Title Fatigue
I'm not a social media guru. I'm also not a ninja or Jedi. These not-so-creative liberties attached to my area of expertise are not cute. In fact, I find them patronizing and offensive.
My industry has been going through an identity crisis since its inception. There's little consistency across agencies and clients on how to best describe the depth of each social channel, let alone how we title the people who manage them.
Social media will always be evolving -- much like how the universe is expanding. My experience is rooted in the agency world, and in under a decade, my title has morphed from PR hierarchical nomenclature to newer, looser titles with overt ties to digital.
My current title reads something like, "Vice President, Social Strategy and Content Marketing," and the clarification after the formal title was my attempt at claiming stake to the area of social media about which I'm most passionate. I see social strategy as level agnostic. Even as a Vice President, I wouldn't scoff at being referred to more generally as a social media strategist to someone who doesn't know or care about agency hierarchy (read: most people).
At my core, I identify as a writer, and over time, that identity has expanded. Aligning myself with the strategist moniker embraces and encompasses my passion for writing, while also compensating for my consumer curiosity, analytical drive, and overall thirst to communicate creatively.
I could easily whittle off a top-10 list of qualities that negate a person's claims to social media czardom (a phrase that truly makes me wince whenever I see it), but I'd rather make the case that we shift how we think about job titles. Roles should be shaped by an agile vision of how a person or particular area can grow --- no limits to inflate impact or truncate potential. Digital teams should be built to flourish in tandem with an always-changing industry.