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WNYC main competitors are WBUR, Vermont Public Radio, and WJW-TV.

Competitor Summary. See how WNYC compares to its main competitors:

  • BBC has the most employees (22,749).
  • Employees at WBUR earn more than most of the competitors, with an average yearly salary of $63,590.
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WNYC vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1924
3.8
New York, NY1$10.2M100
1977
3.9
Colchester, VT1$10.0M35
1967
4.3
New York, NY1$90.2M231
1970
4.8
Washington, DC2$208.0M741
-
4.6
--$6.3B22,749
1948
3.8
New Orleans, LA1$22.0M350
2007
4.1
Chicago, IL1$28.1M653
1950
4.0
Boston, MA1$21.0M271
1990
3.6
Newton, MA1$7.5M60
-
3.3
Cleveland, OH1$8.6M124
1958
3.9
Rochester, NY6$25.0M350
1942
4.6
Washington, DC1$160.0M2,028
1961
3.6
Norfolk, VA1$8.5M150
NBC Chicago
1948
3.8
Chicago, IL1$930,0005
Wicu 12news
-
3.5
Erie, PA1--
1954
4.4
Philadelphia, PA2$43.9M100
1948
3.9
New Haven, CT1-330
1994
3.8
Houston, TX1$15.0M255
ABC27 News
-
3.9
Harrisburg, PA1$2.9M12
-
3.6
Colchester, VT1-51
2007
4.0
Nashville, TN1$5.3M33

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WNYC salaries vs competitors

Among WNYC competitors, employees at WBUR earn the most with an average yearly salary of $63,590.

Compare WNYC salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
WNYC
$58,110$27.94-
Vermont Public Radio
$58,957$28.34-
New York Public Radio
$47,410$22.79-
Npr
$43,817$21.07-
BBC
$40,491$19.47-
WDSU
$43,926$21.12-

Compare WNYC job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
WNYC
$76,181$36.63
WBUR
$89,403$42.98
Vermont Public Radio
$81,330$39.10
Big Ten Network
$80,371$38.64
New York Public Radio
$79,036$38.00
WHYY
$78,771$37.87
WHRO Public Media
$76,981$37.01
WXXI
$76,549$36.80
NBC Chicago
$75,662$36.38
Voice of America
$74,618$35.87
Vermont Public Television
$72,454$34.83
Black River Entertainment
$68,811$33.08
Wicu 12news
$65,019$31.26
Npr
$64,370$30.95
NewTV
$62,593$30.09
WJW-TV
$61,262$29.45
BBC
$59,405$28.56
ABC27 News
$54,250$26.08
WTNH
$48,632$23.38
WDSU
$46,573$22.39

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WNYC demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at WNYC vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
Voice of America41%59%
Npr50%50%
WHYY52%48%
ABC27 News56%44%
BBC63%37%
WNYC--
Male
Female
100%
75%
50%
25%
0%
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%

Compare race at WNYC vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
57%15%16%8%5%
9.9
51%14%16%12%7%
10.0
58%16%11%9%5%
10.0
ABC27 News
67%17%10%5%2%
6.3
67%13%11%6%3%
8.2
51%26%14%8%2%
6.6

WNYC and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio
Gina Garrubbo
Npr

Tom Fussell
BBC

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.

Cynthia King Vance
New York Public Radio

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