I should expand on my earlier answer, I think titles are deceiving and vastly overrated, usually by the people that use them, it's decades ago that we had a whole slew of people coming up with super job titles in England.
"What is your job"?I
"I'm a registered sanitation Engineer"
"Really that sounds interesting what do you do"?
"Clean the toilets"
Personally, I have no problem being called a cleaner or I would do something else, the important part is what you do, and do you try to do it the best you can. I went to college to learn Autocad, I've also been taught Microsoft Office, plus a whole host of other things. I spent 25 years working on building sites, and yes I've even been a "sanitation Engineer" and wheeled bodies around a dark basement as a hospital porter, plus many other things less pleasant than that. When I decided to learn Autocad and get back into drawing office work. I was hired halfway through the first interview I went on, not because I was called an "Architectural technician", or a "super duper drafting wizard", but because I could talk about how I had 20+ years of practical experience, and how I could translate that into Autocad drawings. One of my first jobs was working on a small project called "One Hyde Park" where one of the penthouse apartment's is still the most expensive apartment in the world, and my part in that - was designing the metal frame that held the marble finish from around the toilets. So it's still about keeping the toilets clean
My point is if I had just relied on a "title" then no one would know the whole wealth of other experience that life has brought my way.
So lets start by saying "Hello my name is Steve" I can use Autocad and a whole host of other programs.