In this article
Welcome to journalism
Journalists research, report, and tell the stories that inform the public β from breaking news to long investigations. It's a career of curiosity, writing, and real public purpose, transformed by the digital age. It's also competitive, deadline-driven, and not highly paid for the talent it demands. Whether you're a natural storyteller or weighing a media career, this guide covers what the job really involves, what you'll earn, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A journalist gathers, verifies, and presents news and stories accurately and engagingly across print, online, broadcast, or audio. In simple terms: they find out what's true and tell it to the public clearly and fairly. The work spans reporting, interviewing, research, and writing β increasingly with video, audio, and social skills too.
- Research stories and verify facts
- Interview sources and gather information
- Write and produce clear, accurate stories
- Meet deadlines and uphold ethics
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Curiosity β the drive to ask questions and dig for the real story
- Communication β clear, engaging writing and confident interviewing
- Scepticism β verifying claims and resisting spin
- Resilience β deadlines, rejection, and a tough industry
- Speed β producing accurate work fast, especially in news
- Integrity β accuracy and fairness are the foundation of trust
Education & background
A journalism or related degree helps, but isn't essential β clips (published work) and a portfolio matter most. Many break in through student media, blogs, internships, and persistence.
Typical daily responsibilities
- Finding stories β leads, tips, data, and ideas
- Research & interviews β gathering facts from sources
- Verifying β checking claims before publishing
- Writing & producing β to a deadline and a style
- Multimedia β increasingly video, audio, and social
- Following up β updating stories as they develop
Responsibilities by seniority
Junior / Trainee
0β2 years experience
- Smaller stories and rewrites
- Research and fact-checking
- Building a portfolio
- Learning the beat
- Lots of fast turnaround
Journalist / Reporter
2β6 years experience
- Owning a beat or area
- Breaking and developing stories
- Building sources
- Multimedia reporting
- Bigger features
Senior / Editor
6+ years experience
- Leading coverage
- Commissioning and editing
- Investigations
- Mentoring reporters
- Editorial strategy
Where journalists work
π° News & press
Newspapers and news sites β from local to national, online-first.
πΊ Broadcast
TV and radio news and current affairs.
ποΈ Digital & podcasts
Online outlets, newsletters, and audio β the fastest-growing space.
π Magazines & features
Longer-form, specialist, and feature writing.
πΌ Trade & B2B media
Specialist industry publications β steadier and often better paid.
βοΈ Freelance
Independent reporting and writing for many outlets.
A day in the life
π° News reporter
- Fast-moving, breaking stories
- Tight deadlines
- Lots of calls and interviews
- Reactive and unpredictable
- High output
π Feature / investigative
- Longer, deeper stories
- Weeks of research
- Fewer, bigger pieces
- More planning and craft
- Higher impact
Scan the news, your inbox, and social for what's breaking and what to chase.
Morning conference: pitch your stories and get assigned.
A source calls back; you get a quote that turns a routine story into a real one, then verify it with a second source.
Writing against a deadline, tightening every line.
Filing the piece, then a quick video clip for social.
A tip lands about tomorrow's story; the cycle never stops. The pay isn't the draw β the thrill of finding something true and telling it to thousands of people is. That's the appeal.
What this job gives you
- Real purpose β informing the public and holding power to account
- Variety β no two days or stories are the same
- A front-row seat β to events, people, and the world
- Transferable skills β writing, research, and communication
- The byline buzz β seeing your work published and read
Pros & cons
β Advantages
- Meaningful, public-interest work
- Endless variety
- No degree strictly required
- Skills transfer widely (PR, content)
- Digital opens new freelance paths
- A front-row seat to the world
- Genuine influence
β Disadvantages
- Modest, often falling pay
- Industry instability and cuts
- Intense deadline pressure
- Irregular, unsociable hours
- Very competitive to break in
- Online abuse and pressure
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
- Specialise in a beat β politics, business, tech, sport, or investigations
- Senior reporter / correspondent β own major coverage
- Editor β commission, edit, and lead a desk or title
- Broadcast / on-air β TV and radio presenting
- Freelance / independent β newsletters, podcasts, and your own brand
- Pivot β into PR, comms, or content (often better paid)
Journalist vs related media roles
Journalism sits within the wider world of writing and media. Here's how the neighbours compare.
| Role | Core focus | Key skills | Pay vs journalist | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journalist You are here |
Reporting facts and stories | Reporting, writing, ethics | Baseline | Competitive |
| Copywriter | Persuasive, selling writing | Writing, brand voice | Higher | Accessible |
| Video Editor | Editing video content | Editing, storytelling | Similarβhigher | Medium |
| PR / comms specialist | Shaping an organisation's message | Writing, media relations | Higher | Medium |
| Content Creator | Building your own audience | Content, editing, brand | Variable | Accessible |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional; journalism often pays below related communications roles.
Future outlook
The internet upended journalism's business model β and AI now generates basic news copy. But that has raised the value of what only humans do well. AI can summarise a press release; it can't cultivate a source, sit in a courtroom, verify a claim, or hold the powerful to account. Original reporting, investigation, and trusted voices matter more than ever, even as the industry restructures.
- The industry continues to restructure around digital and subscriptions
- AI automates routine copy; original reporting becomes more valuable
- Trust and verification are premium in an age of misinformation
- Newsletters, podcasts, and creator journalism open new models
- Multimedia and digital skills are now essential
Fun facts π€
"The Fourth Estate" is journalism's nickname β a reminder that a free press is considered a pillar of democracy alongside government itself.
The "five Ws" β who, what, when, where, why (and how) β are the centuries-old backbone of every news story, still taught on day one.
Investigations like Watergate show one story can change history β and why the craft attracts people who want to make a difference.
Many journalists now film, edit, write, and post a story themselves β the "one-person newsroom" is the digital-age norm.
"Don't bury the lede" β start with the most important fact β is the single most repeated rule in newsrooms, and great advice for any writing.
Myths about journalism
"Journalism is dying."
β Half-true. The old business model is shrinking, but demand for trusted reporting, newsletters, podcasts, and digital media is alive β the field is changing, not ending.
"AI will replace journalists."
β False. AI handles routine copy, but sources, verification, investigation, and judgement are human. It raises the value of real reporting.
"You need a journalism degree."
β False. A portfolio of published work matters far more. Many top journalists came from other fields entirely.
"It's glamorous and well-paid."
β False. Pay is modest, hours are irregular, and most of the work is unglamorous graft. Purpose, not money, is the draw.
"Journalists just give opinions."
β Reality: Reporting is about facts and fairness. Opinion is a distinct genre; good journalism keeps the two clearly separate.
Is this job right for you?
β Good fit if you...
- Are endlessly curious
- Write clearly and fast
- Love finding out the truth
- Are resilient and persistent
- Value purpose over pay
- Embrace digital and multimedia
β Maybe not for you if...
- You need a high, stable salary
- Deadlines and pressure stress you
- You want predictable hours
- Rejection knocks you back
- Industry uncertainty worries you
- You dislike chasing people for answers
Freelance & independent potential
Freelancing is central to modern journalism β and digital tools let journalists build their own audiences via newsletters and podcasts, sometimes more lucratively than a staff job.
β Freelance advantages
- Write for many outlets
- Build your own newsletter / podcast
- Own your audience and brand
- Flexible, location-independent
- Specialise in a lucrative niche
β Freelance challenges
- Unstable, often low income
- Constant pitching and chasing pay
- No staff benefits
- You build your own audience from scratch
- Admin, tax, and self-promotion
Recommended path: build clips and a niche through staff or internship roles, then freelance β and consider a newsletter or podcast to build an audience you own.
How to break into this field
- Start writing and publishing now β student media, a blog, or local outlets build clips.
- Learn the craft & law β news writing, ethics, and media law (NCTJ-style training helps).
- Add multimedia β video, audio, and social are now essential.
- Get internships & clips β published work is your real CV.
- Find a beat β specialising (tech, business, health) makes you more hireable.
πΈ What it actually costs to start
Realistic time and money to a journalism career. Figures are rough global guides and vary by country.
What to know before you start
- Clips beat credentials β publish work however you can, from day one.
- Go in for purpose β the pay won't be the reward; the work will.
- Multimedia is the job now β writing alone isn't enough.
- Specialise β a beat makes you more valuable and hireable.
- Skills transfer β if the industry wears on you, PR and content pay more.
- Accuracy is everything β your credibility is your whole career.
What journalists 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:
Nobody got hired off their degree β they got hired off their clips. The students who'd been publishing anywhere they could, however small, were the ones who broke in.
Reporter Β· 5 years in, digital news
The pay shocked me, honestly. I love the work, but I had to be realistic β I supplement with freelance and a newsletter. Go in for the purpose, with a plan for the money.
Feature journalist Β· 8 years in, magazines
Learning video and audio doubled my opportunities. The single-skill writer is rare now; the journalist who can report, film, and edit gets the jobs.
Multimedia journalist Β· 10 years in, broadcast