In this article
Welcome to copywriting
Copywriters write the words that sell β ads, websites, emails, product descriptions, scripts, and slogans. It's a creative career where language meets psychology and commerce, and one of the most flexible and remote-friendly there is. The AI era has shaken it up, but skilled, strategic writers are still in demand. Whether you love writing or are weighing a flexible creative career, this guide covers what the job really involves, what you'll earn, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A copywriter creates persuasive, purposeful text that gets readers to feel or do something β buy, sign up, click, or believe. In simple terms: they use words to achieve a business goal. It's distinct from content writing (informative articles) and journalism β copy is built to persuade and convert.
- Write ads, web pages, emails, and campaigns
- Capture a brand's voice and message
- Persuade and convert the reader
- Edit and refine to a brief and to results
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Creativity β fresh angles and ideas that cut through
- Empathy β understanding what the reader wants and fears
- Adaptability β switching voice between brands and formats
- Taking feedback β iterating without ego on subjective work
- Concision β saying more with fewer words
- Self-discipline β especially as a freelancer
Education & background
No specific degree is required β copywriting is one of the most credential-flexible careers. A strong portfolio of writing samples is the qualification; clients and employers hire on your words, not your diploma.
Typical daily responsibilities
- Writing β ads, landing pages, emails, scripts, and product copy
- Briefs & research β understanding the goal, brand, and audience
- Editing β polishing and tightening your own and others' work
- Brand voice β staying consistent across everything
- Collaboration β with designers, marketers, and clients
- Optimising β testing and improving copy on results
Responsibilities by seniority
Junior Copywriter
0β2 years experience
- Writing to briefs
- Smaller pieces and edits
- Learning brand voice
- Building a portfolio
- Taking lots of feedback
Copywriter
2β5 years experience
- Owning campaigns end-to-end
- A developed personal style
- Client and concept work
- Choosing a niche
- Mentoring juniors
Senior / Creative Lead
5+ years experience
- Leading concepts and strategy
- Brand and tone direction
- Pitching and big campaigns
- Managing writers
- Freelance / studio leadership
Where copywriters work
π¨ Advertising agencies
Campaigns, concepts, and slogans β the classic, creative copywriting home.
π’ In-house brand teams
Owning one brand's voice across all its content and marketing.
π E-commerce & tech
Product copy, emails, and conversion-focused writing.
πΌ Freelance & studio
Independent work for a roster of your own clients.
π Marketing agencies
Content, ads, and campaigns across many clients.
π Specialist copy
UX, technical, medical, or finance copywriting β well-paid niches.
A day in the life
π¨ Agency / in-house
- Briefs from clients and teams
- Collaborating with designers
- Multiple projects at once
- Concept and campaign work
- Feedback and revisions
π Freelance
- Own clients and deadlines
- Full schedule control
- Work from anywhere
- Pitching and invoicing too
- Variety of brands
Coffee and a brief: a launch email that needs to make people actually click. You research the audience, then write ten subject lines to find the one.
Drafting landing-page copy, cutting every word that doesn't earn its place.
A client wants it "punchier"; you translate the vague note into concrete edits.
Writing ad variations for an A/B test.
A results report comes in: your earlier email beat the control by a wide margin. Words you wrote moved real numbers β that blend of creativity and measurable impact is the appeal.
What this job gives you
- Creative + measurable β words that are also judged on results
- Remote & flexible β among the most location-independent careers
- Accessible entry β portfolio over degree; largely self-taught
- Strong freelance path β easy to build your own client base
- Variety β different brands, formats, and challenges constantly
Pros & cons
β Advantages
- Creative, varied work
- No degree required
- Very remote-friendly
- Strong freelance potential
- Demand across every industry
- Skills transfer to marketing
- Words with measurable impact
β Disadvantages
- AI is disrupting routine copy
- Subjective feedback and revisions
- Modest pay at the lower end
- Competitive, crowded field
- Deadline and "make it sell" pressure
- Feast-or-famine as a freelancer
Salary potential β global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where β β β β β β β β β β = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior Copywriter β bigger campaigns and brand voice
- Creative Lead / Director β set the creative vision
- Specialise β UX, technical, medical, or finance copy (high-paying)
- Content / brand strategy β move up into messaging strategy
- Freelance / studio owner β build your own business
- Marketing leadership β broaden into wider marketing
Copywriter vs related writing & marketing roles
Copywriting sits between writing, marketing, and creative. Here's how the neighbours compare.
| Role | Core focus | Key skills | Pay vs copywriter | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Copywriter You are here |
Persuasive, selling writing | Writing, persuasion, brand voice | Baseline | Accessible |
| Marketing Specialist | Campaigns across many channels | Content, ads, analytics | Similar | Medium |
| Content writer | Informative articles & blogs | Writing, SEO, research | Similarβlower | Accessible |
| SEO Specialist | Ranking in search | SEO, content, technical | Similarβhigher | Medium |
| Journalist | Reporting facts and stories | Reporting, writing, ethics | Similarβlower | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by niche, market, and whether you freelance.
Future outlook
AI now writes serviceable copy in seconds, and this genuinely disrupts the commodity end of the market β generic product descriptions and filler. But it has raised the bar, not removed it. AI generates words; humans bring strategy, brand voice, originality, taste, and an understanding of what actually persuades a specific audience. The copywriters who use AI as a tool β and specialise β are pulling ahead.
- AI commoditises generic, high-volume copy
- Value shifts to strategy, voice, and persuasion
- Specialists (conversion, niche, brand) stay in demand
- Copywriters who wield AI are far more productive
- Original ideas and taste remain human
Fun facts π€
Some of history's most famous slogans were a handful of words that took weeks to craft β proof that in copywriting, fewer words can be far harder than more.
A single email subject line can swing open rates dramatically β copywriters routinely write dozens of versions to find the winner.
Great copy is applied psychology β understanding desire, fear, and decision-making matters as much as a way with words.
Legendary admen like David Ogilvy turned copywriting into a discipline β many of their principles still hold up in the AI age.
AI made "everyone a writer" overnight β which has, paradoxically, made skilled copywriters' strategy and taste more valuable, not less.
Myths about copywriting
"It's just writing β anyone can do it."
β False. Persuasive, on-brand copy that actually converts is a craft built on psychology, strategy, and ruthless editing β not just nice sentences.
"AI has killed copywriting."
β False. AI disrupts commodity copy, but strategy, voice, and persuasion are human. Skilled, specialist writers who use AI are thriving.
"You need a journalism or English degree."
β False. A portfolio matters far more than a degree. People break in from all kinds of backgrounds.
"Copywriting and content writing are the same."
β False. Copy persuades and sells; content informs and engages. Related skills, different goals.
"It's an easy, relaxed job."
β Reality: Deadlines, subjective feedback, and "make it sell" pressure are real. It's rewarding, but it's genuine work.
Is this job right for you?
β Good fit if you...
- Love writing and language
- Understand what makes people act
- Can take feedback without ego
- Adapt your voice easily
- Want flexible, remote work
- Like measurable creative work
β Maybe not for you if...
- Subjective feedback frustrates you
- You want a high salary immediately
- You dislike marketing and selling
- Constant revisions would drain you
- A crowded, AI-shaken market worries you
- You prefer purely factual writing
Freelance & independent potential
Copywriting is one of the most freelance-friendly careers β businesses everywhere need persuasive words, often on a project basis, and you can work from anywhere.
β Freelance advantages
- Work from anywhere, set your hours
- Strong rates in lucrative niches
- Choose your clients and projects
- Productise (templates, retainers)
- Scale into a studio
β Freelance challenges
- Finding a steady client pipeline
- Income gaps between projects
- Competing with cheap & AI options
- Admin, invoicing, and chasing pay
- You must market yourself
Recommended path: build skills and a portfolio (employed or on small jobs), specialise in a high-value niche where you add real persuasive value, then go freelance with case studies behind you.
How to break into this field
- Study persuasion, not just grammar β read the classics of copy and marketing psychology.
- Build a portfolio β write real or spec ads, pages, and emails that show you can sell.
- Pick a niche β SaaS, finance, health, or e-commerce; specialism raises your rates.
- Get experience β junior roles, internships, or small freelance gigs.
- Use AI as a tool β let it draft, and add the strategy, voice, and polish that it can't.
πΈ What it actually costs to start
Realistic time and money to a copywriting career. Figures are rough global guides and vary by country.
What to know before you start
- Copy is persuasion, not prose β it's judged on whether it works, not how pretty it is.
- Your portfolio is your career β build it with results-focused samples.
- Niche down β specialists earn far more than generalists.
- Feedback isn't personal β iterating gracefully is core to the job.
- Use AI, don't fear it β let it draft; you bring the strategy and taste.
- Learn marketing β the best copywriters understand the whole funnel.
What copywriters wish they'd known
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job. A few worth hearing before you start:
I obsessed over clever wordplay. Then I learned that copy that converts is usually simple and clear, built on understanding the reader. Persuasion beats poetry every time.
Copywriter Β· 4 years in, agency
Niching into SaaS doubled my rate. As "a copywriter" I competed with everyone and AI; as the SaaS conversion specialist, clients sought me out and paid a premium.
Freelance copywriter Β· 7 years in, SaaS
AI panicked me until I made it my intern. It drafts, I direct and polish. I now produce more and spend my time on the strategy clients actually pay for.
Senior copywriter Β· 10 years in, in-house