Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/cssquirrel/www.cssquirrel.com/blog/index.php:4) in /home/cssquirrel/www.cssquirrel.com/blog/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8
CSSquirrel » title http://cssquirrel.com/blog opinions and news on web design Mon, 06 Feb 2012 17:41:49 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1 What Do You Call Your Job? http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2009/04/02/what-do-you-call-your-job/ http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2009/04/02/what-do-you-call-your-job/#comments Thu, 02 Apr 2009 20:48:57 +0000 Kyle Weems http://www.cssquirrel.com/?p=212 At Mindfly, my official title is “Interactive Designer.” I’ve unofficially expanded it to “Interactive Designer & Humorist,” because my research has determined that you don’t need a special degree or oath to call yourself that. Which is more than can be said about my now-abandoned plan of adding “MD” to my title, which apparently offends members of the medical community and possibly constitutes a crime.

To complicate matters, my business cards says “Developer” on them.  This is largely because I don’t do much conversing with clients, nor am I single, so I don’t have much reason to be handing them out to impress potential clients or dates. As such, I’ve had them for long before my title change. Mind you, my title change didn’t accompany any official change in tasks, merely a redefining what I do, which according to most of my co-workers is “get preachy.”

I’d tell them what to do less if they agreed with me more.

Anyhow, this whole rumination on job title spawned tiny thoughts that crept through my head asking “What do most people in the industry call themselves?” There’s plenty of discussions or surveys on the topic, such as this question from the Web Directions State of the Web 2008 survey, in which about half the respondents called themselves “developer”.

That doesn’t really answer my question. That’s what people call themselves, within the industry, in a survey of their peers. But what do you call yourself to the outside world? When I finally landed a gig in the industry (for which I am eternally thankful to Mindfly for) I called myself a “developer”. That confused most of the people I knew, so I upgraded it to “web developer.”

As expected, I then started fielding questions about how to fix their email problems or broken cable modems.

I experimented with “web designer”, but that didn’t do me much more good, other than being asked to draw things for people. So then I just started listing the technologies I used, which resulted in my friends’ eyes rolling back in their heads as they frothed at the mouth and started gnawing on their hands.

Taking a page from A List Apart, I’ve experimented with saying “I make websites,” which isn’t a title, but seems to at least get the gist across to people. Unfortunately, this almost always leads back to asking my particular role, so it’s a temporary reprieve at best.

At this point, I just tell people “I’m an Interactive Designer & Humorist,” which amusingly enough works better because it throws them off enough to ask what that means, to which I usually respond something like “In between a lot of tweeting I do some coding on websites,” which oddly satisfies most inquirers.

I’m not sure if this is a tactic that I should endorse for everyone, though. So I’m asking you all (and hoping for at least a few answers) what do you call yourself when talking to others, especially those outside the industry? What’s on your business cards? How well does that impart your actual job to the people that read it? Jason Santa Maria once talked about this from a designer angle in an article called Explain Yourself, which I think spawned a good discussion on the topic from a designer’s end. As a person that falls into the ‘code-monkey’ category, I’m wondering how you other developer/designer hybrids fill out your nametags.

]]>
http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2009/04/02/what-do-you-call-your-job/feed/ 6