can provide clear and trustworthy information about the places our readers live and help them navigate their daily lives.
Our vision is for data journalism to play an even bigger role in our news coverage, and for readers to regularly turn to The Times for sophisticated analysis on the news stories of the day and impactful data-driven investigative projects.
We are looking for an experienced journalist to serve as The Times’s Data Editor and help lead this expansion, building out a team of data journalists, developers, and statisticians who will collaborate on projects with journalists on desks across the newsroom, and pursue their own ideas.
As Data Editor, you will be in charge of hiring a team of a half-dozen data journalists, energetically pursuing opportunities for the use of data across the news report, and working with department heads to ensure these projects reach their full potential. You will also help set standards and best practices for our use of data and statistics in our news report and advise other editors, including newsroom leaders, on the use of data.
Basic Qualifications:
- 7+ years of experience conceiving, managing, and editing data-driven journalistic projects
- Knowledgeable at generating ideas on how we can use data to explain the news to our readers
- Experienced in finding creative ways to apply data and statistical analysis to the news
- Eager to work with other department heads to identify opportunities for data-driven journalism and to develop tools, data resources, and workflows that help the newsroom easily infuse data into its daily and longer-term coverage
- Collaborative and excited about working with editors and reporters from across the newsroom who have different experiences and skills
- Demonstrated excellent organizational and communication skills; experience managing many projects at once on a variety of timelines
Preferred Qualifications:
- Experience managing a team, especially one with diverse skills; eager to manage and grow a team of data journalists and help them progress in their careers
- Experience with designing and implementing best practices around data storage and sharing, securing sensitive datasets, code review, sunsetting projects, and writing methodologies
- Knowledgeable about available datasets in at least one beat — the Census, business, and health claims
Internal and external candidates should apply in Workday and include a short memo articulating a vision for how a data-driven journalism team can collaborate with desks across the newsroom to add meaningful data analysis in both our daily and enterprise journalism.
This is an excluded department-head level position.
The annual base pay salary for this role is between $180,000.00 and $190,000.00.
The New York Times is committed to a diverse and inclusive workforce, one that reflects the varied global community we serve. Our journalism and the products we build in the service of that journalism greatly benefit from a range of perspectives, which
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