Guide to Internet research
Find People, Telephone Numbers, Addresses And Maps
Useful Information for Bargaining
Finding Government Information
Includes:
Sources For News On The Web
Newspaper Indexes
Newswires
Magazines
Radio and TV
Finding Information About Companies
Find Name,
Address, Phone
If you need very basic information (company name, location, address) try the links below or any of the links used in the Finding People section:
Public or
Private? Company Search
Determine whether your company is publicly owned (traded on a stock exchange) or privately owned. There is much more information on publicly held companies. Public companies must report certain information to the Security and Exchange Commission and their shareholders.
Company
Overview
If you successfully identified the ticker symbol, you can collect some quick,useful summary information at any of the following sites.
Company
Homepages
Company web sites are mostly a marketing tool but may offer annual reports, information on company executives, news articles and, information about products and services.
If you haven't yet located the home page for your company, try guessing the address. Many businesses have a website address that looks like this:
Type in the name of the company you are interested in.
If that doesn't work try:
Publicly
Traded Companies
If the stock is publicly traded you can identify the stock symbol and get information at:
Public companies must report certain financial
information to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and their
shareholders. You can find annual reports (10K), quarterly reports (10Q), or
other reports such as 13Q ownership filings at any of the following:
Sources include:
Private
Company Information
Executive
Compensation
Non-Profits
NLRB Election History
CWA maintains a database of NLRB election history results between 1960-1997. The report contains employer name, location, date filed, date closed, election date, SIC Code, number of eligible voters, number of no votes, type of unit, petitioning union and employer address (if available). The database is updated as new information becomes available.
Request election history by sending an email to the CWA Research Library. Results can be delivered by mail or fax.
The Unicore
Database
The UNICORE database tracks the union status of companies and can answer the following:
Information comes from a variety of sources including Dun & Bradstreet, the Federal Mediation and Concilitation Service (FMCS) and union data received directly from AFL-CIO affiliates.
A basic report on a company would include ultimate parent company and subsidiaries, location, number of employees, union status and whether there have been any ULPs or OSHA citations filed against the company.
This database is not housed at CWA. Turnaround time is 2- 4 business days. Send requests to the CWA Research Library. The document will be mailed or faxed to you.
SEARCH TOOLS & DIRECTORIES
TOP FOUR SEARCH
TOOLS FOR THE
WEB
INTRODUCTION TO SEARCH
ENGINES,
(OR HOW TO SEARCH THE
WEB
WITHOUT REALLY TRYING)
The World Wide Web gives you access to millions of documents and information sites, but sifting through all of that to find just what you're looking for may seem a rather daunting task. Fortunately, there are a host of different search tools--known as search engines and directories--to help you and Local 2's Web site contains links to several of the most useful ones. If your Web browser has pre-set bookmarks, you'll probably also find some search tools listed there.
Directories
Directories are
simply indexes which list Web sites by subject matter. Like any index, the
categories are somewhat subjective, so you might find unions listed under
the economy, labor, political organizations, interest groups, or some other
category. Keep in mind that no Web directory is comprehensive; new Web sites
are simply being created too quickly for anyone to keep up. (One estimate is
that the number of Web pages doubles every 55 days!) However, each of the
directories listed in Local 2's Web site indexes hundreds of thousands of pages
and will help you get started.
Here's an example of how you might use a directory to find information on school-to-work programs:
Step 1:
Point your Web browser to http://www.opeiu-local2.org (Of course, if you're
reading this online, you're already there.)
Step 2: Choose
Links and Resources main menu.
Step 3: Choose Search Tools for the Web from the table of
contents.
Step 4: Follow the link to the Yahoo directory.
Step 5: From the table of contents, choose Education.
Step 6: Next, choose Sub Category Listing.
Step 7: Scroll through the list of sub categories and find
Career and Vocational and, under that, School-to-Work; follow the link and
you'll see a list of sites related to education and workplace issues,
including the Central Illinois Education to Careers Partnership.
Step 8: Follow that link to learn about the organization and
its programs.
You may have to try a few different categories to find exactly what you want. For instance, instead of starting from the Education category, you might have followed Business and Economy to Companies to Education and found a link to a company called Academic Innovations that is also involved in school-to-work.
Instead of clicking your way through all those categories, you could also try Yahoo's internal search function. Type "school-to-work" in the box at the top of the page and hit the "Search" button. Yahoo will give you a list of sites that match your search. You can also narrow your search by first clicking on a category such as Education and then doing a search; be sure to choose the "Search only in Education" option.
Search Engines
Search engines
are just what they sound like: programs that go out and search the Web for
pages that match specific search criteria you've entered. Search engines are
easy to use; just type a word or phrase into the blank box provided and
click the "Search" button. (Note that search engines won't work with some
Web software. Refer to your software's documentation to learn about other
search tools such as gopher and WAIS.)
If you were to run the school-to-work search you did on Yahoo using a search engine that goes out to search the Web, such as Alta Vista or Open Text, you might get dozens or hundreds of hits. These search engines will generally give you a list of hits similar in structure to Yahoo's, along with additional options to see your search terms on the page or to find similar pages. If your search doesn't turn up what you'd hoped, you have two options: modify your search or try another search engine. To broaden or narrow your search, click on Options or Help for information about additional search criteria you can enter. To run your search on a different search engine, look for pointers to other search engines (at the bottom of the page that displays your search results) or return to Local 2's site.
Choosing the Right Search Tool
Although you
might expect that one search engine would find exactly the same set of Web
pages as another, that's not the case. Some engines search just titles and
headers of pages, some search the entire text of documents, and some search
in other directories; most engines use some combination of search
strategies. In the school-to-work search above we found 49 hits on Yahoo;
running the same search on a search engine that searches the full text of
Web pages yielded more than 10,000 hits, but many of them turned out not to
be relevant to the search's purpose. Similarly, one directory might have
more documents indexed than another, but might be divided into categories
that make it harder to find items on your topic. Your best strategy is to
spend a little time browsing around different directories and running sample
searches to get a feel for the strengths of each tool.
A technical note: Search engines don't really go out and search the whole Web while you're waiting. Instead, the search engine has "robot" software that downloads Web pages to a database. Differences in how quickly robots update the database and which pages they gather also account for some of the differences in search engine results.
See, that wasn't hard. Now you're ready to return to the List of Search Engines and dive into the Web!
Political Organization
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