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Stock Footage Consultant

AMIA | Assn of Moving Image Archivists, New York, NY, USA

Pay: $230 per day

Job type: Part Time


Overview
Position: Stock Footage Consultant (part-time)

Location: New York, NY United States of America

Application Date: January 01, 1970

Job Link: https://www.twn.org/archives

Job Contact: jt@twn.org

Responsibilities

Learn about TWN’s stock footage collection

Offer customer support by phone, email and social media to our clients. Help our customers to research, find, preview, and license stock footage from our collection of more than 50 films produced from approximately 1968-2000

Identify prospective customers and convert leads

Email and call past customers to reactivate accounts

Schedule newsletter and email campaigns to clients and leads

Negotiate stock footage license agreements in consultation with Distribution Director

Book stock footage orders and payments in our database in consultation with Distribution Associate and Distribution Director

Update client data

Prepare and deliver stock footage to clients

Research and attend local trade shows and networking events including Footage Fest

One day per week, with potential additional dates

On-site in our offices in Midtown Manhattan

Preferred background in sales and customer service; an interest in documentary and social issue media is advantageous.

$230 per day

Visit twn.org to learn about our history

Watch our short film Third World Newsreel Briefly on Vimeo: vimeo.com/333545868

Email your resume and a short introductory email to jt@twn.org and distribution@twn.org

About Third World Newsreel (TWN)
TWN licenses archival stock footage to producers, media companies and other institutions, including footage of the leadership of the Black Panther Party, the Young Lords Party, the Anti-Vietnam War Movement, the Student Movement, the Housing Movement, Women’s Liberation Movement, and other social justice movements from the late 60s and early 70s. These are primary sources. The footage was shot by filmmakers who were participants in the movements they documented — not observers. Much of this material exists nowhere else.

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