The Only Career Constant Is Change
You’re In Charge of Your Career in a Fast-Changing Media Business
Deborah D. Douglas, co-editor of the re-launched The Emancipator, says being a Black woman in journalism has required her to recalibrate -- often.
Planning For Newsroom Success
Take proactive steps to map your desired direction, top political editor advises.
Without a strategy, journalists might just as well plan to leave the business, says Sudeep Reddy of Politico.
Transcending Fault Lines
The Five Fault Lines: Race, Class, Gender, Geography and Generation
"So again, fault line awareness is about taking into account nuances in stories. It's about understanding self-awareness. And to realize the societal fault lines and biases are natural because we experience things differently," Henderson said.
Ray Suarez to Journalists of Color: Don’t Suffer in Silence
Ray Suarez, ground-breaking Latino correspondent, takes aim at underrepresentation
"Modesty is an admirable trait but not always useful in a news organization," says Suarez.
9 Tips for Beat Reporters, From Novice to Expert
Diving into Sanctions or an Agency: How Reporters Can Start Getting Exclusives
AP reporter Fatima Hussein started covering the U.S. Treasury Dept. just a month before new sanctions on Russia. Here’s her advice for journalists.
Redefining the Narrative
A National Geographic editor details how centering inclusion and diverse voices has transformed the content of one of the most respected publications in American history.
What started as a brief consulting stint turned into now six years directing content for National Geographic, during one of the most contentious periods in American history.
