About three years ago I decided that RBI should have a forum for journalists who wanted to become editors - it's what I wanted to become but had failed at a couple of interviews to land an editorship. I approached then RBI board member responsible for editorial Iain Melville and he said it was a great idea and that I should go ahead and organise it.
After pulling off a list of people one or two steps away from an editorship - we had to be selective so the group was at a similar level of experience - I arranged the first meeting.
I felt a programme of six lunchtime sessions throughout the year would work well as everyone was short of time. I even got a lunch budget.
I thought the best way to kick off the group would be to define what the company was looking for in an editor so I asked HR director Nathan Cahill to talk about the skills and aptituteds the company expected from an editor. I also asked Karl Schneider, editorial development director to give his slant on what was expected from an editor as well as Trevor Parker, publishing director of Farmers Weekly, who talked about who he would recruit as an editor and why.
The session was a big hit in more than one way.
First, the delegates were able to quiz senior RBI managers on what they were looking for.
Second, they really got an honest view of what an editor was expected to do. I think delegates were quite shocked at how much they would have to achieve to land an editorship.
Third, Nathan got to see would-be editors and to get a feel of what talent was out there.
Fourth, the company now had a way of talking to aspiring editors, something it could never do in the past.
This is the write-up from the first event . . .