Bezos’ Post shake-up tightens newsroom budgets
Coverage of Jeff Bezos’ overhaul at the Washington Post highlights leadership changes, staff cuts and a mandate to double productivity with half the budget — a stark example of cost-driven newsroom restructuring detailed. That backdrop explains why buyers are prioritizing tools that deliver measurable workflow gains and clear ROI.
The Washington Post eliminated more than 300 positions — about one‑third of its workforce — in the February round of cuts. variety.com Management moved to shutter the books section and said the sports desk would not continue “in its current form,” while foreign bureaus and other specialty coverage were sharply reduced. thewrap.com Publisher and CEO Will Lewis resigned days after the layoffs and the Post promoted CFO Jeff D’Onofrio as acting publisher/CEO, while Executive Editor Matt Murray framed the changes as a “strategic reset.” cnbc.com Reporting tied the cuts to mounting losses — more than $100 million in 2025 after similar shortfalls in prior years — and leadership said decisions would be guided by audience and customer data as the organization pivots toward greater automation and AI use. thewrap.com