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BCOM 214 - Fundamentals of Business Communication

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What kind of article do I need?

Articles from newspapers, magazines and trade publications as well as press releases from newswires and company headquarters can help bring to light current and forthcoming trends such as product launches, new patents, mergers and acquisitions, and other impactful events. 

Scholarly articles from academic journals are useful for exploring deeper analyses of the business and economic landscape that require a peer-review process before existing in the information universe. Scholarly research may help you understand an industry or company's current and historical context as well as economic, social, environmental, and political impacts and drivers.

Article Search Strategies

1. Rely more on keywords and phrases relating to your industry or a top company. When using business databases like Business Source Ultimate or Business Insights Global, you may still incorporate NAICS codes and stock tickers into your search strategy, but these will likely not be successful in interdisciplinary databases like Access World News, ProQuest, and ScienceDirect.

2. For scholarly articles, check to see if the database has an option to filter for Scholarly or Peer-Reviewed sources. Additionally, find a publication or source type filter and select Journals.

Article databases by publication type

Browse trade publications and popular magazines

Businessweek (Bloomberg)

The Economist

Entrepreneur

Fast Company

Forbes

Fortune

Harvard Business Review

Inc.

Wired

Browse the news

How do I evaluate news articles?


Selected list of daily newspapers, from A to Z

Financial Times (London)

The New York Times

Start here to access current articles directly on NYT.com:

Look here for full-text PDFs and images of current and historical NYT.com and NYT print articles through library databases:

The Wall Street Journal

Start here to access current articles directly on WSJ.com:

Look here for full-text PDFs and images of current and historical WSJ.com and WSJ print articles through library databases:

The Washington Post