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Syracuse University/Society for News Design

"Working Hard To Improve News Design Through Education"

SND Gets New Executive Director; Office Moves to Fla.

By SND Headquarters -- November 3, 2009

THE SOCIETY FOR NEWS DESIGN has named veteran board member and industry leader Stephen Komives as its executive director.

Komives, design editor at the Orlando Sentinel in Orlando, Fla. for the past five years, has also directed the Society’s Quick Course design workshops since 2007. In his eight years on SND’s board of directors, he has also served as SND Diversity Director and organized two annual SND conventions -- 2006 in Orlando and 2002 in Savannah, Ga. His first day as SND executive director will be Nov. 16.

Komives was chosen through an international search coordinated by 12 SND leaders in five countries and was confirmed unanimously by the board of directors today. He succeeds Elise Burroughs, the SND executive director since 2004, who is leaving the organization at the end of the year to explore new options.

In making its selection, the search committee lauded Komives for his deep understanding of the issues facing SND, his strong ideas about driving membership and participation, his fortitude in handling big change and his passionate, optimistic leadership style. Komives, who is fluent in Spanish, also has an impressive international background that will facilitate global outreach efforts.

SND founder and former SND President Richard Curtis, who anchored the search committee, said Komives typifies all that SND was looking for in a successful candidate: A mastery of his craft, in-depth knowledge of the industry, a commitment to inclusion and diversity, and above all, talent.

“Stephen is articulate, thoughtful, obviously very, very bright,” said Curtis, a founding editor of USA Today. “He has a level-headed assessment of what the job entails, what the job can do, and what success will look like. His answers to our questions were succinct, engaging and illuminating. I have trouble even imagining another superior candidate.”

At the Orlando Sentinel, Komives oversaw visual reporting, developing a team of information designers in print and digital media. He successfully led that team through several challenging transitions, including multiple redesigns and staff reorganizations; the launch of new sections; corporate-level content sharing initiatives; and the creation of a digital-first newsroom.

Prior to joining the Sentinel, he was at the Savannah Morning News in Savannah, Ga., for nine years, the last seven as a planning editor for daily coverage and long-term projects. He also held editing and design jobs at the Santa Fe New Mexican and The Advocate in Stamford, Conn.

“SND has always been about transitions, whether for members moving on to new roles, or news organizations grappling with new ventures,” Komives. says “At every key transition point in my career — learning to design, learning to lead others, learning to lead change — SND has had immense value to me. That is why I’m excited to take on this role and help give back.”

Komives is a graduate of the University of Connecticut and holds a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University.

The 30-year-old Society for News Design represents more than 1,300 visual journalists in more than 50 countries. As executive director, Komives will be responsible for both the long-term and day-to-day management of the Society and its enterprises, including member services, publications, educational direction, design competitions and annual conventions. He will represent SND to other organizations around the world and will work closely with the president of the SND Foundation, a nonprofit education and research effort.

Members of the search committee were:

> SND President-elect Kris Viesselman, Director of Digital Product Development for National Geographic Maps

> Vice President Bonita Burton, Visuals Editor at the Orlando Sentinel

> Secretary/Treasurer Steve Dorsey, Deputy Managing Editor for Innovation at the Detroit Free Press

> Immediate Past President Gayle Grin, Managing Editor for Design and Graphics at the National Post

> International Director Hans Peter Janisch, a consultant with Zeitungs-und Kommunikationsdesign in Grossenlueder, Germany

> Competition and Judging Director C. Marshall Matlock, Emeritus Professor at Syracuse University

> Region 3 Director Melissa Angle; Senior Designer at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution

> Education and Training Director Denise Reagan, Assistant Managing Editor for Visual Journalism at the Florida Times-Union

> Executive Committee Advisor Cristobal Edwards, Professor of Visual Journalism at Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile in Santiago

> SNDS member Anna Thurfjell, Design Director at Svenska Dagbladet in Stockholm

> SND Past President Nanette Bisher, former Creative Director of the San Francisco Chronicle

> SND Founder and Past President Richard Curtis, retired Managing Editor for Photo and Graphics at USA Today

To learn more about SND and how to become a member click HERE.

____________________________________

The above information prvided by SND at WWW.SND.ORG.


   
SND's Annual Competition Now Welcomes Magazine

THE SOCIETY FOR NEWS DESIGN 31st annual Creative Competition, the world‘s largest program for recognizing excellence in visual journalism, has expanded its categories to include all magazines, not just those published with newspapers.

The competition name has been changed to "The Best of News Design™" Creative Competition to reflect design excellence in both newspapers and magazines for the 2009 publishing year.

Magazine designers have long expressed interest in entering the competition, which usually attracts more than 10,000 entries from newspapers in dozens of countries.

"Magazines may now enter a competition that has been well established for newspapers. We hope to honor magazines and staffs the same way we’ve recognized newspapers for more than 30 years," says C. Marshall Matlock, the competition and judging director from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. “Winning an award for newspaper work has always been recognized as a top news design honor for the newspapers industry. Now we’d like to do the same for non-newspaper magazines."

This year, acting on recommendations by the SND Competition Committee, the board of directors voted to allow non-newspaper magazines to enter the competition along with magazines published with newspapers such as The New York Times and El Mundo.

The Competition Committee, chaired by Matlock, updated the rules and added subcategories to provide new opportunities for magazine designers. The 31st edition Call for Entries, reflecting the new categories, is in the mail and posted online in English at http://www.snd.org/pdf/SNDCFE31.pdf. The Call will be posted in several additional languages in early December.

"SND has discussed adding non-newspaper magazines to the competition for several years. It seems like now is the right time to do that since we will have the judges and staff to support the new magazine categories," Matlock says.

"There is no disputing that SND has the branding on excellent news design," says Mike Rice, 31st edition coordinator and a visual team leader for design and graphics at the Arizona Daily Star in Tucson. "Magazine and newspaper designers share the same design principles, and bringing both formats into one competition will raise the bar on excellence for everyone.”

The deadlines for receiving entries in Syracuse are Jan. 13, 2010, for U.S. newspapers and magazines and Jan. 20, 2010, for newspapers and magazines published outside the United States.

An international panel of judges will review the entries and select winners over two long weekends in February at Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York. The S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at SU cosponsors the competition.

Winning magazine pages will be published along with newspaper winners in the 2010 edition of the annual book, "The Best of News Design
™."

SND also sponsors The Best of Multimedia Design Competition recognizing excellence in online design by all types of news media. For more information about the multimedia competition go to http://www.snd.org/competitions/sndies.html.

The Society for News Design, founded in 1979, has professional, educator and student members in more than 50 countries. To learn more about SND and its competitions, visit http://www.snd.org, or contact SND, 1130 Ten Rod Road, E 206, North Kingstown, RI 02852; (401) 294-5233; snd@snd.org.

As of Jan. 1, 2010, the SND headquarters will move to Orlando, Fla. Its address will be 424 E. Central Blvd., Suite 406, Orlando, FL 32801. The Web site and e-mail address will remain the same.

   
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