Published: May 13, 2020 By

Tayler Shaw is a journalism student and an editor with the Media Innovation Center (MIC). Photo by Nick Mundinger (CritMedia'20).

For Delaney Schoenfeldt, one of the toughest parts of college was figuring out what she wanted to do afterwards.听

Her road to graduation was a winding one, paved with trial and error and reshaped by moments of self reflection.

Four years, two majors and seven internships later, her work paid off.听

鈥淚f you want to get people鈥檚 attention, it needs to have a story.

In May, Schoenfeldt graduated as the College of Media, Communication and Information鈥檚 William W. White Outstanding Senior, an honor earned by the student with the highest GPA in the college. She did so with a hard-earned sense of clarity about what comes next, and the confidence to go for it.听

"There are amazing resources at the school, but you鈥檙e not going to get anywhere if you don鈥檛 act on them,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou have to take advantage of every single resource you have.鈥澨

When she began her college career, Schoenfeldt was certain that she wanted to work in the music industry.

A passion that began in middle school, her love of music took her to places from San Diego to London for concerts. Once in college, she sometimes attended two or three shows per week while completing a series of internships in the local industry. But after working everywhere from an artist management and booking agency to The Hill鈥檚 Fox Theater, she found herself facing a hard truth.

"I realized I didn't really like working in the music industry that much,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 just didn鈥檛鈥撯揳nd that was shocking to me.鈥

Rather than give up, she found value in the experience鈥撯搃nformation that could help her reinvestigate her own interests and abilities to ultimately chart a new path.

Personally, she鈥檇 been drawn to the creative freedom and capacity for storytelling that the music industry seemed to allow. And professionally, she was a strategic thinker with a knack for being media savvy. Those insights led her to continue studying Media Production, while adding on a second major in the public relations track of Strategic Communication.

"I think that everything needs a story,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you want to get people鈥檚 attention, it needs to have a story. Whether that鈥檚 in advertising, whether that鈥檚 in media, whether that鈥檚 in public relations鈥撯搚ou鈥檙e not going to get a public interested unless there鈥檚 some sort of emotional rollercoaster for them to ride on with you.鈥

After shifting her focus, Schoenfeldt landed yet another internship, this time with Circuit Media, a design and communications agency that serves government and commercial clients, which she connected with through one of CMCI鈥檚 career fairs. In June, she joined the company full time as a communication and multimedia specialist, a position created specifically for her.听

In large part, Schoenfeldt attributes her success to her learned adaptability, and to the connections she made with faculty and staff鈥撯揵oth of which she developed as a resident advisor (RA) and senior resident advisor (SRA), she says.听

Schoenfeldt worked as an RA and SRA in Baker Hall during her second and third years. For her senior year, she returned as an SRA to Buckingham Hall, where she鈥檇 lived as a freshman and participated in CMCI鈥檚 CommRAP program. The experience allowed her to reconnect with professors she鈥檇 had early on.

"They make genuine connections with their students,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not just people who come in through the door and leave in a year. We鈥檙e people who they鈥檙e genuinely trying to help as we find our passions and our future careers.鈥

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