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Journalism

Job Losses and Public Relations: The Growing Imbalance Between Journalism and PR

The journalism industry is in crisis — 3,087 jobs cut in 2023 alone — while PR professionals now outnumber journalists 6 to 1. Here's what that imbalance means for news quality, and how Rolli is building a smarter model.

5 min readLast updated: February 18, 2025

The journalism industry is in crisis. Mass layoffs, shrinking newsrooms, and the rise of artificial intelligence have reshaped the media landscape. In 2023, 3,087 jobs were cut across digital, broadcast, and print news sectors — the highest annual figure since 2020. In January 2024 alone, over 500 journalists lost their jobs at NBC News, Time Magazine, Business Insider, and the Los Angeles Times (100+ employees). The UK's journalism sector saw a 50% decline in newsroom employment over the past year. At the same time, the number of public relations professionals has skyrocketed, creating a significant imbalance: while journalism jobs vanish, PR is thriving. In 1980, there were two PR professionals for every journalist. By 2008, the ratio had risen to three to one. Today, PR professionals outnumber journalists by over six to one — often former journalists who moved into PR for better pay and job security.

This imbalance is overwhelming journalists with a flood of PR pitches, most of which go unanswered. 46% of journalists receive 6 or more pitches per day (Muck Rack, 2024). 23% get 6–10 daily pitches, while 12% receive 21 or more. 97% of PR pitches are ignored (Propel Media, 2023). AI tools have made mass pitching even easier, further clogging journalists' inboxes. Yet despite the volume, most pitches are irrelevant — 73% of journalists cite 'not relevant to my beat' as the top reason for rejection. The PR-journalist gap isn't just frustrating — it's damaging the quality and diversity of news coverage. Newsrooms lack resources to investigate critical issues. Misinformation thrives, especially in election years. Diverse voices are lost, as layoffs disproportionately affect minority journalists. And PR professionals struggle to get their experts and stories noticed, with poor engagement rates and difficulty measuring impact.

The bottom line: the PR-journalism relationship is broken. But there's a better way — one that eliminates spam pitching, wasted time, and ignored emails. Rolli flips the traditional PR model on its head. Instead of PR professionals flooding journalists with pitches, Rolli lets journalists find the experts they need, when they need them. With an inbound model, AI-powered search, and a vetted network of experts, the right expert gets connected without the noise. Journalists come to the experts — not the other way around — creating faster, more efficient, and more impactful media coverage. PR professionals no longer need to send hundreds of pitches hoping for a response. Instead, journalists come to them.

The journalism industry is in crisis — 3,087 jobs cut in 2023 alone — while PR professionals now outnumber journalists 6…

The future of PR and journalism requires adapting to the realities of modern newsrooms. Old methods — mass pitching, low engagement, inbox clutter — aren't working. Rolli is bridging the gap between journalists and PR professionals, making expert sourcing faster, more efficient, and built for the digital age. For experts and organizations looking to secure media coverage, the path forward is clear: stop competing in the mass-pitch noise and start being discoverable by the journalists who are actively looking for your expertise. That's the model Rolli was built to enable.

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