Broadcasting
is a fast-paced and dynamic industry that
is continually changing. Careers in broadcasting
can be exciting, unique and rewarding. As
with all forms of business, broadcasters
seek to recruit qualified individuals who
want to learn and grow with the changes
of the industry. People who work at radio
or TV stations often wear several hats,
but they generally fall into one of four
categories: Management/administrative; advertising
sales/sales support/underwriting; engineering/technical/computer;
production/programming/news .
Following
are some general descriptions for jobs in
radio and television. Remember that each
station is unique in its staff structure,
and no two stations are organized in the
same fashion. The size of a station and
of the market it serves often dictate the
number and types of jobs available. The
descriptions below provide an overview of
just some of the positions and responsibilities.
ACCOUNT
EXECUTIVE - A person who sells advertising
time and works closely with businesses to
help them market themselves to the station's
listeners or viewers.
ANNOUNCER - Announcers are a radio station's "voice"
and are often the people with whom the public
identifies. This person introduces programs
and music, reads commercial copy and public
service announcements, and is involved in
the overall public presentation of the station.
CHIEF
ENGINEER - The chief engineer is responsible
for the technology necessary to put the
station's broadcast on the air. The chief
engineer works to design, build and maintain
broadcasting capabilities and provide quick
solutions to problems that may arise with
the transmitter, tower, satellite receiver
and other related equipment.
COPY
WRITER - This staff member writes commercial
and promotional copy in support of the station's
sales, marketing and promotion efforts.
GENERAL
MANAGER - The person responsible for
the overall operation of a station. This
position requires business knowledge, leadership
ability and a technical understanding of
how a station operates.
GENERAL
SALES MANAGER - This person hires and
supervises the sales staff, reviews programming
for the best sales opportunities, develops
sales plans and goals, oversees billing,
studies and understands the station's market
and approves all sales promotion campaigns.
Some stations have multiple levels of sales
managers, including National, Regional and
Local sales managers who focus on various
aspects of sales.
MAINTENANCE
ENGINEER - A maintenance engineer installs
and performs preventive maintenance on the
station's control consoles, boards, recording
equipment, microphones, and a wide variety
of other station equipment and electronic
systems.
MUSIC
DIRECTOR - This person manages the station's
music library and works with the program
director in selecting new recordings to
be played as they are submitted by record
companies.
NEWS
DIRECTOR - The news director runs the
news department. The news director assigns
stories to reporters on staff, monitors
the wire service and is involved with identifying
the important news issues within the community.
PRODUCTION
DIRECTOR - The production manager assigns
announcers, schedules studios, arranges
recording sessions, produces commercials,
and directs programs.
PROMOTION
DIRECTOR - This position promotes the
station's image, programs and activities.
The promotion director works closely with
the program director to create on-air
promotions and also with the sales
department in securing new clients and
maintaining current advertisers.
PROGRAM
DIRECTOR - Responsible for the entire
on-air product; governs the sound of the
stations. With control over production,
talent, work schedules, and program
schedules, the programming
objectives support the goals of the general
manager and the general sales manager.
RECEPTIONIST - The duties of the receptionist vary
according to the size of the station. This
position is ideal for understanding all the
aspects of how a station operates.
SALES
ASSISTANT - This position offers support
to the sales staff and managers by handling
much of the office work, including drafting
proposals, which allows the sales staff to
focus on meeting with clients and developing
business.
SPORTS
DIRECTOR - This position is similar to
the news director position. Sports directors
often handle the play-by-play coverage of
local sporting events. Stations that do a
lot of sports sometimes hire a
"color" announcer to complement
the play-by-play talent.
TRAFFIC
DIRECTOR - Collects data from other
departments in order to prepare a
minute-by-minute schedule for the broadcast
day. The traffic person is the daily link
between the sales department and programming
department, keeping up-to-date commercial
time availability.
ACCOUNT
EXECUTIVE - The representative of the
station who solicits advertising from
commercial business. Account executives
develop working relationships with local
business leaders and with local advertising
agencies and client representatives.
ASSIGNMENT
EDITOR - This person is responsible for
the gathering of the news that goes into a
program. Usually a team effort, they set
news coverage priorities, organize the
logistics of camera crews and reporters, and
arrange for the various satellite feeds and
live on-scene coverage.
BUSINESS
MANAGER - Responsible for all financial
transactions. Business
managers are generally expected to have
extensive professional background in
accounting and financial management.
CHIEF
ENGINEER - Heads the technical staff.
The chief engineer is the senior technical
person at the station.
COMMUNITY
RELATIONS DIRECTOR - This person plans,
coordinates and executes a station's
services and programs that are developed to
respond to the needs of the community.
CONTINUITY
WRITER - The continuity person writes
some of the local commercial and promotional
copy. Must be detail-orientated and have
skills in computer and word-processor
operation.
DIRECTOR - The person responsible for the actual
on-line execution of a program. Serves as
producers for entire programs or for the
production of portions of larger programs.
ELECTRONIC
NEWS GATHERING (ENG) - They work
alongside reporters to capture events on
tape and to produce live, on-scene coverage
of breaking news stories. In addition to
operating the video camera and sound, ENG
crews must also operate sophisticated
microwave and satellite transmission
equipment to "feed" programming or
news segments back to the studio from remote
locations.
ENG
EDITOR - The person who edits tape taken
by the ENG crew. ENG editors work with
producers, reporters and writers to build
news packages from the raw tape sent in from
the field or gathered on feeds from networks
or other sources.
EXECUTIVE
PRODUCER - This position coordinates the
content and presentation of broadcasts under
the direction of the managing editor and
news director.
GENERAL
MANAGER - The person responsible for
every aspect of a station's operation. This
position requires business knowledge,
leadership ability and a technical
understanding of how a station operates.
GENERAL
SALES MANAGER - The person responsible
for producing all advertising revenues for a
station and for hiring, training and
supervising the station's sales staff. The
general sales manager must also be adept at
understanding the business climate in the
community and must have a strong knowledge
of the interests of the station audience.
Some stations have multiple levels of sales
managers, including National, Regional and
Local sales managers who focus on various
aspects of sales.
GRAPHIC
ARTIST - Supports all production
activities. Computer skills are particularly
valuable, as is a background in art and
design and radio-television production.
MAINTENANCE
ENGINEERS - Responsible for the repair,
maintenance, installation and modification
of all of the electronic equipment in the
station.
MASTER
CONTROL/VIDEO ENGINEER - Responsible for operating the video recording and playback equipment
for live programs and during commercial
breaks in network and taped shows.
NEWS
ANCHOR - The most visible members of the
news staff. These are the people that appear
as the "up front" personalities on
local newscasts. Ideally, the news anchor is
a complete journalist, familiar with
reporting, on-scene live coverage and
skilled at writing, and in some cases,
producing news packages.
NEWS
DIRECTOR - The news director supervises
the news department. Must understand
budgeting, personnel management and the
technical aspects of television. In addition
to having a firm understanding of the
community service role of broadcast
journalism, he or she must also have solid
news judgment - the ability to determine
which stories are most informative and of
the greatest value to the local viewer.
NEWS
REPORTERS - The key
"front-line" people in the news
department. They are on-the-scene at every
kind of event. Local news reporters must be
excellent writers, capable of working
quickly and accurately to sum up the key
elements of a news story and make it
understandable and relevant to the audience.
NEWS
WRITER/EDITOR - The writer's
responsibilities may include monitoring news
feeds, preparing news packages for voicing
by anchors or reporters, researching story
information, booking guests for live
interviews on news shows and producing
segments of news programs. Exceptional
writing skills are a must.
PRODUCER -
This person develops and organizes local
programs and is responsible for scripting,
story development, booking of guests and
overseeing field production and editing.
PRODUCTION
ASSISTANT - A production assistant works
with all production personnel, helping where
necessary.
PRODUCTION
MANAGER - This position is responsible
for all of the details required in the
actual production of local programming. The
production manager supervised producers,
directors, floor directors and stage
managers.
PROGRAM
DIRECTOR - The manager of the
programming department. The
program director works closely with the
general manager and sales manager to
determine and direct the station's policies
and to plan the most effective program
schedule for the station.
PROMOTIONS
DIRECTOR - The promotions director's job
is to promote the station's image, programs
and activities. They conceive and execute a
variety of written and taped station
promotion spots, secure station advertising
in other media, and in conjunction with the
sales department, develop ways to keep
current viewers and advertisers and to
attract new ones.
RECEPTIONIST - The duties of the receptionist vary
according to the size of the station. This
position is ideal for understanding all the
aspects of how a station operates.
STAGE
MANAGER - The director's representative
on the studio floor and at the site of any
live broadcast.
STATION
MANAGER - The chief operating officer of
the station. The station manager must have
effective personnel management skills and a
thorough knowledge of all aspects of
broadcast operation.
STUDIO ENGINEERS - Responsible for
operating all of the equipment necessary for
the production of a program. This includes
the studio cameras, the audio console,
studio lighting, the video switcher, and in
some stations, the character generator and
the electronic still-storage graphics
display equipment.