Poynter Online Poynter Online
New UserLogin
Poynter Online Main Page
Poynter Career Center
Design / Graphics
Diversity
Ethics
Leadership
Online
Photojournalism
Writing / Editing
TV / Radio
Journalism & Business Values
About Poynter
Seminars
Faculty
Columns
Resource Center
The Poynter Store

Help Poynter


View Your Personal Page
Signup for Poynter Newsletters
Get Poynter Delivered to Your PDA

ASNE Online Ethics Tool





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

Add/View All Ask the Recruiter Feedback
More Ask the Recruiter

Overtime and undertime

As an early bird, this distresses me somewhat.

Management Recruiters International advises that you get more notice and credit for hours put in after the quitting bell than hours put in before others get to work.

MRI president and CEP Bill Olson says: "It's simply true that more notice is taken of people who work late than of people who come in early and as the nation's workforce continues to be reachable 24/7 on their blackberries and cell phones, employees can tend forget the importance of putting in face time at the office."

In newsrooms, work tends to stack up toward the end of shifts and late work is appreciated. However, on assignment desks where stories need to be assigned as soon as the editor gets in, I have seen some reporters get plum opportunities by being the first ones available.

MRI has some tips for early birds. Among them: E-mail bosses to apprise them of situations you have handled or questions that arise as they happen, not just during normal hours, as the e-mail will carry a time stamp.

I would only add, be careful how you do that so you don't give editors the impression that you come to work early so you can bother them with e-mails.

 

Posted at 2:00:00 PM

E-mail this item | QuickLink this item: A109277


Ask the Recruiter Archive
View items published between:   and   
(MM/DD/YYYY) (MM/DD/YYYY)

MAIN | Back to Top



Search Poynter Online
Search Poynter Online

When Principles Collide: The <i>NYT</i> and the CIA Interrogator
When Principles Collide: The NYT and the CIA Interrogator
New On Poynter
NYT and CIA at Odds
By Bob Steele

Gas Station TV is Here
By Rick Edmonds

Doom, or Not?
By Alan Abbey

Hostages Freed
Page One Today

Secondhand Twitter
By Amy Gahran

How I Wrote Father Tim
By Roy Peter Clark

Stupid Filter Tricks
By Amy Gahran

Workers' Comp Stories
Al's Tuesday Meeting

Ideas from Art Caplan
Al's Monday Meeting

Price of AWOL Dads
By Bobbi Bowman

Today's Mini-Tidbits
By Amy Gahran

Poynter Summer Fellows
By Jan Leach

Russert & Catholicism
By Roy Peter Clark

Wikipedia Caves
By Fons Tuinstra

Tableau Vivant Q&A
By Sara Quinn

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.
  Site Map | Advertise | Search | Contact | FAQ | Our Guidelines QuickLink  
  Copyright © 1995-2008 The Poynter Institute
  801 Third Street South | St. Petersburg, FL 33701 | Phone (888) 769-6837
  Site developed & hosted by DataGlyphics, Inc.



Poynter Career Center
Thursday: When Should Intern Start Job Search?
Retaining Top Performers During Difficult Times