← Back to blog
💰★★★★☆Salary potential
🎓Experience / portfolioEducation
🕐Irregular / projectWorking hours
🏠Remote / studioWork style
📈CompetitiveMarket demand

Welcome to the world of film & media

Whether you have stories to tell and a love of film, or you want an honest look at a creative, competitive writing career, this guide covers what a screenwriter actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the real upsides and downsides.

Why read on? Screenwriters write the scripts that become films and television — building stories, characters, and dialogue from a blank page. It is a deeply creative, competitive career where talent, craft, and relentless persistence matter most, and streaming has created more demand for stories than ever, even as breaking in remains hard.

General description

A screenwriter writes scripts for films, television, and other screen media. In simple terms: they write the stories that become films and TV. Think of them as the architects of story.

  • Write scripts for screen
  • Build stories and characters
  • Craft dialogue and structure
  • Develop and revise screenplays

Key skills & qualifications

Hard skills

Storytelling Screenwriting craft Dialogue Structure Character Revision Genre knowledge Pitching

Soft skills

  • Storytelling — story is everything
  • Craft — screenwriting has real technique
  • Discipline — writing is daily work
  • Resilience — rejection and notes are constant
  • Imagination — creating worlds and characters
  • Collaboration — scripts are reworked by many

Education & qualifications

No degree required — screenwriting is built on talent, craft, and a strong portfolio of scripts. Courses help, but writing, persistence, and a great script matter most.

Screenwriting courses (optional) Strong scripts / portfolio Craft and practice Industry contacts

Typical responsibilities

  • Writing — scripts from scratch
  • Story — structure and plot
  • Characters — people who live
  • Dialogue — voices that work
  • Revision — endless drafts
  • Pitching — selling the story

Responsibilities by seniority

Aspiring Screenwriter

0–6 years

  • Writes spec scripts
  • Builds a portfolio
  • Learns the craft
  • Often other work too
  • Toward first sales

Working Screenwriter

6–12 years

  • Writes professionally
  • Sells or is commissioned
  • Builds a reputation
  • Represented by an agent
  • Specialising

Established Screenwriter

12+ years

  • Major credits
  • Choice of projects
  • Recognised name
  • Mentors writers
  • Top of the craft

Where screenwriters work

🎬 Film

Feature screenplays.

📺 TV / streaming

Series writing.

📣 Commercials

Advertising scripts.

🎮 Games

Game narrative.

🎥 Animation

Animated stories.

🏠 Freelance

Writing from anywhere.

A day in the life

9:00 AM

At the page — building a story, plotting structure, and finding the spine of a script.

11:00 AM

Writing scenes and dialogue, making characters live and the story move.

2:00 PM

Revising based on notes, the endless rewriting that screenwriting really is.

4:00 PM

Developing a pitch or new idea, the next project that might be the breakthrough.

6:00 PM

A story built, characters brought to life, a script moved forward. Architecting story for the screen. That's the craft.

What this job gives you

  • Deeply creative writing
  • Telling stories on screen
  • Streaming boomed demand
  • Remote-friendly
  • A true calling

Pros & cons

✅ Advantages

  • Deeply creative writing
  • Telling stories on screen
  • Streaming boomed demand
  • Remote-friendly
  • Flexible, independent work
  • Recognition for the writing
  • A genuine calling

❌ Disadvantages

  • Fiercely competitive
  • Very insecure income
  • Constant rejection and notes
  • Years to break in
  • Often needs other work
  • Scripts heavily reworked

Salary potential — global rating

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

Aspiring★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆Often unpaid early
Working Screenwriter★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆Variable — project-based
Established★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆Strong — recognised
Top Screenwriter★★★★★★★★☆☆Rare — top of profession

Career growth paths

  1. Working Screenwriter — build a writing career
  2. TV Writer — series and staff writing
  3. Showrunner — lead a series
  4. Script Editor — develop others' scripts
  5. Producer-Writer — control your projects
  6. Novelist / playwright — broaden writing
Key insight: Streaming created a huge appetite for stories and series, opening more opportunities for screenwriters, even as the field stays intensely competitive and breaking in remains hard.

Screenwriter vs related roles

Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.

RoleCore focusNotePayEntry
Screenwriter
You are here
Writes scripts for screenStorytelling, craftBaselineAccessible
Film DirectorLeads a film's visionDirecting, storytellingHigherAccessible
EditorShapes and refines contentEditing, judgementHigherMedium
JournalistReports the newsReporting, writingSimilarMedium
CopywriterWrites persuasive copyWritingLower-similarAccessible

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

Future outlook

Streaming created a huge appetite for stories and series, opening more opportunities for screenwriters, even as the field stays intensely competitive and breaking in remains hard.

  • Streaming boomed demand for stories
  • Series writing offers more work
  • Global platforms widen reach
  • Self-made content opens doors
  • But competition stays fierce

Fun facts 🤓

✍️

A screenplay is a blueprint — the foundation everything else on screen is built on.

📺

Streaming created a boom in series, and a huge appetite for writers.

📝

Screenwriting is rewriting — scripts go through countless drafts and notes.

💪

Most screenwriters face years of rejection before breaking in.

🌍

A great script can be made into a film seen around the world.

Myths about this role

"You just write the dialogue."

It's story, structure, character, and dialogue — the whole blueprint.

"Anyone can write a script."

Screenwriting is a demanding craft with real technique.

"You need to be in Hollywood."

Much writing is remote, and streaming opened global routes.

"It's quick money."

It's insecure, competitive, and takes years to break in.

"The first draft is the script."

Screenwriting is endless rewriting and notes.

Is this job right for you?

✅ Good fit if you...

  • Have stories to tell
  • Love film and TV
  • Are disciplined writers
  • Are resilient to rejection
  • Can take and use notes
  • Are deeply committed

❌ Maybe not for you if...

  • You need financial security
  • You can't handle rejection
  • You want predictable work
  • You dislike rewriting
  • You can't take criticism
  • You're not fully committed

Passion & reality

Screenwriting is a passion career of creative reward and real insecurity — most writers graft for years, and streaming has boomed demand even as breaking in stays fiercely competitive.

✅ Advantages

  • Deeply creative writing
  • Streaming boomed demand
  • Remote and flexible
  • Recognition for the work
  • But genuine insecurity

❌ Challenges

  • Fiercely competitive
  • Very insecure income
  • Constant rejection and notes
  • Years to break in
  • Often needs other work

How to get started

  1. Write scripts spec scripts build your craft and portfolio.
  2. Learn the craft structure, character, and dialogue.
  3. Build a portfolio strong scripts open doors.
  4. Get representation an agent helps you sell.
  5. Break in TV, film, or self-made work.

What to know before you start

  • It's the whole story blueprint, not just dialogue
  • Screenwriting is a demanding craft
  • It's mostly rewriting and taking notes
  • Most writers graft for years before breaking in
  • Streaming has boomed demand for stories
  • It's deeply creative but genuinely insecure

From the field

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

People think you just write the dialogue. A screenplay is the blueprint for everything — structure, character, plot, tone, the whole story. And it's rewriting more than writing; a script goes through endless drafts and notes before it's made.

Working screenwriter · 9 years in

Streaming changed the landscape. There's a huge appetite for series now, which means more writers' rooms and more work than there used to be. It's still brutally competitive, but there are more ways in than ever.

TV writer · 11 years in

The years before you break in are hard — rejection after rejection, writing spec scripts no one buys, doing other work to pay the bills. But if you have stories you have to tell, nothing else scratches that itch. You write because you must.

Established screenwriter · 15 years in

FAQ

Do I need a degree?
No — screenwriting is built on talent, craft, and a strong portfolio of scripts; courses help but a great script matters most.
Do you just write dialogue?
No — it's story, structure, character, and dialogue — the whole blueprint.
Do I need to be in Hollywood?
No — much writing is remote, and streaming opened global routes.
Is the income stable?
No — screenwriting is insecure and project-based, especially early on.
Has streaming helped?
Yes — it boomed demand for stories and series, though competition stays fierce.
Is the first draft the script?
No — screenwriting is endless rewriting and notes.