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Markets & Jobs Nonfiction

Nonfiction is a broad market, encompassing various formats and distribution channels. The digital space, including e-books, audiobooks, and online platforms, is a major growth area.

  • Book Publishers: Traditional and independent publishers are major markets. Some examples include HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, and university presses like Oxford University Press. Some publishers, such as Andrews McMeel Publishing, accept proposals directly from authors without agents.
  • Magazines and Journals: General interest and niche magazines publish a wide range of nonfiction, from literary journalism to personal essays and industry-specific articles. Examples include The Atlantic, The New Yorker, and Creative Nonfiction Magazine.
  • Online Platforms & Websites: Blogs, content websites, and digital news outlets are significant markets. Many have specific contributor guidelines, such as Vox’s First Person section or The Christian Science Monitor’s Home Forum.
  • Corporations and Consulting Firms: Businesses hire writers for in-house content, technical documentation, public relations materials, and consulting services.

Current Market Trends 

  • Timely Topics: High consumer demand for books and articles addressing current events, political discourse, and high-profile true crime investigations.
  • Health and Wellness: Continued interest in personal health optimization, longevity, mental health, and self-help categories.
  • Cultural Narratives: A growing appetite for works that explore marginalized perspectives, re-examine history, and cover social issues.
  • Digital Growth: While print is still significant in some genres (like travel books), digital formats, particularly audiobooks and e-books for ages 25-44, are key areas of growth.
  • Niche and Specialized Content: Growth in highly specialized topics and niche markets, allowing writers with specific expertise to thrive.

Ultimate Guide to Being a Freelancer 2025 Update

If you’re thinking of becoming a freelancer, you’re probably bored with your day job and looking for new challenges in your life. Maybe you love the idea of being your own boss, or maybe you just need more flexibility in your work schedule. Either way, the freelance life could be perfect for you.

Youth Writing Markets

A list of organizations for young adult authors and young writers. This list includes information about writing for children, writing young adult and where children and young adults can enter competitions.

teen jobs

35 Online Work Ideas to Earn Good Money Whilst Studying

Teens can work remotely and make good money. There are all kinds of jobs that students can try while they’re studying depending on their current education level and the time they have to dedicate to working. Online tutoring is particularly popular, but freelancing in writing and editing, IT, or gaming is also possible. Freelance web designers, resume writers, transcriptionists and linguists might all be able to have flexible schedules while they’re in school.

3 Ways to Make Your Non-Fiction Article Pitch Stand Out

3 ways to make your pitch stand out. Writing nonfiction articles for magazines, websites, and other media is unlike nearly any other form of writing. That’s because so much of a writer’s success and failure is determined at the pitching stage. This can be both a good and bad thing. Good because you don’t have to start writing until it’s already been accepted or assigned; bad because many writers would rather write than pitch their writing.

Writing Groups List

A list of writing groups that you can join and get help and information. Critique Groups can be very helpful. Reading your work out loud to others can help find areas that need improvement, and can also help boost your confidence when it all goes “write”.

Magazine Links

The magazines in the list below offer advice to aspiring and established writers.  Several of the magazines and ezines listed below are accepting submissions from new and established writers.  Some magazines and ezines are listed for the research material they provide.

Why E-Books?

Chris Randall
With thousands of writers all competing to get the favorable eye of the traditional publisher, it is not surprising that the great majority fail to get into print. Trying to compose those few words which will grab the attention of the person sitting in the selector’s chair, can be about as fruitful as picking out a seven way accumulator at a race meeting. Yet we go through these motions time and again, never stopping to ask why we contribute so eagerly to the publisher’s seat of unreachable power. But you don’t need to be told this. You have probably already experienced it yourself.

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