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Associated Press

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Associated Press reviews

3.8

61% would recommend to a friend

(335 total reviews)
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Daisy Veerasingham

64% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Associated Press has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 335 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Associated Press employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Médias et communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

335 reviews
3.0
Feb 28, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing staff, some very talented, mission driven and committed journalists in text, photos and video. The work of the AP underpins much of the news ecosystem and is really essential to how thousands of millions of people around the globe understand our world. In this day and age of invented "facts" and alternative realities, this is crucial.

Cons

A slowly dying business model as the AP's media customers are struggling mightily and the AP's revenue is dipping precipitously. As a result news gathering budgets are slashed every year. Not sustainable for long. Get in - and out - while you can! Lots of bureaucracy - hard to get things done. Big but sluggish.

4.0
Feb 25, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You get AP on your resume and will work with the smartest people in the industry. You'll learn how to write stories quickly and accurately. The pay is awesome compared to other places. You get paid vacation and sick days. Half the year you'll work a semi-normal hour weekday shift. The job isn't stressful. You'll see your stories published in all the major newspapers. You'll have a relatively large amount of autonomy half the year on the night shift, covering what you feel is necessary for morning drive time broadcasts. You'll learn about the ongoing issues and happenings in 10 states.

Cons

Not sure if this is technically a con, but there's definitely a learning curve. No way around it. The position is tailored to bright-eyed, eager college graduates trying to get into the industry. And each will tell you they weren't very good when they first started. You'll be answering to several editors and reporters who each have their own pet peeves or preffered writing style. What works in one state doesn't work in another. You'll have to work on slow computers with slow internet and a hair-pulling word processing program that can crash on a moments notice. Night shift. While the work is decent, the hours are not. 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. starting Sunday night. This means every two months your body has to abruptly switch from sleeping at night to sleeping during the day and vice versa. Invest in blackout curtains or black trash bags. Summer can be brutal. And good luck watching Game of Thrones, Sunday football or the Oscar's. It's not impossible, but you'll need coffee. No bylines and no reporting. You won't have a byline for two years. You also won't have originally reported a single fact. With everything you write, someone else did all the heavy lifting. You're simply repackaging it. Let that sink in, and then begin thinking how to spin that for your next employer.

Viewing 175 - 177 of 335 Reviews

Glassdoor has 435 Associated Press reviews submitted anonymously by Associated Press employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Associated Press is right for you.