Studio manager,studio director, orstudio head is a job title in various media-related professions, including design, advertising, and broadcasting.
Adesign oradvertising studio manager's responsibilities will typically include traffic management, by ensuring all briefs are dispatched in the studio according to a designer's skills and strengths and ensure all work is delivered promptly and todeadline to the relevant people. A design studio manager should have excellent organizational and communication skills and motivate their team by showing good leadership. The Manager should have a great understanding of how to both achieve and develop project briefs to achieve clients needs and successful design.
The following are a studio manager's responsibilities:
In a broadcasting context, astudio manager, orSM, fulfills an operational role in radio broadcasting to enable and ensure programmes are produced to a high technical standard.[1]
Principally, SMs are involved in the operation of studio equipment. This generally encompasses amixing desk, alongside ancillary equipment such asISDN codecs, playback and recording devices, and telephone andVoIP adapters.
The precise nature of a studio manager's work will depend upon the nature of their deployment, but the core function is usually to ensure the programme is correctly 'balanced'. For speech programmes, this generally means each contributor should be heard with the same perceived loudness. A desirable music balance reflects the sound of a performance; for an orchestral rendition, each instrument ought to be heard at the correct relative volume and, for stereo programmes, at the 'correct' position in the orchestra.
Within theBBC, studio managers are used extensively across news, drama, and live music output.
A studio manager might also be known as adesk driver,technical operator,TechOp, orfacilitator, particularly outside of the BBC. For a period around 1970 the BBC used the termProgramme Operations Assistant, orPOA.