Investigative Journalist Who Says Thank You for Everything


Jim Edwards

Jim Edwards (Sociology, 1991, Cartmel) is the editor-in-chief of Insider's news division and was the founding editor of Business Insider UK. He has also been a managing editor at Adweek, and a Knight-Bagehot Fellow at the Columbia Business School. His work has appeared in Slate, Salon, The Independent, The Nation and on AOL and MTV. He won the Neal award for business journalism in 2005 for a series investigating bribes and kickbacks in the advertising business. Jim has recently published a management book entitled Say Thank You For Everything.

The article below was originally written for STEPS online in 2017 and tells how his time at Lancaster helped his subsequent career.

Jim Edwards is a hands-on editor. On day one of opening the UK office of Business Insider UK in 2014, he was the first person into the empty office, he opened his laptop and started from scratch to build the UK’s equivalent of the largest business news site in the US - in much the same way that he used to edit the student newspaper, Scan, whilst at Lancaster.

Technology may have moved on since he left Lancaster and Jim went on to run a team of over 100 in London, working for a US company which can boast 100 million visitors a month across the world, but he is amazed at how similar the skills are to those he learned as a student.

Says Jim: “Much of what I learned about editing at university is in essence what the job is like in the rest of life. Now I am just running a bigger version.”

Journalism took him from Lancaster to the US for 20 years, where he built a formidable reputation for investigative journalism and won several major awards. His articles have led to changes in US law and have been cited in Supreme Court discussions on the use of the lethal injection. His introduction, he says, was a story he did for Scan revealing the cost of new railings put up outside University House after a student occupation.

Brought up on the Wirral, he came to Lancaster knowing that he wanted to become a journalist. He set out to study psychology because the editor of the Liverpool Daily Post had told him to learn about the world and that journalism could be learned later. He was attracted by the university’s top ranking for the subject and the open day tour won him over to the charms of the campus.

Once at Lancaster he was soon attracted by the politics of sociology and decided to switch from psychology. His transition to university was smooth, he relished the social life revolving round the corridors and the colleges, and counts his time there as the happiest years of his life. He worked hard and remembers looking forward to featured lectures by Professor Nick Abercrombie, a shrewd commentator on British society. He also took the unusual step of taking women’s studies, which he says was ‘an eye opener for a young man’ as well as giving him new insights.

In his last two years he wrote for Scan and committed himself to being published every week. He also drew a weekly cartoon, as the only person on the team who had the skills to do it. These were exciting times to be an aspiring journalist - post Thatcher, with rent strikes, protests and occupations happening on a regular basis. It provided plenty of fodder for Scan under his editorship.

Taking on the role, and running for election, provided him with valuable management skills in addition to teaching him what it required to bring out a newspaper every week. He says: “I learned that you have to persuade people from where they are, rather than demanding that they follow you because of who you are.”

After graduation he had jobs driving a fork lift truck in a cardboard box factory and at the Sugar House before following his then girlfriend to the USA, where he started as Assistant City Editor for the Herald & News in Northern New Jersey. Since then he has worked for a number of publications including Brill’s Content, Adweek and Slate, picking up the Neal Award on the way for a series investigating bribes and kickbacks in the advertising business. He was also awarded a prestigious Knight-Bagehot Fellowship at Columbia University in recognition of his achievements.

He joined Business Insider in 2011 as Senior Editor, based in New York, and was Deputy Editor when he was asked to move to the UK to set up a new operation in 2014. Business Insider pioneered digital business news coverage in real-time. The site’s target audience was the next generation of business leaders. It covered finance, technology, politics, entertainment and the digital industry.

From a launch crew of six people, Jim and his team built up to a staff to over 100, with 7 million visitors a month – about six times the number visiting The Financial Times.

Jim acknowledges Lancaster’s contribution to getting him where he is today. He says: “The sociology course gave me a really good grounding into UK and US politics, which was very useful, but to leave university with the experience of having published a newspaper for 30 weeks a year was invaluable.”

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