Skip to main content

Timmermans to lead Reynolds Center for Business Journalism at Cronkite School


Jeffrey Timmermans, an accomplished business journalist and educator, has been named the Reynolds Chair in Business Journalism at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Jeffrey Timmermans, who has more than a decade of professional experience as a business journalist in the U.S. and Asia, will direct the Cronkite School's Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism, which works with journalists around the world to improve the quality of coverage of business and the economy, as well as teach business journalism courses.

|
June 18, 2021

Jeffrey Timmermans, an accomplished business journalist and educator, has been named the Reynolds Chair in Business Journalism at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Timmermans will direct the Cronkite School's Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism, which works with journalists around the world to improve the quality of coverage of business and the economy, as well as teach business journalism courses.

As head of the Reynolds Center and an endowed chair, he will develop strategies to advance business journalism in the digital age, build partnerships across the university and industry and expand training programs for business journalists domestically and abroad.

“I’ve been using Reynolds Center’s materials in my teaching for years, so it’s a tremendous honor to take on this new role,” Timmermans said. “Business and financial news impacts all of us, and business journalists today face a daunting task in helping readers and viewers make sense of it all. The Reynolds Center will continue to be at the forefront of that effort — globally.”

Timmermans currently is associate professor of practice and director of the undergraduate journalism program at the University of Hong Kong, where he teaches economics and business and financial journalism courses for both graduate and undergraduate students.

He has more than a decade of professional experience as a business journalist in the U.S. and Asia. He covered the finance and banking industries for many years, serving as the Tokyo correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, correspondent for the AP-Dow Jones News Service in Tokyo, and correspondent for the International Financing Review in Hong Kong. He also served as senior correspondent and Hong Kong bureau chief for Dow Jones Newswires.

In 2000, Dow Jones Newswires/The Wall Street Journal named Timmermans news editor with responsibility for overseeing equities coverage for the Asia-Pacific region. He was subsequently named managing editor, holding that position until he left in 2007 to become associate director for public relations at Bain & Company, one of the world’s top business consulting firms, where he was responsible for leading and implementing the company’s public relations strategy in Asia.

Timmermans began his journalism career in 1991 as deputy editor of the Gunma Commerce Journal in Japan, where he helped produce the monthly Japanese-language newspaper and was the first non-Japanese employee to work at the publication.

In addition to his faculty position at the University of Hong Kong, Timmermans founded and operates Backslash Media Ltd., an independent Hong Kong-based media consulting firm that provides media training and other services for multinational clients.

“Jeffrey brings to the Reynolds Center deep expertise in business journalism, international experience and an understanding of what business journalists need to do their jobs well,” said interim Dean Kristin Gilger. “On top of all that, he brings a real passion for teaching the next generation of business journalists.”

The Reynolds Center has provided training to tens of thousands of journalists and educators since it was established in 2003 by former CNBC television anchor and reporter Andrew Leckey at the American Press Institute in Virginia. It was moved to the Cronkite School three years later with permanent funding from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation.

In addition to providing in-person training in the U.S. and abroad, the center offers a range of resources for business journalists at businessjournalism.org and works with other journalism schools to promote the teaching of business journalism.

As director, Timmermans also will place Cronkite School students in business journalism internships, teach in the school’s specialization for students interested in pursuing business journalism careers and oversee the national Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism, which recognize the best business reporting each year.

Timmermans earned his PhD from the University of Hong Kong in 2016. He also holds a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University, New York, and a bachelor’s degree from Colgate University, also in New York.

More Law, journalism and politics

 

Adelaida Severson and Adriana Gonzalez-Chavez smiling for a photo.

When giving goes global: ASU family invests in students studying media abroad

The dream of studying abroad and making connections globally while in college is often hindered by the substantial cost of…

April 02, 2024
Person seated at a desk wearing headphones.

ASU, UMD Howard Centers partner with AP global investigations team on yearslong investigation into police use of force

The Associated Press global investigations team, the Howard Centers for Investigative Journalism at Arizona State University…

April 01, 2024
Portrait of Lydia Dawson.

ASU senior's thesis explores gender, politics and perception

For all its benefits, social media is an environment that remains rife with judgement, especially if you're a public figure, and…

March 28, 2024