St. Petersburg, Florida — The Poynter Institute has announced the 30 journalists selected for the first Leadership Academy for Women in Media cohort in 2024.

Among those selected are Noozhawk executive editor Giana Magnoli.

Noozhawk executive editor Giana Magnoli has been selected by the Poynter Institute for its 2024 Leadership Academy for Women in Media.
Noozhawk executive editor Giana Magnoli is one of 30 women journalists participating in the Poynter Institute’s next Leadership Academy for Women in Media. Credit: Tom Bolton / Noozhawk file photo

She and her colleagues traveling to Poynter in March are from 20 states, plus Washington, D.C., as well as Belgium and Spain.

They represent the full news spectrum: digital news organizations; legacy and public media; audio, visual, engineering, audience and community; and local and nonprofit news. 

Poynter will host two other women’s leadership academies this year, in May and September. Participants for all three groups were selected at the same time and placed into a specific cohort designed to generate rich and diverse group dynamics.

Including these 30 journalists, Poynter will train more than 90 emerging newsroom leaders through this transformative program in 2024.

“We’re thrilled to welcome this cohort of impressive leaders,” said Sitara Nieves, Poynter vice president of teaching and organizational strategy. “This program’s focus on effective leadership, change management, and newsroom sustainability is more needed than ever.

“We look forward to working with — and learning alongside — a cohort that we know will be part of creating the future of our industry.”

Poynter designed the Leadership Academy for Women in Media in 2015 to diversify the ranks of those who lead the media industry. Each new cohort grows the alumni group of more than 600 journalists.

“One truth about newsrooms is that great journalists have not always made great leaders,” academy director Kate Cox said.

She added that in this program, consistent, empathic leadership — grounded in ethics and transparency — is increasingly a sustainability issue for the news industry.

“The 90 people we bring into these trainings from across the globe every year have demonstrated a desire to upend the great journalist/poor leader paradigm and are already building resilient communities in their own newsrooms right now,” Cox said.

“We amplify their efforts by connecting them with a network of emerging leaders who share a similar vision for the future of newsrooms, and have the skills to make meaningful change on the people side of our profession.”

Those selected foor the newest Leadership Academy for Women in Media cohort are:

Schedule

The March academy will kick off with an exploration of each member’s top five leadership strengths, via the Gallup CliftonStrengths assessment.

Other lessons during the week include:

  • The popular work-life chemistry session, plus how spot burnout and what to do about it, with Poynter faculty Kristen Hare
  • Intentional delegation, negotiation tactics and ethical leadership with Cox
  • Managing through authenticity and recruitment and retention, with consultant Maria Carrillo
  • Using positive psychology to silence your inner critic, with executive producer and host of the Zest podcast, Dalia Colón

Each instructor will also offer coaching, as will Poynter’s senior director of publishing and local news initiatives, Jennifer Orsi.

Selection process

Those chosen for Poynter’s 2024 Leadership Academy for Women in Media passed through multiple rounds of review led by program alumni that emphasize diversity across race, ethnicity, geography, age, platform/medium, organization size and expertise to further enrich the participant experience.

Poynter thanks the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and Newmark Philanthropies for their longstanding support of this program.