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Ask the Recruiter
Joe Grimm of the Detroit Free Press tackles journalism's toughest recruiting questions.

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Daily or weekly newspaper?

Q: I need some help deciding on where to go next in my career.

    After much soul-searching and many, many interviews, my career path recently took a new direction.     I spent seven-plus years as a sports copy editor because sports is a passion and editing is natural and a strength. But for years I have blocked out something that is even more natural to me: teaching and mentoring. I also wanted to do things that had more of a community impact and were therefore more gratifying.

    As a result, I have decided that my eventual goal is to be in charge of reporters at the least, perhaps a few editors, at a mid-sized or smaller daily.

    When I came in second place on what seemed like an ideal job for me (editor of a 5,000 6-day in charge of three editors and several reporters) and missed out on a couple of other switches to the news side and all of them cited my lack of management experience, I took a huge pay cut to come to my current job, editor of a 7-year-old 2,500 three-day competing with a daily that has been in town for 150 years.

    The experience has been wonderful, and I enjoy it and have produced some remarkable packages, but I am spiraling into debt and have to make a move soon. Right now I there are two prospects for which I've interviewed and am waiting on offers and a few more strong possibilities out there, but the competition is tough.

    One of these is editor of a 2,500 weekly in an area closer to where my wife and I would like to live that is part of a larger newspaper group (two dailies and seven small weeklies) in a larger market, with one reporter and a few support staff. Another is news editor of a 6-day, in charge of four reporters and one layout person. Other possibilities I am considering include city editor at an 18,000 6-day, assistant city editor at a mid-sized state capital paper, editor of a 6,500 suburban weekly, etc.

    Would any of these likely be a stumbling block to my goal? Even though we publish three days a week and 90 percent of my career has been at dailies, interviewers at dailies tend to ask about the shift from daily to weekly and ask whether it would be a big shock for me. Would moving to a weekly for a year or two make it more difficult to shift back to daily down the road? If I pick a weekly that's part of a group, do you think I'd have a better chance getting in on the flagship daily?

     Jim in Illinois

A: While you can get the kind of work you want at either a daily or a weekly, it sounds as though you need to be at a daily to have the kind of paycheck you need.

I'd focus on getting back to a daily, relying on your extensive experience there and explaining yor move to a weekly as a way to get management experience that you would now like to bring back to dailies.

I would try hard to not string together two weeklies in a row. You'll just make editors who are skeptical about your return to dailies that much more reluctant.

Posted at 7:00:00 AM

E-mail this item | QuickLink this item: A109079


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Where's Joe?
  • July 23-27, UNITY 2008, Chicago
  • Aug. 5, Michigan Interscholastic Press Association, MSU
  • Sept. 10-13, Online News Association, D.C.
  • Oct. 29-31, University of Missouri

Give Me a Sign
As we travel our career paths, wondering where to go next, we get signs. They can be in places ordinary or unexpected. They can come from above or from the road commission. We use those signs in Ask the Recruiter.

If you see a sign that speaks to you about your career, e-mail a photo of it to joe.grimm@gmail.com. Who knows? The sign you see may serve another.
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