ICFJ Programs in Business

  • McGraw-Hill Markets Reporting Program

    Click here to apply today!


    The International Center for Journalists (ICFJ) will offer two online courses in English and Spanish on covering marketing concepts such as how to plan for retirement, understanding your 401k, stock and bond markets, mutual funds and private and public companies, among others. These courses will be available to U.S. journalists who report in minority communities. The online courses will take place from September 4, 2012 through October 26, 2012.

  • Sub-Saharan Africa: Develop New Business Models

    A media entrepreneur, Knight International Journalism Fellow Meredith Beal is working with members of the African Media Initiative (AMI), a pan-African organization of media owners and operators, to develop effective business models and new revenue streams that support quality news coverage.

    Through a competitive process, AMI is selecting organizations to receive Beal’s intensive coaching on business practices, including monetizing mobile and online news services.

  • McGraw-Hill Personal Finance Reporting Online Courses

    The International Center for Journalists (ICFJ) has offered two online courses in English and Spanish on covering personal finance for Hispanic journalists and US journalists covering finance issues for minority and immigrant communities. These courses started on July 1 and will end on August 18.

    The courses were open to Spanish-speaking and English-speaking journalists from ethnic media.

  • Serbian Media Managers Professional Development Program

    ICFJ conducted a U.S.-based professional development program for six media managers from Serbia, sponsored by the U.S. Department of State through Support for East European Democracy (SEED) assistance to Serbia

    The program is designed to explain the principles and practices of U.S. media industry that help the press retain its freedom and economic viability through observing how U.S.

  • Unilever Journalism Exchange Program for Journalists from Ghana

    Samuel Kwaku Agyemang of Metropolitan Television (Metro TV) in Accra participated in the 2011 Unilever Journalism Exchange Program for journalists from Ghana. Agyemang was named the Best Journalist of the Year in Ghana in 2009.

  • Escucha! Taking Community Radio Digital in the Americas

    The International Center for Journalists aims to build stronger and better-informed communities of Latin American immigrants by creating a corps of community radio reporters and citizen journalists who will develop and share higher-quality multimedia programming across stations and borders.

  • World Affairs Journalism Fellowships

    The World Affairs Journalism Fellowships are intended for experienced journalists and editors from America's community-based media outlets. The goal is to give them an opportunity to establish the connections between local-regional issues and what is happening abroad.

  • Serbia: Building a Business Journalism Dynamo in the Balkans

    Miodrag Savic turned the leading independent news agency in Serbia into a business-reporting powerhouse in the Balkans. He introduced many new innovations that have strengthened the agency editorially and financially.

    Savic developed teams of aggressive beat reporters and created the first Serbo-Croatian manual of business terminology for them. He launched the country’s only Web site that solicits news tips from citizens across the region. He convinced the agency’s management to institute weekly quality reviews to make sure the editorial staff maintains the high standards set during the fellowship. He also created a mobile news delivery service to inform clients of stories breaking on the wire. This helped attract new business.

    Savic, former Belgrade bureau chief for The Associated Press, helped Beta’s reporters to break away from a tradition of accepting official information at face value. That alone has had huge impact. Reporters double checked government-issued statistics showing the country emerging from recession only to discover that the government was using a new method to analyze data that skewed the results. When the reporters reassessed the data comparing apples to apples, they determined that the economy was still in dire straits. Bureau reporters he trained uncovered an increase in injuries on construction sites because of unqualified day laborers. In response, officials announced they would double inspections of construction sites.

  • 2009 Professional Development Program for Serbian Editors and Media Managers

    2009 Professional Development Program for Serbian Editors

    May 25 - June 4, 2009

    The International Center for Journalists administered a ten-day professional development program for a group of senior Serbian editors.

    Visiting journalists had the unique opportunity to meet with media professionals in the U.S. and participate in in-depth workshops.

  • Personal Finance Reporting: An Online Guide to Connecting with Hispanic Audiences

    Improving Personal Finance Literacy in Hispanic Communities: A Training Program for Latino Journalists

    Purpose:

    The Hispanic Personal Finance Reporting Program of the International Center for Journalists (ICFJ) provided hands-on training to Latino journalists working at Spanish-and English-language news organizations in the United States. Between 10 and 15 journalists from print, radio, television and on-line media outlets participated in a two-day workshop.

  • Persian: Business and Economic Reporting Modules

    ICFJ developed four training modules on business and economic reporting in Persian via IJNet. These self-study courses engaged participants in interactive learning activities at their own convenience. The first module, "An Introduction to Business Reporting and Writing" was launched in May 2008. ICFJ also launched a second online business and economic reporting courses in Persian.

  • The Tsinghua Global Business Journalism Program (GBJ)

    The International Center for Journalists and Tsinghua University in Beijing launched China’s first Global Business Journalism Program on September 17, 2007. The initiative includes a two-year master’s degree program and professional trainings for working journalists from around the country.