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The Washington Post

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washington post - Anonymous employee The Washington Post Employee Review

2.0
Sep 6, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

i work with some very nice people.

Cons

big ship that works in silos. difficult to do a good job.

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The Washington Post Response
9y
Thank you for your review and feedback. Your feedback about silos is helpful as we are pro-actively addressing reducing silos by bringing teams from across the company together. Thank you again for your feedback. We have a commitment toward growth and making The Washington Post a great place to work for all. We’d love to hear more specifics about how you've found it difficult to do a good job at The Washington Post. Feel free to e-mail us: life@washpost.com.

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Cons

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1.0
Jul 8, 2026
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Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Talented coworkers who care strongly about the mission of supporting independent journalism.

Cons

Context: tech side of the org - C-suite will pay lip service to disruptive innovation and allowing ideas to come from anywhere, but at the end of the day you will realize they always had a pet project in mind and nothing else actually mattered. Furthermore, those ideas will have you saying "...that's what we came up with?" - C-suite & other leadership (in my professional opinion) regularly cherry-pick and misinterpret data, intentionally or not, oftentimes to support the narrative they want. - C-suite can't handle negative feedback or opposing ideas, and has actively chastised employees for speaking up. I have never felt so unsafe using my voice and challenging power, which is ironic at a newspaper. - It's famously difficult to get promoted here. Your career will progress more slowly than you ever thought was possible. - There is so much potential for growth and innovation, but if you stay for long enough you'll realize it's not possible due to the rot and misaligned incentives at the top of the organization.

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