Full-Time
Posted on 8/25/2025
Operates paywalled journalism with Arc XP
$74k - $111k/yr
Washington, DC, USA
In Person
Work on-site five days a week.
| , |
The Washington Post runs a national newspaper and earns revenue from digital subscriptions, digital advertising, and licensing its Arc XP technology. Arc XP is a cloud-based suite of tools that publishers and other businesses use to create, manage, publish, and monetize digital content across channels. It differentiates itself by combining consumer news with a growing B2B licensing business that sells Arc XP to other media companies and organizations. Its goal is to grow a global reader base, expand subscriptions, maximize digital ad revenue, and scale Arc XP as a major licensing platform for publishers and enterprises.
Company Size
1,001-5,000
Company Stage
Acquired
Total Funding
$250M
Headquarters
Washington DC, District of Columbia
Founded
1877
Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?
Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
401(k) Company Match
Paid Vacation
Paid Sick Leave
Paid Holidays
Parental Leave
Mental Health Support
Pet Insurance
Professional Development Budget
Washington Post Executive Editor Matt Murray said the newspaper is on a trajectory to break even following mass layoffs that eliminated more than 300 journalism positions earlier this month. Speaking at Semafor's Restoring Trust in Media event, Murray defended the cuts as a necessary "strategic reset" amid declining revenue and subscriptions. Murray acknowledged the Post remains behind competitors like The New York Times and Wall Street Journal commercially, noting the business had been declining for "quite some time". The paper has lost subscribers partly due to owner Jeff Bezos' decision to pull back its endorsement of Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election. Murray did not provide a timeline for reaching profitability but said the goal is to achieve stability, then break even, before returning to growth mode. He emphasised Bezos remains committed to the Post's long-term future.
Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos issued his first public statement since the paper enacted mass job cuts this week, emphasising the importance of "data" and understanding reader interests. The billionaire Amazon founder indicated he wanted to apply his customer-focused approach to the Post. "Each and every day our readers give us a roadmap to success. The data tells us what is valuable and where to focus," Bezos wrote. His statement came as CEO Will Lewis stepped down, to be replaced on an interim basis by CFO Jeff D'Onofrio. The messaging echoed comments from top editor Matt Murray, who told staff the Post must focus on areas where it demonstrates "authority, distinctiveness, and impact", including politics, national affairs and national security. However, critics remain sceptical following controversies over the paper's 2024 presidential endorsement and recent opinion section changes.
The Washington Post Guild has called for Jeff Bezos to sell the publication following CEO Will Lewis' departure on Saturday. The union described Lewis' exit as "long overdue", saying his legacy would be "the attempted destruction of a great American journalism institution". Lewis left days after sweeping layoffs affected hundreds of reporters across sports, audio, international, books and DC metro sections. Laid-off journalists celebrated his departure on social media, with former culture writer Jada Yuan calling herself "thrilled" by the news. The union demanded Bezos immediately rescind the layoffs or sell the paper to someone willing to invest in its future. Unionised employees had held a "Save the Post" rally earlier this week, emphasising risks to press freedom if legacy publications like the Post cannot continue operating.
Will Lewis has resigned as publisher and CEO of the Washington Post after two years, with Chief Financial Officer Jeff D'Onofrio appointed as acting publisher. The announcement follows mass layoffs on Wednesday that cut hundreds of journalists, many covering foreign affairs. Lewis's tenure was marked by buyouts and shrinking coverage at the newspaper owned by Jeff Bezos since 2013. Employees and supporters protested outside the Post's offices on Saturday following the drastic cuts. In his first public comments since the layoffs, Bezos said readers provide "a roadmap to success" through data showing "what is valuable and where to focus". D'Onofrio previously served as CEO of Tumblr and held leadership positions at Raptive, Google, Yahoo and Major League Baseball.
Jeff Bezos's relationship with The Washington Post has dramatically shifted since he purchased the paper for $250 million in 2013. Initially, his ownership was celebrated: he invested heavily in staff, technology and coverage, and the paper became profitable during Trump's first presidency. Now the Post is reporting significant losses—$77 million in 2023 and $100 million in 2024—leading to major cuts this week. The paper may have overhired, peaking at 1,100 staff in early 2021, whilst digital advertising revenue declined. Bezos's decision in October 2024 not to endorse a presidential candidate triggered a mass subscription exodus. Editor Matt Murray's memo announcing cuts suggests the paper may shift its editorial approach, stating it has "too often write[n] from one perspective, for one slice of the audience." The enthusiasm Bezos once displayed has apparently faded, leaving staff uncertain about the paper's direction.