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senior digital designer jobs in worcester

At Beyond The Book we specialise in recruitment in the Creative, Marketing and Digital space, including Senior Digital Designers.
Typically, a Senior Digital Designer will play a key role in a design studio, either within a creative agency or an in-house creative team, usually managed by a Digital Creative Director or Creative Director, and would require multi-tasking and working to tight deadlines, in a fast-paced environment.
 
A Senior Digital Designer role would be suitable for a highly experienced Digital Designer with a solid digital background from either e-commerce, creative or marketing environment. The role will typically suit someone with a huge passion for digital innovation, leadership qualities and the desire to continue help brands in the digital space. Strong commercial expertise and awareness of emerging digital technologies.
 
The Senior Digital Designer role would usually encompass the following responsibilities:
Responsible for the creative development of new and existing digital solutions, across web, social, email, apps. Participate in creative scoping sessions and help define creative briefs. Hold workshops to engage clients throughout the lifecycle of the project. Manage a small team of Digital Designers, offering mentorship and design direction. Designing responsive/adaptive solutions. Testing and optimising solutions.
About Worcester​
Worcester is a cathedral city and the ceremonial county town of Worcestershire.
Worcester is famous for several things including the birthplace of Lea & Perin's well-known Worcestershire sauce.
It is also the home to the oldest surviving newspaper in the world (Worcester’s Berrow’s Journal) which dates back to 1690.
The top attraction in Worcester is Worcester Cathedral. The present cathedral church was built between 1084 and 1504 and represents every style of English architecture from Norman to Perpendicular Gothic.
The Battle of Worcester took place on 3 September 1651 at Worcester, England, and was the final battle of the English Civil War, which began in 1642. This saw Oliver Cromwell's Parliamentarian New Model Army, 28,000 strong, defeat King Charles II's 16,000 Royalists.