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Opportunities in New Media and Mass
Communications
In an era of convergence,
consolidation and layoffs, opportunities for media-related careers
do
exist for the well-prepared
By Pearl S. Stewart
A few weeks ago, a radio talk show host contacted me with a request
to book a couple of student writers on his show, which often addresses
issues related to colleges and universities. He hoped to interview
students who had written controversial articles for my website,
BlackCollegeWire.org. “Great,” I said, “I’ll tune in and listen.”
There is just one catch: The program isn’t broadcast on terrestrial
“radio” as we know it, nor even on satellite radio. It’s broadcast
online at PSIradio.com or downloaded via podcast.
This is just one example of how “new media” technologies, such as the
Internet and portable digital or wireless devices, have changed the
landscape of mass media and the field of mass communications as a whole.
A Google search turns up eight distinct definitions for “new media,”
ranging from “artworks that use multimedia… and computer technology,” to
“emerging digital/electronic communications forms.” In any case,
today’s students preparing for any career in media should assume they
will be working in a multimedia environment – and a rapidly changing one
at that.
Rapid Change, Diverse Skillsets
Remember when you purchased your first laptop with all latest bells
and whistles only to find, a year or so later, that it was obsolete?
Similarly, if you entered journalism or media program four years ago,
you may have thought you wanted to be a TV reporter or producer, or
perhaps a newspaper or magazine editor or columnist, or a radio
announcer. Maybe you were interested in graphic design, illustration,
photography or video engineering for a mass medium. Four years later,
those professions have metamorphosed into new forms, and you need to be
educated and trained as a multimedia communicator.
“What happens,” asks the website for the New Media Program at the
University of California at Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism,
“when distinctions between print and broadcast media fade away and a
single reporter must combine video, audio, text and images to tell the
story?”
TV reporters and newspaper columnists are now are likely to have
blogs on their employers’ websites, complete with video and audio clips.
Print communicators also blog and now often carry digital cameras that
shoot still and video images. Their stories are posted online within
hours (or sometimes minutes) of being produced along with photos and
video clips. Content may be produced, edited, distributed and “consumed”
simultaneously in multiple formats as varied as audio
podcasts, email or newsreader feeds,
interactive forums, and live or on-demand streams delivered to
computers, PDAs or even cellphones, as well as
in newsprint and broadcast.
This doesn’t mean that the bedrock skills imparted by traditional
journalism and communications training are out of date. A strong
command of language both spoken and written, the ability to research,
digest and communicate information clearly and economically on a fast
turn-around, and a familiarity with principles of publishing ethics and
copyright may all be more relevant and in-demand than ever. However,
finding gainful employment in media increasingly demands that candidates
be able to marry these skills with some cross-disciplinary training and
multimedia work experience.
Employment Outlook
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the overall
employment outlook for media-related occupations is a good news-bad news
story. Consolidation and convergence among the large and more
traditional organizations in the media and publishing industry has
slowed job growth for such occupations as news analysts, reporters, and
correspondents, and caused a decline for some, such as non-online
broadcast announcers.
Nonetheless, for most media and mass communications majors armed with
good training and updated skills needed for the shifting media landscape
and its new digital tools, the underlying picture is less bleak.
If your goal was to become a graphic designer four years ago, you are
now headed for a field that has become wholly digitized, so that
designers with website design and digital
animation experience will have the best opportunities and likely the
highest salaries in the profession, according to the 2004 BLS analysis.
For print communicators, the BLS offered a
similar outlook: “Online publications and services are growing in number
and sophistication, spurring the demand for writers and editors,
especially those with Web experience” and backgrounds in specialized
areas such as science or business. Also proliferating are corporate and
nonprofit vehicles outside the “traditional media” industries where
communications majors can use their skills. Nearly every major
corporation, for example, from pharmaceuticals to automotive, maintains
a newsletter, brochures and annual reports, multimedia web channels, and
online PR campaigns – often produced in-house and more or less
professionally. Similarly, easier, cheaper publishing technologies have
allowed small, highly targeted niche publications to flower, from
multicultural and non-English outlets, to trade and hobby magazines, to
“alternative” newswire and syndication services. Even as representation
of African Americans has been spotty or sparse in mainstream news and
entertainment media – in employment and community coverage – Black-owned
and -oriented media companies have grown in number in recent years, with
new media players like Black Planet and Black America Web joining the more
traditional BETs, Ebonys, or BLACK COLLEGIANs of the
world.
The diversification of media formats has
also expanded the range of potential employers of mass comm. majors.
Not too long ago, for example, someone aspiring to a television
programming career had a handful of local studios and national networks
to pick from. Even with the advent of cable TV, the positions were
relatively limited. Today, however, major cable and online companies may
hire media professionals to manage both aggregated content and original
programming. Meanwhile, wireless industry employers are increasingly
serving on-demand news, business information, entertainment and gaming
content produced or reworked just for their mobile/cellphone products.
Education
Some colleges and universities are eons ahead of others in embracing
this new media explosion. George Mason University’s Center for History
and New Media recently launched a new podcast, Digital Campus,
now available from iTunes and Digitalcampus.tv. According to the online
news release, “The biweekly roundtable will discuss how digital media
and technology are affecting learning, teaching, and scholarship at
colleges, universities, libraries, and museums.”
GMU’s program for more than a decade has used digital media and
computer technology to preserve the past. Its projects include a
September 11 Digital Archive and a History News Network, and the
Hurricane Digital Memory Bank that includes blogs and podcasts related
to hurricanes Katrina, Wilma and Rita.
At Columbia University, students are being
prepared for the digital media world through a variety of programs
including the Hearst New Media Professional-in-Residence, a New Media
Lecture Series and special events such as last November’s panel
discussion, “The Changing Media Landscape,” which featured
panelists from Yahoo!, Wikipedia and WSJ.com, the Wall Street Journal’s
online publication.
The University of South Carolina’s 5,700-square-foot
Newsplex is described as “a $2 million
multimedia newsroom of the future” where professionals, college faculty
and students, and even high school faculty and students attend seminars
for training in “converged media management.” It’s part of the College
of Mass Communications and Information Studies.
Unfortunately, not all journalism or mass communications programs
have caught up with the changes in media. However, fellowships,
internships, conferences, job fairs and training seminars, where
students can interact with today’s media professionals, offer
opportunities to find out what it’s really like to work and communicate
in the new media environment.
For a list of resources, and more detailed information about
employment and salary outlook for specific media-related occupations,
visit the extended online edition of this feature at Blackcollegian.com.
Pearl Stewart is founder of the
Black College Wire news service,
former newspaper editor, and visiting professional at the University of
Southern Mississippi School of Mass Communication and Journalism
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