Metadata
Title
Creative writing
Category
international
UUID
36aee33c00734395bfa7936893d285b3
Source URL
https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/options/sectors/creati...
Parent URL
https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/options/sectors/
Crawl Time
2026-03-20T07:25:59+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Creative writing

Source: https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/options/sectors/creative-writing/ Parent: https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/options/sectors/

Creative writing involves a variety of roles and settings. The information here covers screenwriting, online content, playwright, writing fiction, non-fiction and poetry.

If you are interested in exploring other areas connected with writing you may like to research our other job sector pages of journalism, publishing, creative industries and advertising, marketing and PR.

The career of a writer can be extremely rewarding, allowing creativity and independent working. The rewards of seeing work in the public domain provide a sense of achievement.

However, it can also be unpredictable with periods of lone working, working to deadlines, irregular work and pay, and it requires dedication, persistence and self-motivation.

Find out about creative writing

See the Society of Authors website for background information, news items and advice.

Check Prospects’ job sector pages, covering media and internet, creative arts and design and its generic job profiles (linked from the job sector pages), such as writer.

Use the members dictionary on the Publishers Association to further explore publishers and their opportunities.

The Writers and Artists Yearbook is an invaluable resource, including listings of agents.

If you're interested in scriptwriting, visit the BBC Writers website for a range of resources, including interviews, advice and toolkits.

Attending conventions and conferences, such as CrimeFest, the international crime writers' convention in Bristol, can help you develop your knowledge of the industry, as well as providing a good opportunity to meet people and develop your networks.

As well as your creative output, you’ll also need to work on marketing yourself and your work. An agent or a publisher is likely to help with publicity, but it's important that you also look for opportunities yourself, such as:

For more specific training, you could consider the following:

There are many literary consultancy agencies, such as Cornerstones, which for a fee offer detailed feedback and advice to writers seeking publication.

Use of AI in creative writing

The perceived threats of AI on the future of human writers has become a key topic for discussion and protest (members of the Writers Guild of America went on strike in 2023 partly because of the fear AI would replace professional writers). Other areas of concern include the implications around ownership and creativity, and the use of existing work to train AI.

For more thoughts and observations of the impact of AI, see the following articles:

What skills do I need?

Your strengths and skills will evolve as a writer and knowing your strengths can be helpful in supporting your writing practice and yourself as a creative practitioner.

See where in-house content creation or editing skills are needed not only in the 'literary' world. You have transferable skills and can build up a network and CV via entry level, part-time volunteer, and intern positions at places like charities or companies, which have in-house magazines or outward communications (press releases etc) or even political parties and campaigning organisations. The Media Mentor can be a great place to start.

For more information about skills, see the York Strengths Professional Skills page.

Work experience

Say ‘Yes’ to working out of your comfort zone, and don't limit yourself, consider gaining experiences within all areas of the creative field. Spend a lot of time in environments involving writing and publishing and enquire what support is available to help your development such as mentoring schemes.

Find jobs

Jobs in writing can overlap with other sectors such as: journalism, publishing, media, marketing/advertising and communications. However, there are also many other exciting opportunities within the field of writing itself where your transferable skills may be helpful.

Most writers work freelance and are self-employed, and many manage their writing work alongside full or part-time jobs. This work may be related to their writing (such as lecturing and teaching on creative writing courses) or entirely unrelated.

There are also opportunities for writers in areas such as mobile phone content, computer game scripts and becoming a published novelist also writing reviews and literary criticism. You may also be interested in STEM and consider becoming a technical writer in the science, engineering and pharmaceutical sectors, see technical author. Other areas such as teaching, journalism, librarianship or publishing will require further vocational training.

Useful jobs sites include:

What can I do at York?

There are lots of things you can do right now at university to help you get the skills and experience for a career in creative writing.

More resources: people to follow, podcasts, blogs

Other useful websites

Connect with York graduates

Join York for Life to connect with our global network of alumni. Start building your own network - find people from your course, look at different careers, ask questions and request a mentor.

Use LinkedIn to make connections, follow organisations of interest, and find out what York graduates are doing. Find out more about using LinkedIn and networking.

Podcast

Keep up to date with the sector and learn about the types of jobs available with relevant episodes of our podcast, What do you actually do?

Other areas of Podcasts that may be of interest to you:

People to follow

Some individuals in the books industry such as Katie Ailes (creative arts), Hamza Jahanzeb (publishing and editing), and Sam Missingham (publishing and activism) are worth following online for the variety of resources that they create, promote, and/or host.

Carole Blake, From Pitch to Publication, still offers good advice, as well as an insight into the books industry a generation ago at the moment when it began to change dramatically.