Books Be Reborn In the Waters of the Mighty Amazon
posted by August 12 at 13:00 PM
onA Slog tipper who wishes to remain anonymous has forwarded this job description to me:
Kindle Book Evangelist (Req #31303) Seattle, Washington, United StatesJob Description
Amazon is looking for an experienced professional to work with
authors, agents and publishers to facilitate and encourage title
selection on Kindle, Amazon’s portable reader. Kindle Evangelists will
be passionate advocates on behalf of customers educating, influencing
and bringing together all the interested parties who can make more
titles available on Kindle.Responsibilities Include:
- Generate grassroots support for Amazon’s Kindle among the author
and agent community, educating through compelling presentations and
product demonstrations.
- Facilitating and encouraging positive discussions between authors,
agents and publishers for the purpose of driving the clearance of
digital rights and settling of terms.
…and further down:
Job Qualifications - 5+ years’ experience; ideal candidate will have served that experience within publishing or literary representation or a closely related media industry, and/or have good contacts within the industry - Proven track record of driving aggressive content acquisition and/or negotiations for media or licensing company … - Ability to communicate effectively and act as both an influencer and an ambassador on behalf of Amazon.com - Open to travel
Two things: is an influencer somebody who helps deciders decide? And does anybody else find it creepy when giant corporations adopt religious terms? I suppose we should be glad Amazon’s not hiring Kindle Missionaries…yet.
Comments
When Amazon screws over independent booksellers, they're lucky if they get the missionary position.
"evangelism" is a pretty common term in corporate marketing.
@2 iawtc
yeah, amazon didn't co-opt evangelism. it's been going on for years.
Thank Apple Computer (Guy Kawasaki et al) for "evangelism" in a corporate context.
I think it's helpful that corporations use a title that let us know that their message is bullshit, personally! :D
Considering they haven't filled the music editor position which has been posted since April, it's clear Amazon is trying to hire people that don't exist. There's a cultlike mentality that goes with working for Amazon, so this is perfect.
@5: So your definition of evangelist is one who spreads a message of bullshit? Interesting.
What about Kindle Youth Pastors?
"Evangelist" is a pretty common title in tech companies. To "evangelize" a product is common enough, but the term is even used in companies internally as a way to get people on board with a project, or use a new code base or software product.
The tech Evangelist is part cheerleader, part knowledge base, and part consultant. It's a little uncommon in tech to find people that are not only extremely technically proficient, but also able to relate in a positive way with most people, tech-savvy or not. A good evangelist will have those qualities.
Reading too quickly, I thought it was a story about a bunch of evangelicals in the Amazon prostelitizing with Kindles.
Reading too quickly, I thought it was a story about a bunch of evangelicals in the Amazon prostelitizing with Kindles.
As others have said "Evangelist" has crept into some marketing and tech job descriptions.
Even the "Father of the Internet" now has Evangelist in his job title.
This post is an example of how far from ever having an actual job Stranger writers are. Evangelist! Flip the calendar, it must be 1991 already!
True, it is awesome to not know what having a career is like. Corporate jobs do totally fucking suck, and let no one tell you different. But it does make it hard to relate to your readers.
The use of the term evangelist to describe a position which is essentially equivalent to salesman suggests a level of commitment akin to unquestioning faith in the product. Most of the early Chrisitian evangelists ended up as martyrs. Perhaps this ad is for an entry level position.
@6 - This person does exist, it just so happens to be one of their CUSTOMERS or current employees who doesn't already have experience evangelizing Kindle, so the job will remain open for the next year.
Tech companies love to open jobs for new positions and magically have the perfect person appear, who just so happens to be just like the hiring manager who opened the job.
RE: Music editor position. The same position or another version been posted since long before April. If Amazon hasn't already contacted you to apply, due to your established highly specialized knowledge of certain genres, don't bother. They aren't looking for more pop, rock, dance, or hip-hop specialists. Especially not indie rock or anything that would be reviewed in the Stranger or on Pitchfork.
@16 - I didn't apply; I just read the job description. They want you to name your top 10 record labels and artists from this year. I couldn't come up with two I liked. I forwarded it to a friend who covers music for a weekly in another state and even he couldn't come up with 10 he likes from this year.
Whenever an Amazon Youth Pastor asks you to touch his Kindle, you should say no, and report it to the proper authorities.
re: music editor position - yes you will need to know a lot about music - but the only TRUE qualification is will you be willing to work and work and work and work and work and work and work like a dog. can't imagine why they haven't found anyone.
If missionaries are the next step, then digital magic underwear can't be far behind.
Microsoft's been naming folks as evangelists of their various projects and technologies for at least since the Win95 era...
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There is no religion at Amazon, except that of Mammon. And that's a GOOD thing.
Managers are big drunks there.
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