Phone/Whatsapp: +44 (0)7749 000 889
sam@thejollygeo.com
The Jolly Geo Interrail Journey, 2023 The Jolly Geo Interrail Journey, 2023 The Jolly Geo Interrail Journey, 2023 The Jolly Geo Interrail Journey, 2023
  • Home
  • The Jolly Geographer
    • Raising the profile of geography
    • Thinking of a career as a Geographer?
    • Publications and mentions
    • Socials
  • Projects
    • GEM: A Smartphone App for Mapping Mangroves
    • Gough Island Restoration Programme
      • Gough Blog
    • Project Hogwatch
    • Interrail 2023
    • A map of me!
  • The Jolly Geo Quiz
    • The Xmas Edition – LIVE!
    • The Halloween Edition – LIVE!
    • The Summer Edition – DONE
    • Corporate Bookings
  • Jolly Geo extras
    • The Jolly Geo meets…
    • Geo podcasts
    • Jolly Geo GPS art
    • Jolly Geo book recommendations
    • Solargraphy
    • Granny Gandhi Chai!
  • About The Jolly Geo
  • Get in Touch

Thinking of a career as a Geographer?

    Home Thinking of a career as a Geographer?

    Geography is a broad church

    You’re probably familiar with the broad Physical Geography / Human Geography split. But it goes much deeper than that. I consider myself to be an Environmental Geographer, which is a blend of human and physical. At university I studied Political Geography and Economic Geography, and actually – if you think about it, everything has geography, everything has a location. So being a Geographer can mean many different things.

    I work mostly in the technical side of Geography, using georeferenced, geospatial data to study the location, or extent of physical and human phenomena. I particularly study environmental phenomena, e.g. how have forests changed over time, where are the deforestation hotspots? Or, what does the landscape look like after an earthquake, or other natural disasters, and how are local communities impacted?

    I found this word cloud on a teacher’s webpage titled ‘Essential Question: What is Geography?’ It sums up my work as a Freelance Geographer very well!

    Credit: Katrina Axford (https://www.katrinaaxford.com/what-is-geography.html)

    Geospatial skills

    Geospatial analysis requires a range of complementary technical skills. The more of the following skills you can learn and nurture, the more effective I find your geospatial analysis will be:

    GIS – Geographic Information Systems (or Solutions), are software programs that enable geospatial analysis. Esri’s Arc Pro is the best known proprietary tool, QGIS is the open-source and free to use alternative. I personally use QGIS to do most of my GIS work, though familiarity with both is helpful, as each has its strengths and weaknesses. When it comes down to it, both can do 90% of GIS processes very well.

    Remote Sensing – is the science of remotely studying phenomena on the Earth’s surface, whether using camera traps and drones, light aircraft flyovers that capture aerial imagery, or satellite sensors that capture great swathes of imagery. I use camera traps to study animal behaviour, drones to capture high-resolution imagery of the landscapes I am studying, and most commonly, a range of satellite imagery sources to measure change in landscapes over time. You’ll encounter some physics and statistics whilst processing imagery, whilst some creativity is needed to depict and communicate what are highly visual outputs. Remote sensing capability has dramatically improved over the last 10 or so years with the advent of cloud computing, largely replacing software programs such as Envi and Idrisi with browser-based platforms such as Google Earth Engine (GEE). Which brings me nicely onto…

    Coding – at the heart of geospatial analysis is data. Efficent analysis of large and regularly updated datasets requires coding skills, in what are known as high-level programming langauges (user-friendly and closer to human language), such as Python or R. Google Earth Engine’s web-based platform uses its own Earth Engine language which is based on JavaScript, but GEE can also be accessed in QGIS via a plugin using Python. GIS and coding, or Remote Sensing and coding are highly complementary skills.

    Field Survey – nothing beats getting into the field to build that intimate familiarity with the features or phenomena that you are trying to map. For remote sensing, ground-truthing is an important part of calibrating machine-learning based models (this sounds scarier than it actually is!), which means visiting and verifying on the ground examples of the different land cover classes you are mapping, whether tropical rainforest, cropland, rivers, or even football pitches! I’ve been lucky enough to visit the beautiful mangrove forests of Madagascar and Singapore to improve and refine my mangrove maps.

    What sort of roles are in Geospatial?

    A typical role is that of the Geospatial Analyst – at my core this is what I consider myself to be. Then there are niches which require more specialist skills, yes, within the specialism of Geospatial – examples include Web GIS Developers (focussing on web mapping), Spatial Data Developers and Engineers (focussing on ensuring data is accessible, reliable and effectively visualised), Spatial Data Scientists (exploring spatial patterns using data science methods), and Remote Sensing Scientists (described above).

    Which sectors hire Geospatial professionals?

    There are a growing number of geospatial roles out there, both for geospatial organisations such as Esri, Ordnance Survey, and a plethora of geospatial consultancy firms, but also within in-house geospatial teams in a growing range of sectors. You can find geospatial roles across the public, private and charity sectors, in science, health, renewables, transport, natural resources, conservation, humanitarian, the space sector… the list is endless.

    How do you find jobs in Geospatial?

    In the UK there are websites and email distribution lists where geospatial roles are advertised. Examples include:

    • GIS-JOBS is updated regularly with the latest geospatial roles
    • JISCM@il is an online email distribution list where different organisations post their vacancies, it is subscribing to this.
    • For public sector roles check out Civil Service Jobs for the latest geospatial (and broader geography-related) job adverts across over 200 public sector bodies. From Defra to DfT, to the Intellience Agencies – yes they recruit Geographers too! Worth setting up subscription filters again.
    • Jobs in carbon is a great repository for the latest roles in carbon, including full-time, part-time, and contract roles.

    Network! Use LinkedIn, attend events hosted by the excellent Royal Geographical Society, and keep up with the latest and greatest in Geospatial or whatever flavour of Geography takes your fancy – subscribe to the Geographical Magazine (discounted with membership of the RGS), listen to podcasts (see my Geo Pods page), and find yourself a mentor who works in a relevant space. I’ve had mentors since my career began, and it is the single biggest thing that has helped me build my career.  Anyone can be your mentor, it doesn’t even need to be a formally defined relationship – just someone you can talk to, someone you respect.  For interviews, I always found coming with a printed portfolio of my best geospatial work was a winning tactic, use the Q&A segment at the end to flick through your best work, to really demonstrate what you’re about.  If the interview is online, don’t be afraid to ask to show one or two of your outputs on a screen-share.

    There are some great training options out there, I highly recommend Spatial Thoughts courses in GIS and Remote Sensing, with a range of free (self-study) and paid (tutored) learning paths. The legend behind Spatial Thoughts is my (unrelated) namesake Ujaval Gandhi, who is well respected in the geospatial community. Esri have short training courses which are freely available (MOOCs), which allow you to get your hands on their software for a limited period of time.

    Lastly, there are some great volunteering options within the broad church that is Geography. You can volunteer with your local Wildlife Trust, or if you are technically-minded be sure to check out MapAction, deploying Geographers like me to disaster zones to provide life-saving humanitarian support.

    Get in touch!

    I hope this was a useful read, I will try to update it as more resources come online, but in the meantime, if you have any questions, or would like to chat all things Geo, get in touch!

    sam @ thejollygeo.com

    The Jolly Geographer Ltd | All Rights Reserved
    • Home
    • The Jolly Geographer
      • Raising the profile of geography
      • Thinking of a career as a Geographer?
      • Publications and mentions
      • Socials
    • Projects
      • GEM: A Smartphone App for Mapping Mangroves
      • Gough Island Restoration Programme
        • Gough Blog
      • Project Hogwatch
      • Interrail 2023
      • A map of me!
    • The Jolly Geo Quiz
      • The Xmas Edition – LIVE!
      • The Halloween Edition – LIVE!
      • The Summer Edition – DONE
      • Corporate Bookings
    • Jolly Geo extras
      • The Jolly Geo meets…
      • Geo podcasts
      • Jolly Geo GPS art
      • Jolly Geo book recommendations
      • Solargraphy
      • Granny Gandhi Chai!
    • About The Jolly Geo
    • Get in Touch
    The Jolly Geo Interrail Journey, 2023