testimonial

“I feel prepared to write about the most important business and financial stories”

Here’s a testimonial from Jody Xu, who is currently on the program:

If it were not for The Wall Street Journal Journalism in Asia Fellowship, I would still be working in Time’s China office, in the reporting job I started six years ago. I certainly would not have enjoyed the same opportunity to learn about business and finance and to interact with journalists in New York writing about the historic economic events of the past year.

But fortunately, half a globe away and three semesters later, I feel prepared to write about the most important business and financial stories. I owe it to the WSJ Fellowship and to the education I have received in NYU’s program in Business and Economic Reporting (BER). The BER program is interdisciplinary, with a curriculum split between business journalism courses at NYU’s Carter Journalism Institute and MBA courses at NYU’s Stern School of Business.

I’ve heard it said many times that numbers should not scare a business writer. But believe me, getting a perfect score on the GRE’s math section is different from understanding financial statements. The finance, accounting, and economics courses I took in the first and second semesters at NYU equipped me with a solid foundation in business principles. And the flexibility that the final semester offered with free electives allowed me to expand my knowledge in areas I found most exciting.

I started an internship at The Wall Street Journal this summer. And while there I have been able to see the value in the cutting edge media tools that I’ve learned at NYU, including blogging, video shooting and editing, and podcasting. Thankfully, these newly acquired skills have enabled me to become very involved with WSJ’s online media. I am currently writing for the Deal Journal blog with frequent updates about mergers and acquisitions. Since September 2009, I’ve been writing a weekly column, Decoding China, for the blog that was created to help Western investors understand China better.

During the internship, I also worked with The Journal’s multimedia team to make a video to go along with feature stories. Again, I stress that my new media skills are critical to flourishing in today’s news environment. The school’s Guerilla News class provided training that enabled me to complete a podcast, a photo slideshow, three short videos, and confidence in handling the gadgets and software.

Nothing above would have happened without the opportunity provided to me by the WSJ Fellowship. In a new world of journalism where we must be able to report in all media and understand complex financial and economic concepts, NYU’s Business and Economics reporting program has provided me with exactly that.

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Testimonial From a Current Fellow

Here’s a testimonial from Nesil Staney, who shared his background and motivation to join the program.

I was a reporter in Mumbai covering the impact of the credit crisis on India’s companies and markets for a national business daily. After four years of financial journalism, I was ready to take a break from work and start an academic stint at a top university in the U.S. The crisis exposed gaping holes in the complex global financial system and the great need for trained financial sleuths in media. There were many important stories that could have been told early, loudly and clearly. This was my big motivation to apply for the fellowship and the BER program at NYU in December 2008.

We also asked Nesil for some thoughts on what journalists thinking about applying should consider. Here’s his response:

The WSJ fellowship is prestigious. It has introduced me to a club of very smart, successful young business journalists and some extremely good mentors. I am learning the ropes of American journalism here. The BER program is designed to create world-class business journalists – it is both rich and intense. The business classes at Stern School, one of the world’s best, where you get trained along with MBA students, is a terrific experience. The program also helps you develop a deep understanding of the evolving structure of media. For those who believe in crisis investing, there is no better time to apply for the WSJ fellowship and to invest your time in this program. While preparing the applications, you should focus and emphasize on your long-term objectives in journalism.

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Testimonials from Fellows

If you’re not sure what to expect from the Fellowship, or whether it’s right for you, check out some of our testimonials from previous Fellows.

Eva Woo, for example, found that she was able to tell the story of the 2008 financial upheaval in China better because of what she learned on the course:

Luckily I am equipped to tell that story and be a part of that story with what was taught at the BER program: The inverted yield curve I first learned at the macro class two years ago predicted the recession long before anyone had a sense of it. The Foundation of Finance class taught me some of the perfect models behind the current bubble, one of the biggest in financial history.

Shefali Anand, meanwhile, felt it was a long shot to apply, but, found it was one well worth taking:

I should note that winning the WSJ fellowship doesn’t automatically result in a job at the Journal. But the exposure and knowledge that I got while at NYU would have propelled my career no matter where I ended up working. That long shot for applying to the WSJ Asia fellowship was well worth taking.

Jason Leow had already been working in China for six years as a reporter but since doing the NYU program has a much better feel for the nuances of the business story:

My job scope now includes banking and finance, a beat I’m able to handle because I had business journalism training at NYU. 

Serena Ng also found the program added depth to her reporting:

The BER program equipped me with the skills I needed and taught me the fundamentals of corporate finance, accounting and economics. I also picked up some valuable investigative-reporting techniques.

Sui-Lee Wee has also derived confidence from the program:

Now, I know how to scour through a financial statement, I understand the major economic forces that shape this country and the world and I can write big-picture pieces about the current financial crisis.

Read the full testimonials here.

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Eva Woo’s Testimonial

Here’s a testimonial from Eva Woo, the first recipient of the award and the first from mainland China.

For the last ten months I have been following (literally) the financial crisis as it spread from West to East; from New York to Beijing—after spending two years in New York, I moved back to Beijing a week before the Olympics.

On top of that, I’ve been lucky enough to see another equally important story of our time unfolding: the changing dynamics of capital flow, political power and communication around this world.

I say that because at Caijing magazine, a leading economic and financial publication in China where I work, we cover that story every single day. More interestingly, we are a part of the story ourselves–simpl by providing a platform for communication and understanding between the two worlds.

Luckily I am equipped to tell that story and be a part of that story with what was taught at the BER program: The inverted yield curve I first learned at the macro class two years ago predicted the recession long before anyone had a sense of it. The Foundation of Finance class taught me some of the perfect models behind the current bubble, one of the biggest in financial history.

The tricks to dig out financial details of companies and the techniques to tell a compelling story on a relatively "boring" subject taught at the journalism classes all came in handy…

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Shefali Anand’s Testimonial

Shefali Anand tells of her experiences since applying for the WSJ Fellowship:

It seemed like a long shot to apply for the WSJ Asia fellowship back in 2003.

After all, editors at the most important business publication in the world were going to select only one journalist from Asia for this fellowship; what was the chance it would be me? I had only three years of experience working as a reporter/ copy editor at a newspaper which is well-regarded in India but hardly known globally. But I’m glad that I didn’t let my hesitation keep me from applying, because that turned out to be one of my best moves, not only career-wise, but also for my growth as a person.

I joined the NYU program in September 2004, and for the next year-and-a-half, I learned about everything from digging through court documents, to journalism ethics, to economics and investment banking. Equally important were the friendships and network of journalists I developed while studying at NYU. My class of nine students included one from Singapore, one from China, one from Italy and the rest from the U.S. Talk about a meeting of minds from around the globe!

In 2006, I was hired by the Journal in New York to write about mutual funds, and later, my beat expanded to personal finance. In my mind, my job is broadly to write about how Wall Street impacts individuals like you and me. This has been a particularly exciting year to write about that, because the recent market turbulence has unearthed many hidden problems. For instance, I wrote stories about individuals who had put their money in securities which they were told were safe, just like cash, but this year they couldn’t get their money out.

As a journalist, I’m driven to write more such stories where individuals are not being told the entire truth, and there’s no better place to do that than the Journal. I should note that winning the WSJ fellowship doesn’t automatically result in a job at the Journal. But the exposure and knowledge that I got while at NYU would have propelled my career no matter where I ended up working. That long shot for applying to the WSJ Asia fellowship was well worth taking.

More testimonials can be found here.

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Jason Leow’s Testimonial

Here’s a testimonial from Jason Leow, another alumni:

I have been reporting from China for nearly six years now. Before I joined the Wall Street Journal, in March 2007, I was a China correspondent for a regional English-language paper, The Straits Times, where I covered social and political issues from Beijing and Shanghai. The highlight of my time at the Straits Times came in 2003, when I had a chance to lead coverage on the Sars health pandemic, a disease that originated in southern China and that eventually killed nearly 800 people worldwide.

I came on board the Journal later, after completing the fellowship-funded graduate program at New York University and a summer internship in the Journal’s New York bureau. As I write this, at the tail-end of a very eventful 2008 (it’s November), I am again in China, working at the Beijing bureau. My job scope now includes banking and finance, a beat I’m able to handle because I had business journalism training at NYU.    But my work has involved more than that. This year, I plunged into two big disaster stories: the mega-earthquake in Sichuan province and the melamine milk scandal. There was also the Beijing Olympic Games in August, a defining moment for China and the climax of a very busy year for me.

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Serena Ng’s Testimonial

Here’s a testimonial from another alumni, Serena Ng. You can catch a video of her here.

Before moving to New York in the fall of 2004, I was a reporter for a business newspaper in Singapore, writing two or three news stories a day about local companies plus the occasional feature or commentary. I enjoyed the work, but felt I lacked the knowledge to dig deeper into many subjects, to analyze financial transactions, and to write about complex topics in a clear and engaging way. The BER program equipped me with the skills I needed and taught me the fundamentals of corporate finance, accounting and economics. I also picked up some valuable investigative-reporting techniques.

During a 10-week summer internship at the WSJ in 2005, I learned how to develop unique story ideas and wrote features about Wall Street stock research, mergers and insider trading. I was hired by the Journal in January 2006 to cover the U.S. credit markets. It was an area I knew very little about at the time, and I spent months learning about it by meeting with dozens of money managers, bankers and other professionals and asking them to describe what they did for a living and what they thought were important issues in their space. Back then, companies and individuals were in a borrowing binge and Wall Street banks were churning out a myriad of complex financial instruments and selling them to global investors, who had a seemingly endless amount of money to invest.

That all came to a head when the subprime mortgage market turned south in 2007 and subsequently dragged the rest of the markets down with it. The credit crisis gave me the opportunity to write many stories that analyzed the causes and effects of the downturn, and to investigate what led to the excesses at some of the world’s best- known financial institutions.

If not for the fellowship, I wouldn’t have been able to help chronicle an important part of the world’s financial history. In my opinion, the WSJ fellowship isn’t a free ticket to a plum reporting job; rather, it gives reporters an opportunity to learn more about covering business, to pursue more in-depth reporting, and to work with many top-notch editors and reporters, whether they are professors in the BER program or colleagues at an internship or job. It can also open doors to new possibilities.

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Video Profiles of BER Alumni

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If you’re looking for an idea of what successful applicants might be in for, check out some great videos of previous alumni of the Business and Economic Reporting course. In particular watch the video of Singaporean Serena Ng (above), who was one of two winners of the first fellowship. She now works on the WSJ’s Money and Investing team.

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Sui-Lee’s Testimonial

Here’s a testimonial from Sui-Lee Wee about her experience on the course. More testimonials to come:

Despite having one and a half years of experience reporting for the Associated Press and Reuters in Singapore, I still felt that I had so much more to learn, if I wanted to be among the best in business journalism. I knew I wanted to be an educated journalist — be a specialist in a particular subject and report authoritatively on most topics related to business. I wanted to be in New York City – the world’s financial capital — covering Wall Street. I wanted to be able to understand the inner workings of the financial world – how monetary and fiscal policies affect the world of equities and bonds, for example.

The Wall Street Journal fellowship gave me the opportunity to learn all that, through the Master’s in Business and Economic Reporting at NYU. Now, I know how to scour through a financial statement, I understand the major economic forces that shape this country and the world and I can write big-picture pieces about the current financial crisis.

In less than two months, I’ll be leaving NYU with more than a Masters in Business and Economic Reporting. I’ll be leaving with many great friendships, a renewed passion for business journalism and the confidence to produce good stories. For these, I am eternally grateful to both the Wall Street Journal and NYU. At a time when the global financial world is straining under rapid change, it is even more important that business journalists are equipped with the skills to understand how markets work and how the different asset classes interact with one another in the larger economy. I would encourage anyone who is eligible to apply for the Wall Street Journal fellowship to do so.

Anyone interested in applying for the fellowship should read the pages listed on the left. If you have any more questions, please contact us through the form.

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