Interactive Media Specialist

Interactive Media Specialist

Also called: Interactive Media Designer, Mixed-Media Specialist

Interactive media specialists are a new breed of professional, using a mix of content creation, software design, programming, and marketing skills to create engaging apps, websites, and web-based multimedia applications, as well as immersive AR and VR experiences.

What Does an Interactive Media Specialist Do?

Because this is an emerging field, and because they do so many different things for so many different employers, it’s difficult to sum up what interactive media specialists do for a living. Some are web developers on the cutting edge of interactive web design. Others are mobile app developers, web marketers, or innovative content creators who use tools such as 360-degree video, live streaming, and online polling to engage audiences. Ultimately, everything at the intersection of cutting-edge media and digital audience interaction is their purview.

What connects all interactive media specialists is a desire to use cutting-edge tools to create interactive media experiences that engage and immerse audiences in new and unexpected ways.

If you use an interactive online web application to tour a museum without leaving the house, or visit it in person and discover a downloadable AR app that enhances the experience, chances are high that these were designed by an interactive media specialist. Similarly, an interactive media specialist might work with an online education program to design a virtual classroom interface, with a business to develop a site-specific AR app as part of a marketing campaign for a new product, or with a fast-food chain to refine the interactive ordering software used in new touch-screen kiosks. While interactive media specialists focus on front-facing development—audience experiences—they might also create tools that aid employees.

Work Life Balance

While most interactive media specialists are freelance contractors or self-employed entrepreneurs, some are full- or part-time employees of large companies with a focus on web and app design or marketing. For the most part, interactive media specialists work from a desk, but some positions include opportunities to escape the office for creative ventures, such as shooting a live or VR video.

Community

What connects all interactive media specialists is a desire to use cutting-edge tools to create interactive media experiences that engage and immerse audiences in new and unexpected ways. These tools are constantly changing, but the basic skills aren't: serious programming prowess, an awareness of the latest media technology, a knack for marketing and branding, and a natural sense of how disruption and interactivity can be used to deepen a digital or physical experience.

Finding Work

Many interactive media specialists are freelancers who move from project to project at different businesses and nonprofits. Others are entrepreneurs who seek funding for their own ideas and found startups. A small number of organizations with a particular interest in interactive media might hire specialists full time, such as web-based businesses, museums, and advertising firms.

Professional Skills

  • Digital media
  • Software design (particularly app design)
  • Web development (programming)
  • AR/VR programming
  • Video editing
  • Video game design
  • Marketing and branding
  • HTML
  • ASP
  • CSS
  • JavaScript
  • Adobe Creative Suite

Interpersonal Skills

What connects all interactive media specialists is a desire to use cutting-edge tools to create interactive media experiences that engage and immerse audiences in new and unexpected ways. These tools are constantly changing, but the basic skills aren't: serious programming prowess, an awareness of the latest media technology, a knack for marketing and branding, and a natural sense of how disruption and interactivity can be used to deepen a digital or physical experience.


Industries

  • Film, Video, and Television
  • Technology
  • Video Games
  • Advertising
  • Artist Services
  • Music and Audio Tools
  • Radio and Streaming Music
  • Recording Industry
  • Health and Wellness
  • Theater
  • Live Music
  • Opera
  • Dance
  • Orchestra, Chorus, and Band
  • Education
  • Arts Administration
  • Journalism
  • Church and Worship

Top US Cities for This Role

  • Los Angeles
  • San Francisco Bay Area
  • New York City
  • Boston
  • Nashville