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💰★★★★☆Salary potential
🎓UniversityEducation
🕐Full-time / freelanceWorking hours
🏠Office / remoteWork style
📈MediumMarket demand

Welcome to the world of media & publishing

Whether you love language and a good story, or you want a career shaping the words others read, this guide covers what an editor actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.

Why read on? Editors are the shapers of words — turning raw text into clear, accurate, and compelling content, and deciding what gets published and how. It is a craft career, where a sharp eye for language and story shapes what readers see, with a path from copy editing into commissioning and editorial leadership.

General description

An editor shapes and polishes written content for publication. In simple terms: they turn raw text into clear, polished content. Think of them as the shaper of words.

  • Edit text for clarity, accuracy, and style
  • Commission and shape content
  • Work with writers and authors
  • Decide what gets published and how

Key skills & qualifications

Hard skills

Editing Language / grammar Storytelling Style guides Commissioning Fact-checking Proofreading Judgement

Soft skills

  • Language sense — what reads well
  • Sharp eye — spotting every error
  • Judgement — what works and what doesn't
  • Communication — working with writers
  • Decisiveness — what to publish
  • Patience — reworking text

Education & qualifications

A university degree, often in journalism, English, or a related field, is typical — editors are valued for language skill, judgement, and a strong body of work.

Degree typical Strong language skills Editing experience Portfolio of work

Typical responsibilities

  • Edit — for clarity and style
  • Commission — shaping content
  • Writers — working with authors
  • Accuracy — fact-checking and proofing
  • Decide — what gets published
  • Standards — keeping quality high

Responsibilities by seniority

Junior / Sub-editor

0–3 years

  • Edits and proofreads
  • Learns the style
  • Polishes text
  • Building skills
  • Toward editor

Editor

3–7 years

  • Commissions and shapes content
  • Works with writers
  • Trusted and skilled
  • Often specialising
  • Toward senior

Senior / Editor-in-Chief

7+ years

  • Sets editorial direction
  • Leads the team
  • Mentors editors
  • Manages publication
  • Toward editorial leadership

Where editors work

📰 Newspapers / magazines

Editorial teams.

📚 Book publishers

Book editing.

💻 Online media

Digital content.

🏢 Companies

Content and comms.

🎓 Academic / journals

Scholarly editing.

🌍 Freelance

Independent editing.

A day in the life

9:00 AM

Reviewing the day's content — what to edit, commission, and publish.

11:00 AM

Editing text for clarity, accuracy, and style, the craft at the core of the role.

1:00 PM

Working with a writer to shape a piece, the collaboration that makes it sing.

3:30 PM

Deciding what gets published and proofing the final copy.

5:00 PM

Text polished, content shaped, the right pieces published. The shaper of words. That's the job.

What this job gives you

  • Craft, language-focused career
  • Shapes what readers see
  • Freelance-friendly
  • Varied content
  • Path to editorial leadership

Pros & cons

✅ Advantages

  • Craft, language-focused career
  • Shapes what readers see
  • Freelance-friendly
  • Varied content
  • Path to editorial leadership
  • Intellectually rich
  • Tangible output

❌ Disadvantages

  • Deadline pressure
  • Industry under financial strain
  • Modest pay outside seniority
  • Subjective judgement calls
  • Detail-intensive
  • Competitive field

Salary potential — global rating

Rated against all professions globally, where ★★★★★★★★★★ = top 1% earners:

Junior / Sub-editor★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆Modest start
Editor★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆Comfortable
Senior Editor★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆Higher — seniority
Editor-in-Chief★★★★★★☆☆☆☆Strong — leadership

Career growth paths

  1. Senior Editor — lead editorial work
  2. Editor-in-Chief — run the publication
  3. Commissioning Editor — commission content
  4. Content Director — lead content strategy
  5. Freelance editor — independent work
  6. Publisher — run a publication
Key insight: Content needs shaping across media and business, keeping skilled editors in demand even as the industry shifts, with a path into editorial leadership.

Editor vs related roles

Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.

RoleCore focusNotePayEntry
Editor
You are here
Shapes and polishes contentEditing, judgementBaselineMedium
CopywriterWrites persuasive copyWritingSimilarMedium
JournalistReports the newsReportingSimilarMedium
Content ManagerManages content strategyContentHigherMedium
ProofreaderChecks final copyProofingLower-similarAccessible

Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.

Future outlook

Content needs shaping across media and business, keeping skilled editors in demand even as the industry shifts, with a path into editorial leadership.

  • Content always needs editing
  • Businesses need editorial skill too
  • Freelance demand is strong
  • Quality writing still matters
  • Path to editorial leadership

Fun facts 🤓

✏️

Editors are the shapers of what readers actually see.

🔍

A good editor is invisible — you only notice bad editing.

📚

From books to news to brands, everything needs an editor.

💻

Much editing is now freelance and remote.

📈

It's a path into commissioning and editorial leadership.

Myths about this role

"It's just fixing typos."

It's shaping clarity, structure, accuracy, and story — proofing is just one part.

"Anyone who can write can edit."

Editing is a distinct skill from writing — judgement and a reader's eye.

"AI will replace editors."

AI drafts and checks, but judgement, story, and standards need people.

"The industry is dead."

Media is shifting, but content and editorial skill are needed everywhere.

"It's a dead-end job."

It leads to commissioning and editor-in-chief.

Is this job right for you?

✅ Good fit if you...

  • Love language and story
  • Have a sharp eye for detail
  • Like shaping others' work
  • Have good judgement
  • Can meet deadlines
  • Want a path to editorial leadership

❌ Maybe not for you if...

  • You dislike detailed work
  • You want to be the writer, not the editor
  • You can't handle deadlines
  • You dislike subjective calls
  • You want high pay immediately
  • You want job security guarantees

Craft & language-focused

Editor is a craft career, where a sharp eye for language and story shapes what readers see, with a path from copy editing into commissioning and editorial leadership.

✅ Advantages

  • Craft, language-focused career
  • Shapes what readers see
  • Freelance-friendly
  • Varied content
  • Path to editorial leadership

❌ Challenges

  • Deadline pressure
  • Industry under financial strain
  • Modest pay outside seniority
  • Subjective judgement calls
  • Competitive field

How to get started

  1. Get a degree and strong language skills the usual foundation.
  2. Build editing experience and a portfolio editors are hired on work.
  3. Start as a sub-editor or proofreader learn the craft.
  4. Become an editor and specialise a genre, beat, or medium.
  5. Advance senior editor, commissioning editor, editor-in-chief.

What to know before you start

  • It's shaping content, not just typos
  • Editing is distinct from writing
  • Content needs editing everywhere
  • Freelance demand is strong
  • AI is a tool, not a replacement
  • It leads to editorial leadership

From the field

The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:

People think editing is fixing typos. That's proofing — one small part. Real editing is shaping the whole thing: structure, clarity, accuracy, voice, deciding what stays and what goes. A good editor makes a piece better in ways the reader never sees.

Editor · 7 years in

Writing and editing are different skills. Plenty of brilliant writers can't edit, because editing is about judgement — reading as the reader will, knowing what works. I learned it as a sub-editor, and it's served me everywhere words matter.

Editor · 5 years in

Everyone says the industry's dying and AI will finish the job. Media's changing, sure, but content and editorial judgement are needed everywhere now — brands, tech, publishing. AI drafts and checks; it doesn't decide what's worth publishing. That's still us.

Editor-in-chief · 14 years in

FAQ

Do I need a degree?
Usually yes — often in journalism, English, or a related field.
Is it just fixing typos?
No — that's proofing; editing shapes the whole piece.
Will AI replace editors?
AI drafts and checks, but judgement and standards need people.
Can I freelance?
Yes — much editing is freelance and remote.
Is the industry dying?
Media is shifting, but editorial skill is needed everywhere.
What's the career path?
To senior editor, commissioning editor, and editor-in-chief.