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Connecticut Network main competitors are KDHX, WBUR, and ESPN.

Competitor Summary. See how Connecticut Network compares to its main competitors:

  • Voice of America has the most employees (2,028).
  • Employees at KDHX earn more than most of the competitors, with an average yearly salary of $70,402.
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Connecticut Network vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1999
3.7
Hartford, CT1$5.0M30
1970
4.8
Washington, DC2$208.0M741
1983
4.0
Minneapolis, MN1$16.1M50
1954
4.4
Philadelphia, PA2$43.9M100
1948
3.8
New Orleans, LA1$22.0M350
2005
3.6
New York, NY1$21.0M375
-
4.3
Oklahoma City, OK1$6.5M50
-
3.3
Cleveland, OH1$8.6M124
1942
4.6
Washington, DC1$160.0M2,028
1924
3.8
New York, NY1$10.2M100
1962
4.1
Hartford, CT1$22.8M122
1985
4.0
Doral, FL1-30
1987
4.1
Saint Louis, MO1$2.6M30
1888
4.7
Washington, DC1$499.2M1,500
1979
4.6
Bristol, CT6$4.0B1,250
-
3.3
Lewes, DE1$2.4M25
1964
4.1
New York, NY1$16.0M154
2011
3.9
New York, NY1$12.0M750
-
3.0
Pullman, WA1$1.8M50
1950
4.0
Boston, MA1$21.0M271
1995
3.8
Austin, TX1$6.0M350

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Connecticut Network salaries vs competitors

Among Connecticut Network competitors, employees at KDHX earn the most with an average yearly salary of $70,402.

Compare Connecticut Network salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
Connecticut Network
$58,195$27.98-
Npr
$43,817$21.07-
Public Radio International
$59,357$28.54-
WHYY
$52,675$25.32-
WDSU
$43,926$21.12-
Eater
$44,354$21.32-

Compare Connecticut Network job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
Connecticut Network
$81,075$38.98
ESPN
$116,841$56.17
KDHX
$95,529$45.93
WBUR
$89,403$42.98
National Geographic
$87,854$42.24
Eater
$83,102$39.95
WHYY
$78,771$37.87
Public Radio International
$78,531$37.76
Connecticut Public
$77,020$37.03
WNYC
$76,181$36.63
Poetry.com
$74,845$35.98
Voice of America
$74,618$35.87
NBC Olympics
$74,508$35.82
Northwest Public Broadcasting
$72,608$34.91
KFOR
$70,390$33.84
Radio Televisión Mart
$69,278$33.31
Sports Media 101
$66,456$31.95
Npr
$64,370$30.95
WJW-TV
$61,262$29.45
Texas Student TV
$57,179$27.49

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Connecticut Network demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at Connecticut Network vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
Voice of America41%59%
National Geographic47%53%
Npr50%50%
WHYY52%48%
ESPN67%33%
Connecticut Network72%28%

Compare race at Connecticut Network vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
75%10%9%4%3%
6.1
61%16%12%8%4%
9.5
57%15%16%8%5%
9.9
51%14%16%12%7%
10.0
67%13%11%6%3%
8.2
53%14%19%9%5%
9.5

Connecticut Network and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio
James Pitaro
ESPN

Gina Garrubbo
Npr

William J. Marrazzo
WHYY

Senior Executive with proven track record as Chief Executive Officer, President and Chief Operations Officer in publically traded and private corporations all with rapidly changing and highly competitive market environments. Also served in high ranking government positions, including Managing Director of the City of Philadelphia, the most senior non-elected position in the government.Specialties: Strong leadership and management skills in organizational settings with diverse constituencies. Particular strengths in:developing, communicating and executing clear vision and strategy for improved performance; ensuring individual high performance patterns to improve team performance; developing customer driven strategies; using vision and values to shift organization culture as required by market conditions, and; directing complex and major projects.

Margaret Low Smith
WBUR

Margaret Low is Vice President of The Atlantic and President of AtlanticLIVE. She oversees all aspects of The Atlantic‘s live events team, which produces more than one hundred events each year across the country and around the world. Before joining The Atlantic, Smith was NPR’s Senior Vice President for News, where she oversaw that organization’s award winning news division and the work of nearly 400 broadcast and digital journalists. Smith also spent eleven years as NPR’s Vice President for Programming, where she developed the live events strategy for the hit show Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me! and oversaw all program acquisitions including Car Talk and Fresh Air. Low is a graduate of the University of Michigan.

Jill Tiefenthaler
National Geographic

As chief executive officer at the National Geographic Society, Dr. Jill Tiefenthaler oversees the development and implementation of the Society’s mission-driven work and programmatic agenda. She leads our global community of Explorers: scientists, innovators, educators, and storytellers-in our mission to illuminate and protect the wonder of our world. Jill sits on the Society’s Board of Trustees and the board of National Geographic Partners. Before joining the National Geographic Society, Jill spent nine years as the president of Colorado College. During this time, she helped set a new direction for the school, executed the most ambitious fundraising campaign in the college’s history, and developed and implemented a comprehensive strategic plan that expanded and cultivated an engaged and globally connected academic community. She developed a Campus Master Plan, executed an alliance to make the world-class Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center part of the college, and led the college’s efforts to achieve carbon neutrality. She also drove significant increases in diversity among the faculty and student body and led the campus community in an external review of racism at the college that resulted in an Antiracism Implementation Plan. Before leading Colorado College, Jill was provost of Wake Forest University, where she redesigned the admissions process to include an SAT-optional policy, integrated the university’s undergraduate and graduate business schools, established the Institute for Public Engagement and The Humanities Institute, and implemented “Living Our Values,” a plan to strengthen residential life and campus vibrancy. Jill began her academic career at Colgate University, where she was a full professor of economics before holding various administrative roles, including consultant to the president; associate dean of the faculty; founding director of the Upstate Institute; and chair of the department of economics. Originally from Iowa, Jill grew up on a farm and worked for her family’s popcorn business before attending Saint Mary’s College in Notre Dame, IN. She received her M.A. and Ph.D. in economics from Duke University.

Mark Contreras
Connecticut Public

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