About Journalism Careers
Journalism careers focus on ideas, culture, and communication. Report the truthβinform the public
Featured Careers
Top picksApplied & Industry
Applied problem-solving across industries.
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News Correspondent
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Investigative Journalist
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Photojournalist
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Video Journalist
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Anchor
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Copy Editor
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Fact Checker
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Feature Writer
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Political Reporter
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Business Reporter
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Sports Reporter
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Science Reporter
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Health Reporter
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Entertainment Reporter
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Crime Reporter
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Data Journalist
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Broadcast Producer
Create and craft original work.
Radio Jockey
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Newsroom Coordinator
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Assignment Editor
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Digital Journalist
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Social Media Editor
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Newsletter Writer
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Opinion Columnist
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Editorial Writer
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Press Officer
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Media Relations Executive
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Copywriter (News)
Write, edit, and shape communication.
Stringer
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
Foreign Correspondent
Build a career in journalism through applied work.
News Editor
Write, edit, and shape communication.
All Journalism Roles
Frequently Asked Questions
A master degree helps in academia, research, and some policy roles, but many humanities careers start with a bachelor degree. Employers value strong writing, analysis, and communication. A focused portfolio of essays, reports, teaching work, or research projects often matters more than extra degrees. A master degree is useful when a role demands specialization or teaching eligibility.
Education, communication, policy research, public administration, and content roles show steady demand. NGOs, think tanks, media, and corporate communication teams keep hiring even when markets slow. Demand varies by region, but roles that connect people, information, and institutions remain consistent. Strong writing and research skills improve job stability across sectors.
Start with clear writing, structured research, and presentation skills. Add practical tools like data basics, survey design, or content management. Build a portfolio with essays, reports, teaching plans, or community projects. Internships in media, NGOs, or policy organizations provide real-world credibility. Employers respond well to evidence of impact and clarity of thought.
Common employers include education, media, publishing, government, NGOs, consulting, and corporate communications. Research firms hire for qualitative analysis, while HR and training teams hire for people development. Museums, cultural institutions, and public policy groups also hire humanities talent. Career growth often comes from specialization in a domain like education, policy, or communications.
Yes. International organizations, universities, NGOs, and research institutions hire for writing, program management, policy, and communication roles. Global mobility improves with strong writing samples, language skills, and domain expertise. Building a portfolio with measurable outcomes helps across borders. A master degree can improve eligibility for international roles, but proven impact matters most.
Salary ranges vary by role and location, with faster growth in policy, consulting, and corporate communication. Teaching and publishing can be stable but slower growing. Career growth depends on specialization, leadership skills, and evidence of outcomes. Combining humanities strengths with digital tools or analytics can unlock higher-paying roles without abandoning the core discipline.
Common entry roles include content writer, research assistant, program coordinator, teaching assistant, communications associate, and community outreach roles. These positions build a base of writing, organization, and stakeholder skills. Early projects and volunteer work improve employability. A clear focus on one domain, such as education or policy, helps target the right roles.