It’s now or never to expand remote work in newsrooms

“This is the last chance to take what we’ve learned from the pandemic and implement long-term changes that can help these organizations become more inclusive and better places to work.”

2022 will be a make-or-break year for remote and flexible work in news, particularly in national and global newsrooms. This is the last chance to take what we’ve learned from the pandemic and implement long-term changes that can help these organizations become more inclusive and better places to work.

Next year, it seems likely newsrooms will finalize their plans for returning to office work. But it’s another question if news leaders will make the changes necessary to give their employees more flexibility in where and how they work — or if they’ll fall back into old habits and outdated management practices.

Even as many people continue to work from home, news organizations with correspondents around the country and the world still insist on hiring many positions to work out of offices, especially in New York and Washington. Bureaucracy and HR concerns are the likely culprits, but they’re also just excuses. After all, national news organizations like Vox Media, Forbes, and The 19th have figured out how to offer many fully remote positions.

There are valid reasons for news organizations to maintain the status quo. Newsrooms are great places for reporters and editors to collaborate. They offer opportunities for younger staffers to learn the trade, and they can be exciting, adrenaline-filled environments. But like offices in other industries, they won’t be the same after the pandemic, and they simply aren’t necessary for some kinds of jobs. Now’s the time to reimagine what newsrooms look like and make them better places to work.

Remote work can help chip away at some persistent problems in national media. More remote positions can allow for more desperately needed diverse hiring practices. Having staffers more widely dispersed throughout the country could improve how newsrooms think about and shape the news, and potentially cut down on parachute journalism. Hiring more remote workers could also push newsrooms to improve and formalize processes like mentorship and training.

That said, it’s not enough just to make certain positions remote-friendly and call it a day. In order to make remote work functional, newsrooms must actually enact policies for onboarding, stipends, mentorship, communication, and work culture, among other things. Also, establishing remote and flexible work policies must incorporate staff feedback.

All of this will take time and experimentation, and we should work together across the industry to share our knowledge as we figure out how to make this work. It will be worth it: Newsrooms that formalize meaningful remote and flexible work policies will likely become more competitive in attracting and retaining talent.

We’re now nearly two years into the pandemic; we have proof that news operations can function outside of offices. It’s past time for more newsrooms to come to terms with the future of remote work.

Rachel Glickhouse is a senior project manager at the (all-remote) News Revenue Hub.

2022 will be a make-or-break year for remote and flexible work in news, particularly in national and global newsrooms. This is the last chance to take what we’ve learned from the pandemic and implement long-term changes that can help these organizations become more inclusive and better places to work.

Next year, it seems likely newsrooms will finalize their plans for returning to office work. But it’s another question if news leaders will make the changes necessary to give their employees more flexibility in where and how they work — or if they’ll fall back into old habits and outdated management practices.

Even as many people continue to work from home, news organizations with correspondents around the country and the world still insist on hiring many positions to work out of offices, especially in New York and Washington. Bureaucracy and HR concerns are the likely culprits, but they’re also just excuses. After all, national news organizations like Vox Media, Forbes, and The 19th have figured out how to offer many fully remote positions.

There are valid reasons for news organizations to maintain the status quo. Newsrooms are great places for reporters and editors to collaborate. They offer opportunities for younger staffers to learn the trade, and they can be exciting, adrenaline-filled environments. But like offices in other industries, they won’t be the same after the pandemic, and they simply aren’t necessary for some kinds of jobs. Now’s the time to reimagine what newsrooms look like and make them better places to work.

Remote work can help chip away at some persistent problems in national media. More remote positions can allow for more desperately needed diverse hiring practices. Having staffers more widely dispersed throughout the country could improve how newsrooms think about and shape the news, and potentially cut down on parachute journalism. Hiring more remote workers could also push newsrooms to improve and formalize processes like mentorship and training.

That said, it’s not enough just to make certain positions remote-friendly and call it a day. In order to make remote work functional, newsrooms must actually enact policies for onboarding, stipends, mentorship, communication, and work culture, among other things. Also, establishing remote and flexible work policies must incorporate staff feedback.

All of this will take time and experimentation, and we should work together across the industry to share our knowledge as we figure out how to make this work. It will be worth it: Newsrooms that formalize meaningful remote and flexible work policies will likely become more competitive in attracting and retaining talent.

We’re now nearly two years into the pandemic; we have proof that news operations can function outside of offices. It’s past time for more newsrooms to come to terms with the future of remote work.

Rachel Glickhouse is a senior project manager at the (all-remote) News Revenue Hub.

Errin Haines

Catalina Albeanu

Victor Pickard

Daniel Eilemberg

Kerri Hoffman

Alice Antheaume

Cherian George

Doris Truong

Kristen Muller

Amara Aguilar

AX Mina

Kristen Jeffers

Anthony Nadler

Parker Molloy

Gonzalo del Peon

Zizi Papacharissi

Megan McCarthy

John Davidow

Anita Varma

Jessica Clark

Burt Herman

Tom Trewinnard

Chicas Poderosas

Mandy Jenkins

Shalabh Upadhyay

Sarah Stonbely

David Skok

Chase Davis

Brian Moritz

Millie Tran

David Cohn

Kathleen Searles & Rebekah Trumble

Shannon McGregor & Carolyn Schmitt

Mike Rispoli

Mario García

James Salanga

Julia Angwin

Richard Tofel

Jody Brannon

Jesse Holcomb

Matthew Pressman

Melody Kramer

Jennifer Coogan

Jim Friedlich

Joshua P. Darr

Amy Schmitz Weiss

Cristina Tardáguila

Raney Aronson-Rath

Joanne McNeil

James Green

Joni Deutsch

Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

Joy Mayer

Larry Ryckman

Nikki Usher

Wilson Liévano

Jesenia De Moya Correa

Juleyka Lantigua

Mary Walter-Brown

Jonas Kaiser

Tamar Charney

Matt Karolian

Candace Amos

Julia Munslow

Izabella Kaminska

Jennifer Brandel

Don Day

Stephen Fowler

Natalia Viana

Rachel Glickhouse

Laxmi Parthasarathy

Eric Nuzum

Gordon Crovitz

Cindy Royal

Simon Allison

A.J. Bauer

Francesco Zaffarano

Gabe Schneider

Matt DeRienzo

Sam Guzik

Simon Galperin

Christina Shih

Andrew Freedman

Kendra Pierre-Louis

Sarah Marshall

S. Mitra Kalita

j. Siguru Wahutu

Ståle Grut

Paul Cheung

Ariel Zirulnick

Moreno Cruz Osório

Anika Anand

Whitney Phillips

Meena Thiruvengadam

Christoph Mergerson

Robert Hernandez

Joe Amditis

Tony Baranowski

Michael W. Wagner

Stefanie Murray