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2024-02-01, 08:46 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Jul 2010
Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
What are some job titles for jobs where the primary tasks are digital/print/library/etc. research? Just jobs where 90% ish of the work is just looking for relevant sources on questions handed over from elsewhere in the company/organization/business.
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2024-02-01, 08:48 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Sep 2016
Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
"Document Specialist" is one, but not too many people hire for that. "Office Assistant" and similar roles might work too.
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2024-02-01, 09:53 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2009
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- Washington D.C.
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Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
Document Specialist, Office Assistant or Administrative Assistant might fit. Research Assistant sounds like it should but it's usually for much more intensive research work.
Cuthalion's art is the prettiest art of all the art. Like my avatar.
Number of times Roland St. Jude has sworn revenge upon me: 2
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2024-02-01, 10:55 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Jul 2010
Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
Hmmm. I just searched for "document specialist" on some job boards, and the only jobs with that title were for making sure a stack of boilerplate contracts and releases get signed at car dealerships, HR, employment agencies, etc.
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2024-02-02, 12:34 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Sep 2016
Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
So the issue you're gonna run into is that pure research positions are...rare. And they're gonna primarily be for people who are highly educated, and highly specialized in some very technical field.
The vast majority of roles that require research are going to be people who do their own research to accomplish some specific purpose. As an example, I am a Technical Writer. I research systems and processes, then document them. I am also typically in charge of determining storage and managing knowledgebases such as SharePoint based sites. So primarily a specialized content writing position with heavy emphasis on direct research and interviewing SMEs (Subject Matter Experts), with light webmaster duties.
A "document specialist" would theoretically be someone who worked with me to help procure information. However, that would only be something done for VERY large projects where I'm juggling too many balls at once to make it feasible to just go and figure out this stuff for myself. I have never come across this scenario in the real world.
Similar roles in IT exist, like Business Analysts or Systems Analysts, Reports Writers, even Project Managers, all of whom are usually the SMEs I am interviewing...but it's very rare you're ever going to find a role in a practical business that is going to be primarily research as the focus and very little practical done with said research directly by the employee doing said research.
A document specialist would be an entry level position (the only time I ever served in such a role was as a part-time job working for my college while attending) where you kinda learn the ropes of what you'd be doing for one of those more advanced positions. It is not going to be glamorous or very intellectually fulfilling work. It's the documentation equivalent of digging ditches, frankly, but it might get your foot in the door especially if you can prove ability to then properly summarize and write white papers and whatnot on stuff, you can parley that into better work.
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2024-02-02, 10:39 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Jul 2010
Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
I expanded my search and found another different job that's being called "document specialist." The person whose job it is to make sure that documents are filled in and filed properly when people who make 7+ figures a year submit them.
The signal to noise ratio is 0.00 so far.
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2024-02-02, 10:49 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2009
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- Washington D.C.
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Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
So we know the desire, but not the context. What's the goal here? Is this something that you did, and you are trying to put a resume together but didn't have a formal title? Are you looking for this specific type of work to do ans trying to search for it? Something else? That might help.
Last edited by Peelee; 2024-02-02 at 10:50 AM.
Cuthalion's art is the prettiest art of all the art. Like my avatar.
Number of times Roland St. Jude has sworn revenge upon me: 2
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2024-02-02, 02:00 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Sep 2016
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2024-02-03, 07:23 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2012
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Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
I think there's a bunch of jobs that mostly consist of library research:
- Research librarian;
- Archivist;
- Historian, though it depends on the specialty;
- Journalist, though it depends on the specifics of your job;
- Freelance fact-checker, which I believe are trained in journalism schools;
- Various other types of researcher, like others have mentioned.
All of them require special training. There are also other jobs that sometimes do library research. In the sciences, work that consists solely of library research tends to be situational. A scientist doing a meta-analysis is mostly reading papers, not performing experiments—but it's unusual for a scientist to spend most of their time doing that.
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2024-02-06, 06:29 AM (ISO 8601)
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- May 2017
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Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
Jasnah avatar by Zea Mays
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2024-02-07, 01:21 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Jul 2010
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2024-02-07, 02:40 PM (ISO 8601)
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- Dec 2009
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- Washington D.C.
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Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.
Cuthalion's art is the prettiest art of all the art. Like my avatar.
Number of times Roland St. Jude has sworn revenge upon me: 2
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2024-02-09, 03:00 AM (ISO 8601)
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- Apr 2012
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Re: Job titles for doing literature reviews, etc.