
I was having a debate with a friend on a recruiting question -- do recruiters go to a candidate paper's Web site and search on bylines to see what unfiltered clips look like?
|
ASK JOE A QUESTION
|
|
To get your question answered on this page, send it to Joe. Please include your full name in your message. If you prefer that your surname not be published, please indicate that.
Sign up to receive Ask The Recruiter by e-mail: * Click here (sent Monday-Friday at 8 a.m.) | |
Do they use it to measure output? I figured they do, but my friend said, "They never did it with
LexisNexis, why would they do it now?"
You might be interested in my blog. It covers a range of topics, but the newspaper-related posts can be found
here.
Best,
Rocky

True story: I met for a job fair interview with a guy I had spoken with before. To prepare for the interview, I had used
Nexis to print out his output for the preceding nine months or so.
Not only could I see how much he had written and where it had played, I could locate a period of low activity that was too long to be a vacation. We talked about what happened then.
I am not always that thorough. There is no reason to go to that length on every candidate. But I always can. And I can use Nexis, media company Web sites or search engines.
Nexis is the most expensive way to search, so that discourages some recruiters, but the others are free.
Coming Wednesday: The ex followed this journalist to a second newspaper and now wants to follow to a third. The journalist wonders how to stop this pursuit.