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How to Become a Multimedia Editor in North Carolina

Written by Judee ShipmanJune 6, 2012
How to become a multimedia editor in North Carolina

The state of North Carolina features nearly a million commercial businesses and many local multimedia artists.  Recent technological advances in media production have led to a fast-growing demand for local multimedia professionals, especially editors.  North Carolina offers countless opportunities for resident artists seeking careers in this creative, high tech field.

North Carolina Schools and Training Programs for Multimedia Editing

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Many dozen North Carolina colleges, Universities and private film academies offer classes and degree programs in audio-visual design.  Aspiring editors going for full-fledged degrees typically major in computer science or communications design.  North Carolina design colleges with film studies include King's College in Charlotte, North Carolina Central University in Durham, Bennett College in Greensboro, Peace College in Raleigh and Salem College in Winston-Salem.  Other favorites include ECPI University with campuses in Raleigh, Charlotte and Greensboro. 

Nowadays, numerous North Carolina artists enroll at internet-based design schools.  Popular accredited online colleges with audio-visual programs include the Academy of Art University, Post University, Full Sail University, DeVry, Stratford Career Institute, University of Phoenix, The Art Institutes and ITT Tech.  Quite a few online art colleges also feature physical locations.  University of Phoenix has campuses in Ashville, Charlotte, Fayetteville, Greensboro and Raleigh.  ITT Tech has locations in Charlotte, Durham, High Point and Cary.  The Art Institute maintains Charlotte and Durham facilities.  DeVry is available in Charlotte and Morrisville.

Working as a Multimedia Editor in North Carolina

Commercial businesses in North Carolina hire multimedia editors for many assorted production and post production design tasks.  Some North Carolina multimedia editors work for local TV stations like Charlotte-Mechlenburg in Charlotte, ABC-11-Eyewitness-News in Durham, Dick's-Broadcasting in Greensboro, Capitol-Broadcasting in Raleigh and WNYV-Channel-48 in Winston-Salem, to name a few.  North Carolina sound editors are often hired by local radio stations such as Que-Pasa-Media-Network in Charlotte, Capitol-Broadcasting in Durham, Pappas-Telecasting in Greensboro, 1007-the-River in Raleigh and Light-1340-Request-Line in Winston-Salem, among others.

The reported average annual income for a multimedia editor working full time in the state of North Carolina is about $37,000, with a mean hourly wage of roughly $18.00. 

Skills of a Professional Multimedia Editor

Multimedia editors are multi-skilled professional artists who organize and manipulate audio recordings and motion graphics into slick, stylistic media presentations.  Photography, videography, lighting techniques and digital design are just a few of the many skills involved.  Audio-visual editors also perform restorations, media conversions, visual special effects and noise reduction, among other production-related tasks.  Personal attributes important to audio-visual editors include self-motivation, smooth collaboration, artistic creativity and extreme detail-orientation.  Technical qualifications include proficiency with digital editing design software as well as mechanical ability with traditional editing techniques.  Also useful are programming skills and web design.