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  2. Getty By Shana Lebowitz At least three-quarters of companies with more than 100 employees use personality assessments for external hiring — and that number is steadily growing. These tests ...

  3. Journalist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalist

    A worldwide sample of 27,500 journalists in 67 countries in 2012–2016 produced the following profile: [4] 57 percent male; mean age of 38; mean years of experience, 13; college degree, 56 percent; graduate degree, 29 percent; 61 percent specialized in journalism/communications at college; 62 percent identified as generalists

  4. Human-interest story - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human-interest_story

    Human-interest stories may be "the story behind the story" about an event, organization, or otherwise faceless historical happening, such as about the life of an individual soldier during wartime, an interview with a survivor of a natural disaster, a random act of kindness, or profile of someone known for a career achievement.

  5. Feature story - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feature_story

    A feature story is a piece of non-fiction writing about news covering a single topic in detail. A feature story is a type of soft news, [1] news primarily focused on entertainment rather than a higher level of professionalism. The main subtypes are the news feature and the human-interest story.

  6. I took a $1,000 personality test for Fortune 500 CEOs to see ...

    www.aol.com/finance/took-1-000-personality-test...

    The second is a development survey, or, ominously put, the dark side profile. It measures who you are at your worst. Last is the motives, values, and preferences inventory, which seeks to capture ...

  7. Interview (journalism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interview_(journalism)

    Although the question-and-answer interview in journalism dates back to the 1850s, [4] the first known interview that fits the matrix of interview-as-genre has been claimed to be the 1756 interview by Archbishop Timothy Gabashvili (1704–1764), prominent Georgian religious figure, diplomat, writer and traveler, who was interviewing Eugenios Voulgaris (1716–1806), renowned Greek theologian ...

  8. News style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/News_style

    News style, journalistic style, or news-writing style is the prose style used for news reporting in media, such as newspapers, radio, and television.. News writing attempts to answer all the basic questions about any particular event—who, what, when, where, and why (the Five Ws) and often how—at the opening of the article.

  9. Broadcast journalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadcast_journalism

    Broadcast journalism is the field of news and journals which are broadcast by electronic methods instead of the older methods, such as printed newspapers and posters. It works on radio (via air, cable, and Internet), television (via air, cable, and Internet) and the World Wide Web.