Missouri S&T is hiring for our web team

We’re building up our web team at Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T) for some exciting things in the future.

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We’re hiring two positions focused on web, digital communications and social media to double our dedicated online/web staff to four. (That may not sound like a lot, but members of our web team work in a highly collaborative environment with other communications pros — writers and editors, graphic designers, videographers, a photographer — and work closely with members of our IT staff. So there’s a lot of talent working together to make great things happen.)

If you’re looking for an opportunity to help reinvent our web presence for an adaptive, responsive future, these two positions offer great opportunities for the right people. Plus, you’ll be joining a fun and award-winning communications team.

We’re looking for:

  • One User Interface Designer to bridge the back-end work of our web developer to the outside world. We’re looking for someone who can see the online world through the user’s eyes and visualize and create that smart and beautiful interface. If you have experience designing simple and intuitive user interfaces and the ability to effectively communicate conceptual ideas and design rationale, this is the job for you.
  • One Digital Communications Coordinator to create web content for our top-level sites and help other units across campus create compelling content. If you love creating web content, breathing life and personality into existing content, and think editing makes everything better, then this may be the job for you. This new position will write, create, edit and maintain content on university websites and social media outlets.

Deadline to apply is March 18, so get your resumes and applications in post haste, or pass along the news to your contacts who might be interested. As always, feel free to reach out to me (acareaga AT mst DOT edu) if you have questions.

More about Missouri S&T

What is the ‘media’ of social media?

Is this what social media looks like?
Is this what social media looks like?

Sometimes we become so immersed in a thing that we can’t distance ourselves from it enough to think critically about it. Like air. It’s all around us, and unless something happens to disrupt its usual quality, we rarely give it much thought.

And then sometimes we can’t think critically about a thing because we bring our own biases and pre-conceived ways of thinking about the thing that we can’t fathom any other perspective.

For those of us who work in social media, we probably don’t understand this thing as well as we could, and for a combination of the two reasons I mention above. First, we’re too immersed in our social media work to view it with much detachment. Second, and we filter our understanding of it through our own biases or the requirements of our job on how we use it. If I’m a marketer, for example, then my marketing background is going to affect how I view social media.

Viewing through a different lens

Lately I’ve been thinking more about our understanding of social media — or our lack of understanding — because of something I read in the early pages of John Naughton’s book From Gutenberg to Zuckerberg: Disruptive Innovation in the Age of the Internet.

By comparing the communications revolution spawned by the Internet to that which arose from Gutenberg’s printing press some 550-plus years ago, Naughton — a British academic,  blogger and tech columnist — draws some interesting parallels. But first, he provides some context about how to think about the Internet and all its trappings. At one point, he suggests that some of us may be viewing this thing called social media through the wrong lens.

Like many of you, I have a background in communications — in my case, journalism. Whenever journalists, marketers, strategic communicators and others with similar academic and vocational backgrounds think about a “medium,” the singular of media, we tend to think about a conduit of information. Television is one medium of communication. A newspaper is another.

“The conventional — journalistic — interpretation holds that a medium is a carrier of something,” writes Naughton.

That’s how I typically think of social media: as a carrier of information. That’s how I was trained to think of any sort of media, social or otherwise.

A global Petri dish?

But as Naughton points out, a biologist may offer a different perspective on the word.

In biology, media are used to grow tissue cultures — living organisms. … It seems to me that this is a useful metaphor for thinking about human society; it portrays our social system as a living organism that depends on a media environment for the nutrients it needs to survive and develop.

Perhaps that’s what this thing we call social media is. Maybe it’s more than just a communications conduit — more than a “series of tubes,” as one out-of-touch politician put it many years ago.

Maybe it’s a type of global, interconnected Petri dish that provides the digital nutrients our interconnected world needs to sustain the increasingly complex, interdependent and internetworked social systems.

And because we’re all immersed in this giant Petri dish, we can’t fully understand its impact — no more than a jellyfish could comprehend how it and seaweed both thrive in the waters of the sea.

This brings me to the question I’m grappling with: If we were to start thinking of social media more as an ecosystem and less as a carrier of information, how would that change our approaches — vocational and personal — to social media?