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Maintain a Web Presence So Practitioners Can Find You

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2018

Matthew J. Borneman*
Affiliation:
Research and Development, career.place
*
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Matthew J. Borneman. E-mail: mborneman82@yahoo.com, mborneman@career.place

Extract

In addition to the suggestions made by the authors of the focal article (Lapierre et al., 2018), it is also important for academics to market themselves and keep their information up to date. As a practitioner, I sometimes end up working with interesting data sets worth publishing but lack the time and resources to complete the entire publication progress. There are also times when I am in need of a targeted intervention and would be willing to work with academic researchers in a mutually beneficial arrangement. As such, I need to be able to find you. This commentary expands on the focal article by providing some tips on how to be found by practitioners and increase the likelihood that a practitioner will contact you. Though networking is also of vital importance in this area, the authors of the focal article covered that well; as such, no further discussion of it will take place here.

Type
Commentaries
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology 2018 

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References

Lapierre, L., Matthews, R. A., Eby, L. T., Truxillo, D. M., Johnson, R. E., & Major, D. (2018). Recommended practices for academics to initiate and manage research partnerships. Industrial and Organizational Psychology: Perspectives on Science and Practice, 11 (4), 543581.Google Scholar