DESCRIPTION:
Interns at Listen Vision work directly with the Operations/Studio Manager and Business Development Manager to provide administrative & sales assistance for the recording studio and video production/graphic design departments. Responsibilities include providing information to prospective clients, conducting studio tours, communicating with clients (written and verbal), making follow-up sales calls, as well as basic duties such as answering the phone and taking proper messages. Some light production work for clients, internal materials and website required.
Positions are open immediately, require 15-20 hours per week, and will last through the summer. At which point, the right intern could be offered a full-time position.
Skills:
QUALIFICATIONS:
- basic knowledge of audio/video production process (i.e. you know the difference between .wav/.mp3, have at least seen pro tools being used, and know a thing or to about video editing or graphics)
- strong computer skills (word, excel, social networking sites, internet research, salesforce)
- self-starter, independent worker, not easily distracted, ability to multi-task
- excellent customer service and communication skills
- professional demeanor
Please provide a resume and a cover letter that explains how you can contribute to Listen Vision.
Apple Hires Key Digital Music Industry Legal Executive Billboard reports that Apple has hired Elliott Peters, a senior vice president and head of digital legal affairs at Warner Music Group, to manage the company's legal team overseeing iTunes and MobileMe services in Europe.
Troski attempts to revive local kwaito music Just when the Botswana music industry thought Kwaito music had died a slow death, out came Troski, the local industry?s version of South Africa?s Mandoza.
Putting Sustainability to Music Artists and industry insiders discuss how to make music green, both for fans and businesses.
Don't Stop Believing in Risk of Song Sharing A mother of four in a long-running fight with the music industry was ordered by a Minneapolis federal jury Wednesday evening to pay $1.5 million for sharing 24 digital songs.