New York Post reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(131 total reviews)
avatar

Sean Giancola

83% approve of CEO

64% positive business outlook

New York Post has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 131 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The New York Post employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media & Communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

131 reviews
1.0
Nov 3, 2015

They can't get it right

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Not overly stressful environment. Newsorp has a nice gym that you can pay to belong to in the building.

Cons

Old management did not understand the digital world and they actually don't know how to manage sales people. They don't do pipeline reviews, track to quota.... they basically don't manage. A new regime was brought in as a last ditch effort. The new leadership is completely clueless. All of the new hires they have brought in have crashed. They are brining in less revenue than ever, They are trying to use a bandaid approach for something that needed a complete over hall. My recommendation is if you care about your career and potential to learn, run! This is not the place to be inspired by intelligent people.

2.0
Aug 25, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible Hours News Corp Training New Corp gym next door

Cons

Management isn't very influencing or useful. No room for progression. Toxic work environment

2.0
Nov 23, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

My three years at the New York Post and Page Six made one thing very clear: hierarchy ruled everything. Opportunities, growth, and even pay often felt tied less to performance and more to who had the closest relationships with senior staff. Management was generally lenient, but direct communication was inconsistent at best.

Cons

In an effort to “bring back office culture,” the company implemented a return-to-office schedule, first three days a week, later four. Ironically, walking into the newsroom on most days meant stepping into near silence. Despite leadership insisting that in-office energy was essential, many higher-ups were rarely seen on Fridays, while those below them were expected to be there without exception. As for Page Six, it somehow manages to distance itself—at least stylistically—from the broader conservative, often sensational tone of its parent outlets. Yet even with that distance, it still leans heavily into flashy, click-driven coverage that can feel more like noise than news. It’s a strange blend: a brand that prides itself on entertainment reporting done with “integrity,” while publishing stories that rarely say much of substance beyond the headline. Culturally, the environment often felt like a real-life spin-off of Succession, complete with annual reminders that raises would be capped at around 2%—this while the parent conglomerate owns more than a hundred outlets across multiple countries. Still, that tiny bump did occasionally make a Trader Joe’s splurge feel possible, if the price was right. Overall, the journalism was mediocre, the work was manageable, and the job paid the bills—but the experience highlighted a workplace where hierarchy overshadowed merit, communication lagged, and morale was paper-thin.

Viewing 16 - 18 of 131 Reviews

Glassdoor has 166 New York Post reviews submitted anonymously by New York Post employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if New York Post is right for you.