The term "webmaster" popped back into my head a few days ago, and I've been thinking about it ever since.
It seems like that's not really a thing anymore.
The web has become so complex that skills have been siloed.
Webmasters used to design, build, and manage websites on their own. Sometimes they hosted the site, too.
But websites have mostly become too complex for that.
I don't even see the term "web designer" used much anymore.
A web designer now has 3 parts:
- UI designer
- UX designer (often the same person as the UI)
- Front end developer (rarely designing anymore)
This has just been what I've seen and felt lately.
What are your thoughts?
[Update]: I just found this post, coincidentally posted today
https://zeldman.com/2024/04/03/the-more-things-change-or-whats-in-a-job-title/
Good point, I haven't heard that title in a minute. It's kinda cool though and sounds like a beastmaster.
Also, kinda makes me think of the title scrum master.
As for why the title might have faded out, I think you bring up a good point that typically when we think of someone building a website these days it's not just one person, but a team with specialties.
I think websites used to be more simple in what they offered — and the expectation wasn't to have something visually mind blowing. So, one person could kinda get away with hacking something together because that's just the way the web looked. (Haha, I love looking at the brutalist web design of yesteryear!)
And as for today, when there is just one individual building a website, it seems that they frequently use website building tools and templates, then sorta stitch it all together. But yeah, we don't refer to them as a webmaster... come to think of it, I don't know what we call those folks, haha. 😅