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Happy New Year all,

I thought you’d be interested in an analysis I posted last week of openings
listed on Twitter that found an explosion last year of digital curation
jobs--and their titles. The running joke that no two titles are the same
still holds: three-quarters of the 2022 position titles were unique.

In 2019 I found 170 digital heritage and data curation job ads from
Twitter; in 2022 that number climbed to 492. Along with the usual
libraries, archives, museums, and scientific labs were places like the
Coney Island historical society, Paramount Pictures, and the US Marine
Corps.

Among the more exotic titles were Hidden Collections Processing
Coordinator, Peoples Archive Manager, and Change Management Professional.
This year's titles saw an uptick in certain phrases, including "genealogy,"
"steward," "applications development," and "data curation."

Digital Archivist, Records and Information Management Specialist, and
Metadata Librarian were the most popular digital curation job titles, but
these still represent less than 10% of all titles.

Another trend that doesn't seem to be going away: the overlap of digital
skills is blending previously separate disciplines, as reflected in
portmanteau titles such as Archive Curator, Digital Archives Librarian, and
Special Collections Instruction Librarian and Curator. More at

https://blog.still-water.net/digital-curation-jobs-more-than-doubled-in-2022

I did the analysis for UMaine's online graduate Digital Curation program.
(Still seats available for anyone who wants to join me in our digital
preservation class starting 18 January.)

Cheers,

jon
______________________________
Director, Digital Curation graduate program
The University of Maine
https://DigitalCuration.UMaine.edu
Twitter: @jonippolito
Mastodon: @[log in to unmask]

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