Tough Job Market for New Journalists
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
While the future of journalism is evolving into such a broad branch, there is the actual difficulty of actually getting a job in the field of journalism. Most people are becoming freelance writers in this industry, and so a recent article was published informing those who have become freelance writers, what are some keys that they would be advised to do to successfully get their work published.
Flexibility is the key, when going into this field. You are not able to get the positions that are hoped for and that is why flexibility is important. Recently a 2009 graduate of University of British Columbia decide to actually go abroad to find work in the journalism field. She worked for the company Journalists for Human Rights, a Canadian non-profit company, for about a year. After that year she returned home and received a year contract as a reporter with CanWest News Services, which is a wire service for many Canadian newspapers.
It also means that you might not go to your field you want another student from UBC, began as a TV reporter but now is reporting on the radio. She hope to eventually return to television, but as of right now she feels that it will not be any time soon. The job market for journalist seems to be making it more difficult to get the job in the field you want. It is more of becoming a entrepreneurial business. People have to get themselves out there than depending on companies to do it for them.
1 comments:
It doesn't surprise me the least bit that the field is going through a slight rough patch and that journalism jobs are hard to find, but are some fields in journalism harder than others? Is getting a job as a sports reporter easier to get than an anchor on a new channel? For the people who are interested in a specific field, should they just try to find a completely different type of work if the chance of getting their dream job is so slim? For instance, should someone who wants to be a sports writer, decide to get completely out of the field and try to be an athletic trainer instead? The fact that there are so many little job openings brings up many questions for the ever-changing journalism world.
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