Emily Ristow

Emily Ristow

Director of communications

Emily Ristow is the director of communications at the American Press Institute, where she ensures solutions and actionable advice are delivered to local news leaders across API’s platforms and channels.

Previously, she served in the role of Director of Local News Transformation and managed the Major Market Table Stakes program and API’s alumni sprint cohorts and coordinated efforts across the various Table Stakes programs. The Digital Transformation Guide from the American Press Institute, written by Emily, highlights proven strategies from the Table Stakes program, which helped news leaders transform their organizations' journalism and business through intensive change management training.

Before coming to API, Emily worked for a decade in local news, including as Loyalty and Engagement News Director for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, her hometown newspaper. She helped develop and supervise the Journal Sentinel's strategy to grow its loyal audience and to double its digital subscribers and managed the newsroom's engagement strategy across digital platforms, including its sites, apps and social media accounts.

She has also worked as a social media editor, digital producer, copy editor and print designer. She graduated from the University of Missouri with degrees in journalism and political science.

More from the author

What’s next

February 12, 2025|

As we look ahead to the next five to 10 years, the American Press Institute team brainstormed future non-negotiables that we believe local news organizations must consider to ensure their longevity and resilience.

Managing people through change

February 12, 2025|

Change is hard. Leading others through major organizational changes that you are also experiencing is even harder. There’s a framework that Table Stakes organizations come back to again and again to help them navigate those tough waters.

Collaborating internally and externally

February 12, 2025|

Collaboration allows you to bring in more perspectives and ideas, making you better equipped to solve problems and take on bigger, more complex projects. Though the benefits are apparent, many teams and organizations need help with effective collaboration.

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