I just finished my last exam and I haven't found a job yet. I feel a little lost -- if you have an opinion on what I'm doing wrong/right, or what you would do in my position, please let me know.
A little background on my experience:
Summer internship at the Washington Post
Full season as a writer/multimedia producer for DenverBroncos.com (2007 NFL season)
Summer internship with the Tennessee Titans, cover every home game (2008 NFL season)
Two seasons covering high school football for local papers (one weekly, one on deadline)
Four years writing for my university paper (weekly), one as sports editor
I can shoot/edit video and photos, I have blogging experience and a little design experience. I don't have much experience with daily newspapers.
I'm looking for a job with a solid smaller daily newspaper as a sports reporter. I've searched hard and I can't find many job openings other than the ones listed on JournalismJobs.com. I've started looking up daily newspapers on every state's press association Web site, e-mailing them my resume and asking if they have any openings.
Location is not an issue. I would like to make 25K with student loan payments starting up, but I'll make it with less if I need to.
I've applied to 10-15 places with actual job openings and sent out 40 other resumes. I don't have a perfect sense of how difficult it is to get a job other than what I read in all the articles, but I know newspapers are evolving and shedding positions. Am I looking for the wrong position (fairly small to medium daily) with my experience? I have high aspirations for my career. I have no problem gritting through a first job and don't have any big sense of entitlement, but I want to work somewhere that will give me an opportunity to move up and I fear getting "trapped" somewhere.
I haven't gotten any responses to my applications. The few e-mails I've received have been apologetic in tone, some saying they liked my credentials but they aren't good enough with the current market. I figure I'm a pretty stubborn guy, and I won't give up, but I wonder if there's anything I could do differently, or is patience the best option?
Sorry to burden the board with a personal question, but I figure there are other young journalists here with the same issues.
A little background on my experience:
Summer internship at the Washington Post
Full season as a writer/multimedia producer for DenverBroncos.com (2007 NFL season)
Summer internship with the Tennessee Titans, cover every home game (2008 NFL season)
Two seasons covering high school football for local papers (one weekly, one on deadline)
Four years writing for my university paper (weekly), one as sports editor
I can shoot/edit video and photos, I have blogging experience and a little design experience. I don't have much experience with daily newspapers.
I'm looking for a job with a solid smaller daily newspaper as a sports reporter. I've searched hard and I can't find many job openings other than the ones listed on JournalismJobs.com. I've started looking up daily newspapers on every state's press association Web site, e-mailing them my resume and asking if they have any openings.
Location is not an issue. I would like to make 25K with student loan payments starting up, but I'll make it with less if I need to.
I've applied to 10-15 places with actual job openings and sent out 40 other resumes. I don't have a perfect sense of how difficult it is to get a job other than what I read in all the articles, but I know newspapers are evolving and shedding positions. Am I looking for the wrong position (fairly small to medium daily) with my experience? I have high aspirations for my career. I have no problem gritting through a first job and don't have any big sense of entitlement, but I want to work somewhere that will give me an opportunity to move up and I fear getting "trapped" somewhere.
I haven't gotten any responses to my applications. The few e-mails I've received have been apologetic in tone, some saying they liked my credentials but they aren't good enough with the current market. I figure I'm a pretty stubborn guy, and I won't give up, but I wonder if there's anything I could do differently, or is patience the best option?
Sorry to burden the board with a personal question, but I figure there are other young journalists here with the same issues.