Explore how your personality fits with Lighting Technician and hundreds of other career paths.
Get started with TraitLabLighting Technicians set up, maintain, and dismantle light fixtures, lighting control devices, and the associated lighting electrical and rigging equipment used for photography, television, film, video, and live productions.
In addition, Lighting Technicians may focus or operate light fixtures, or attach color filters or other lighting accessories.
The median salary for a Lighting Technician is $70,980, and the average salary is $74,880. Both the median and average roughly describe the middle of the Lighting Technician salary range, but the average is more easily affected by extremely high or low salaries.
Many Lighting Technicians earn significantly more or less than the average, due to several factors. About 10% of Lighting Technicians earn less than $31,150 per year, 25% earn less than $45,240, 75% earn less than $98,330, and 90% earn less than $123,670.
Between the years of 2020 and 2030, the number of Lighting Technicians is expected to change by 16.3%, and there should be roughly 2,900 open positions for Lighting Technicians every year.
Career interests describe a person's preferences for different types of working environments and activities. When a person's interest match the demands of an occupation, people are usually more engaged and satisfied in that role.
Data on vocational interests of Lighting Technicians is not yet complete. Please check back later.
People differ in their values, or what is most important to them for building job satisfaction and fulfillment.
Data on vocational interests of Lighting Technicians is not yet complete. Please check back later.
Each occupation brings its own set of psychological demands, which describe the characteristics necessary to perform the job well.
Data on the specific demands for Lighting Technicians is not yet complete. Please check back later.
Lighting Technicians often have training in vocational schools, related on-the-job experience, or an associate's degree.
Lighting Technicians usually need one or two years of training involving both on-the-job experience and informal training with experienced workers. A recognized apprenticeship program may be associated with this occupation.
Through education, training, or experience, most Lighting Technicians will need to be proficient in mutliple areas to perform their job well.
Data on the specific knowledge and expertise required for Lighting Technicians is not yet complete. Please check back later.
Lighting Technicians must develop a particular set of abilities to perform their job well. Abilities are individual capacities that influence a person's information processing, sensory perception, motor coordination, and physical strength or endurance. Individuals may naturally have certain abilities without explicit training, but most abilities can be sharpened somewhat through practice.
Data on the specific abilities important for Lighting Technicians is not yet complete. Please check back later.
Skills are developed capacities that enable people to function effectively in real-world settings. Unlike abilities, skills are typically easier to build through practice and experience. Skills influence effectiveness in areas such as learning, working with others, design, troubleshooting, and more.
Data on the skills needed by Lighting Technicians is not yet complete. Please check back later.
The information provided on this page is adapted from data and descriptions published by the U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration under the CC BY 4.0 license. TraitLab has modified some information for ease of use and reading, and the U.S. Department of Labor, Employment, and Training Administration has not approved, endorsed, or tested these modifications.
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