Analysis Of The Most Credible Information Sources Of Kennedy

Submitted By poppasmurf132
Words: 810
Pages: 4

I found this story to become more interesting as I read on and thought it to be very helpful to me learning as a whole. After reading this article, I came to the conclusion that the most credible information sources that Kennedy utilized were his professional networking, journalistic source interviews, observation skills, informal interviews, journalistic monitoring, institutional sources, and former employees. Kennedy tried and did get plenty of information about the company as a whole to try and piece his story together. The information that I actually thought was most credible came from former employees, town officials and Prepared Foods Magazine. I found these informants to be credible because they were professional in a sense of their titles in the community, they had nothing to gain from being truthful, and they provided Kennedy with answers that he didn’t even ask questions about. Kennedy’s interviews and journalistic observations also yielded information that showed that the company was intentionally kept off of city promotional maps in order to remain its anonymity. Why would a business of any kind deny free promotion and be so secretive? This doesn’t occur unless you have something hide! I actually thought that the accuracy of the information that Kennedy gathered was good as well. The accuracy of the information that he gathered allowed him to be able to uncover more credible information about Schwan’s as well, from the political contributions that were made, to the Governor that was receiving them. Journalistic source searches also yielded accurate information for Kennedy, such as Star Tribunes electronic back files. These files I found to be accurate because they are public records and they are not allowed to be biased or discredit its topic because of legal reasons. Kennedy’s timelines enabled him to find back ground information about the company that actually gave light to the company’s credibility with the community. These timelines allowed Kennedy to find former employees who actually helped him to pretty much format his story. The library gave Kennedy a look at the company owners past and allowed him to gather information about the owner’s personal life, personal financial records, and pictures of the founder of the company shaking hands with one of our past presidents. His timelines also allowed him to find information about the company and a razor blade incident that they were cited for in 1987. Kennedy had a plan and really was digging up information from every possible place. He wanted to understand this company completely before publishing his findings. Kennedy utilized many different types of sources to come up with useful information. The authority of his information was found in different places. He utilized commercial database services that index journalistic sources, such as Lexis Nexis database and standard business publication databases. Authority would normally shed information that is respected because it comes from a source that is educated in a certain field, such as commercial database services that index journalistic sources and standard business publication databases. Kennedy used both of these authority information sources, but they didn’t yield him anything useful except for a confirmation of Schwan’s as a low- profile firm. Finding sources that yield reputable information was relatively easy.