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Career Transition

5 Signs It’s Time to Start Looking for a Different Job

From stalled growth to company instability, here are the signals that it might be time to update your resume and explore new opportunities.

time-to-leave-your-job-feature
John icon
By Corinne Grinapol
@Corinneavital
Corinne Grinapol is an assistant editor covering energy and environment at Engineering News-Record, with previous editorial roles at Adweek's FishbowlDC and Mediabistro. She studied international relations at SUNY Geneseo.
3 min read • Originally published January 26, 2016 / Updated April 7, 2026
John icon
By Corinne Grinapol
@Corinneavital
Corinne Grinapol is an assistant editor covering energy and environment at Engineering News-Record, with previous editorial roles at Adweek's FishbowlDC and Mediabistro. She studied international relations at SUNY Geneseo.
3 min read • Originally published January 26, 2016 / Updated April 7, 2026

The fact that you’re reading this probably means you’re at least considering whether it’s time to leave your job or stick with a job that’s not really too bad.

While the decision to stay or go is a very personal one—one that shouldn’t be made lightly—there are a few red flags that may help you determine if it’s time to freshen up the resume and head to the job boards. Read on.

1. You’re no longer learning.

You’ve mastered everything there is to know about your position—be it as a junior account executive or social media coordinator. You’re fast, efficient, and mainly cruise-control your way through the day. You’ve gotten so good at what you do because it’s all you do. Have you not been given new tasks or challenges to tackle? More importantly, have you asked to take on more? Showing initiative and a desire to do more are key to growing in any role.

If there’s a legit lack of learning opportunities—and you’re bored doing the same thing day after day—it may be time to move on. In a job market where employers increasingly expect candidates to bring specialized skills on day one, staying in a role where you’ve stopped growing means you’re not building the experience that makes you competitive for what comes next.

2. You can’t move up, or you don’t want to.

Maybe you’ve been a photo assistant for a while. Your duties have changed, but your title has not. Nor, for that matter, has your salary. It may be the case that no matter how good your work is, the positions above yours won’t be vacated any time soon. Or perhaps you’ve been passed over for a promotion. If you want to make it to the next level, you might just have to do it with a new organization.

Or maybe it’s you. If moving into a new role doesn’t appeal to you, the company you’re working for might not be the right one for you.

3. Company cha-cha-cha-changes.

Mergers, acquisitions, and restructurings are often make-or-break moments not only for the company but also for its employees. A change of ownership or a department overhaul may result in an unwanted shift in culture, a new boss, the loss of a mentor, or being handed projects that no longer interest you.

Bottom line is changes can bring exciting new possibilities—or they can leave you in the cold.

4. The business is hanging by a thread.

Your role might be a dream, but the rumors you’ve been hearing are becoming more substantial by the day: The company is in trouble.

If you suspect your employer won’t make it to next year, it’s better to start looking for a new job while you still have your old one.

5. You’ve reached the burnout stage.

Is your job the primary relationship in your life? Are your mornings colored by the dread of heading off to another day at the office? Do you get headaches or colds more often now than you used to?

If you can’t work with your boss to adjust your schedule or workload, moving on may be the best choice—for your health and, in the long run, your career. It may seem like getting off the hamster wheel will interrupt your career trajectory, but, unburdened by your responsibilities, you may gain a clarity of perspective that could move your career goals forward, or in another direction entirely.

Topics:

Be Inspired, Career Transition
Resumes & Cover Letters

3 Ways to Keep Your Resume Current (So You’re Ready When Opportunity Strikes)

Don't wait until you need a resume to update it. Track your wins, keep LinkedIn fresh, and refresh your resume twice a year so you're ready for whatever comes next.

Update your resume
Katie icon
By Debra Wheatman
Debra Wheatman is a certified professional resume writer and career strategist who has helped over 11,000 executives with personal branding and career positioning. She brings more than 20 years of corporate HR experience at companies including Condé Nast and Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia.
2 min read • Originally published July 26, 2016 / Updated April 7, 2026
Katie icon
By Debra Wheatman
Debra Wheatman is a certified professional resume writer and career strategist who has helped over 11,000 executives with personal branding and career positioning. She brings more than 20 years of corporate HR experience at companies including Condé Nast and Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia.
2 min read • Originally published July 26, 2016 / Updated April 7, 2026

Fewer media jobs and more competition for senior roles means you can’t afford to scramble when a recruiter reaches out or a posting closes in 48 hours. Here are three simple ways that you can ensure your resume is ready should you need one quick, in the event of unforeseen circumstances, like (heaven forbid) a layoff or (hallelujah!) an unexpected job offer.

1. Track Your Accomplishments

It can be challenging to remember achievements from a few years ago. You probably know what you did in general terms, but the measured results may be tough to recall. Keep a folder where you can store e-mails, reports and performance evaluations that document your achievements and the statistics. It only takes a few seconds to tuck this data into a safe place for review at a later date. When it is time to update your resume, you will be glad you saved those documents.

Want even more help on your resume? Get started with a FREE resume evaluation from Mediabistro’s Career Services. Our counselors and writers can help you update and upgrade your resume so you can confidently apply for the job you want.

2. Keep Your LinkedIn Profile Current

Your LinkedIn profile is much easier to update and maintain than your resume. You don’t have to be concerned about the appearance or spacing. You can quickly drop in a few lines about a recent project or new certification. Also, you are probably on your LinkedIn profile page at least once every week or two. Each time you are on LinkedIn, it is a reminder to add important new accomplishments.

3. Refresh Your Resume Twice Annually

Waiting one or two—or more—years to update your resume can be a large endeavor. The thought of such an effort can cause you to delay until you absolutely need a resume. Rather than wait that long, update your resume at least twice annually. Follow this checklist when performing your refresh:

  • Have your career goals changed?
  • Do you have a new position, new employer, new award or new degree to add?
  • What are your top accomplishments since your last update? Can you add a measured result for the accomplishment?
  • Is your resume style and format current?

Debra Wheatman is president of Careers Done Write.

The American Marketing Association is the pre-eminent force in marketing for best and next practices, thought leadership, and valued relationships across the entire discipline of marketing. Its online publications include posts on industry trends, career advice and more. Three Tips on Keeping Your Resume Up To Date was originally published by the American Marketing Association.

Topics:

Get Hired, Resumes & Cover Letters
Networking

Marketing Professional Associations: The Best Organizations to Join

Networking groups and professional organizations for marketers, PR professionals, and communicators

Joining professional associations
Katie icon
By Molly Folse
@MollyFolse

Molly Folse is a marketing leader with 20 years of experience in content strategy and social media, currently serving as Director of Content and Creative at Protective Life. She has led award-winning content and digital campaigns across financial services, higher education, travel, and consumer brands.

7 min read • Originally published June 13, 2016 / Updated April 7, 2026
Katie icon
By Molly Folse
@MollyFolse

Molly Folse is a marketing leader with 20 years of experience in content strategy and social media, currently serving as Director of Content and Creative at Protective Life. She has led award-winning content and digital campaigns across financial services, higher education, travel, and consumer brands.

7 min read • Originally published June 13, 2016 / Updated April 7, 2026

In this article: Why Join | Marketing Associations | Advertising | Public Relations | Digital & Content | Specialized | Online Communities | FAQs

Joining a professional association opens doors to valuable networking opportunities, industry training, and career advancement. The right membership can connect you with peers, provide access to exclusive resources, and add credibility to your resume.

Here are the top professional associations for marketers, advertisers, PR professionals, and communicators—along with membership costs and key benefits.

Why Join a Professional Association?

  • Networking – Connect with peers, mentors, and potential employers at events and through member directories
  • Professional development – Access training, certifications, webinars, and conferences
  • Industry credibility – Membership signals commitment to your profession
  • Job opportunities – Many associations have job boards exclusive to members
  • Resources – Research, templates, salary data, and industry benchmarks
  • Leadership experience – Serve on committees or local chapter boards

Marketing Professional Associations

American Marketing Association (AMA)

The American Marketing Association is one of the largest and oldest marketing organizations, with 30,000+ members and 70 local chapters across the country.

Benefits:

  • Local chapter networking events and national conferences
  • Professional certifications (PCM®)
  • Exclusive research, webcasts, and marketing resources
  • Templates, assessment tools, and planning guides
  • Leadership opportunities on local executive boards

Membership: Professional membership starts at $149/year (plus local chapter dues of $25-$75). Young professional rates are available for recent graduates.

Association of National Advertisers (ANA)

The Association of National Advertisers represents the marketing community with a focus on brand building, media, and advertising effectiveness.

Benefits:

  • Industry research and benchmarking studies
  • Training and professional development
  • Networking with brand-side marketers
  • Committees focused on specific marketing disciplines

Membership: Corporate membership (company must join); individual benefits through employer membership.

Product Marketing Alliance (PMA)

The Product Marketing Alliance is a growing community of product marketing professionals.

Benefits:

  • Product marketing certifications
  • Templates, frameworks, and playbooks
  • Slack community for peer networking
  • Virtual and in-person events

Membership: Free tier available; Pro membership with additional resources.

Advertising Professional Associations

American Advertising Federation (AAF)

The American Advertising Federation connects advertisers, agencies, media companies, and students through local clubs and college chapters nationwide.

Benefits:

  • Local chapter events and national conferences
  • ADDY Awards recognition program
  • Professional development and training
  • Advocacy for the advertising industry
  • College chapter involvement and mentorship opportunities

Membership: Varies by local chapter; discounted associate membership for young professionals under 32.

4A’s (American Association of Advertising Agencies)

The 4A’s is the leading trade association for advertising and marketing agencies, representing the agency perspective in the industry.

Benefits:

  • Agency management resources and best practices
  • Industry research and compensation studies
  • Training programs and conferences
  • Talent development initiatives

Membership: Agency membership (agencies must join as organizations).

The One Club for Creativity

The One Club celebrates creative excellence in advertising and design, known for The One Show awards.

Benefits:

  • Access to award-winning creative work archives
  • Networking with creative professionals
  • Educational programs and portfolio reviews
  • One Show award submissions

Membership: Individual memberships available; student and young professional rates.

Public Relations & Communications Associations

Public Relations Society of America (PRSA)

The Public Relations Society of America is the largest organization for PR and communications professionals, with 22,000+ members.

Benefits:

  • APR (Accreditation in Public Relations) credential
  • Local chapter events and national conferences
  • Professional development in social media, corporate communications, crisis management
  • Ethics standards and advocacy for the profession
  • Job center and career resources

Membership: Associate membership for those with less than 3 years experience: $60-$200 based on experience. Full professional membership: $260-$305/year plus chapter dues.

International Association of Business Communicators (IABC)

The IABC serves communication professionals globally, with members in 70+ countries.

Benefits:

  • Global Communication Certification (GCC)
  • World Conference and regional events
  • Communication World magazine and research
  • International networking opportunities

Membership: Professional membership approximately $300/year; student and transitional rates available.

Arthur W. Page Society

The Arthur W. Page Society is an exclusive membership organization for senior corporate communications executives.

Benefits:

  • Peer networking with Fortune 500 CCOs
  • Research on corporate communications trends
  • Executive-level events and conferences

Membership: By invitation; for senior communications executives only.

Digital Marketing & Content Associations

Content Marketing Institute (CMI)

The Content Marketing Institute is the leading resource for content marketing education and community.

Benefits:

  • Content Marketing World conference
  • Research reports and benchmarking studies
  • Online training and certification
  • Chief Content Officer magazine

Membership: Free content available; paid training and conference registration.

Data & Marketing Association (DMA)

The Data & Marketing Association focuses on data-driven marketing, including digital, email, and direct marketing.

Benefits:

  • Data and privacy compliance resources
  • Research on digital marketing effectiveness
  • Certification programs
  • Annual conferences and events

Membership: Corporate membership structure; individual benefits through employer.

Social Media Marketing Society

Social Media Marketing Society (from Social Media Examiner) is a membership community for social media marketers.

Benefits:

  • Weekly live training sessions
  • Private community for peer discussion
  • Exclusive research and guides
  • Discounts on Social Media Marketing World conference

Membership: Paid membership with monthly and annual options.

Specialized Marketing Associations

Society for Marketing Professional Services (SMPS)

The SMPS serves marketing professionals in the architecture, engineering, and construction (A/E/C) industries.

Benefits:

  • CPSM certification (Certified Professional Services Marketer)
  • Industry-specific training and resources
  • Local chapter networking
  • Annual Build Business conference

Membership: Approximately $350/year for professional members.

Association of National Advertisers B2B (formerly BMA)

The ANA B2B focuses on business-to-business marketing.

Benefits:

  • B2B marketing research and best practices
  • B2 Awards recognition program
  • Networking with B2B marketing leaders

Membership: Through ANA corporate membership.

American Association of Inside Sales Professionals (AA-ISP)

The AA-ISP serves inside sales and sales development professionals, with relevance for sales-focused marketers.

Benefits:

  • Inside sales training and certification
  • Research on sales development
  • Networking with sales professionals

Membership: Individual and corporate memberships available.

Online Communities for Marketing Professionals

Beyond formal associations, online communities offer additional networking opportunities:

The CMO Network (LinkedIn Group)

The CMO Network is a private, executive-level LinkedIn group for Chief Marketing Officers, Heads of Marketing, VPs of Marketing, and senior marketing executives leading brand, growth, and go-to-market strategy. This group is actually owned by the same company that runs Mediabistro, CognoGroup, so it’s a sister brand.

Who it’s for: Marketing leaders responsible for revenue growth, brand leadership, customer acquisition, performance marketing, marketing operations, marketing technology, and organizational design.

Discussion topics include:

  • Executive marketing leadership and board-level communication
  • Brand strategy, demand generation, and go-to-market planning
  • Marketing organization structure, hiring, and senior talent development
  • Media strategy, martech stacks, data, analytics, and AI adoption
  • The evolving role of the CMO and cross-functional leadership

Other Online Communities

  • Slack communities – RevGenius (revenue professionals), Superpath (content marketers), Demand Curve (growth marketers)
  • Reddit – r/marketing, r/PPC, r/socialmedia for peer discussions
  • Local meetup groups – Search Meetup.com for marketing groups in your city

How to Choose the Right Association

  • Consider your specialty – General marketing vs. PR vs. digital vs. industry-specific
  • Evaluate local chapters – Active local chapters provide more networking value
  • Check certification options – If credentials matter in your field, prioritize associations that offer them
  • Attend an event first – Many associations allow non-members to attend events before joining
  • Calculate ROI – Consider whether membership benefits justify the cost for your career stage

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best professional associations for marketers?

The top marketing associations include the American Marketing Association (AMA), the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA), the American Advertising Federation (AAF), and the Content Marketing Institute (CMI). The best choice depends on your specialty—PR, advertising, digital, or general marketing.

Is it worth joining a marketing professional association?

Yes, if you take advantage of the benefits. Professional associations provide networking opportunities, training, certifications, and job resources. The value depends on how actively you participate—attending events, using resources, and engaging with other members.

How much does it cost to join a marketing association?

Membership costs vary. The American Marketing Association charges around $149/year plus local chapter dues. PRSA ranges from $60 to $305/year, depending on experience level. Many associations offer discounted rates for students, recent graduates, and young professionals.

What’s the difference between AMA and PRSA?

The American Marketing Association (AMA) focuses on marketing broadly—strategy, research, digital, brand management. PRSA (Public Relations Society of America) focuses specifically on public relations and communications. Choose based on whether your career leans more toward marketing or PR.

Are there free marketing professional groups to join?

Yes. Online communities like The CMO Network on LinkedIn, Slack communities, Reddit marketing forums, and local Meetup groups offer free networking. Some associations also offer free tiers with limited benefits, or allow non-members to attend certain events.

Do marketing certifications from associations matter?

It depends on your field and career goals. The PRSA’s APR (Accreditation in Public Relations) is respected in PR. The AMA’s PCM (Professional Certified Marketer) demonstrates marketing competency. Certifications can help with career advancement, especially when changing industries or seeking promotions.

How do I find the local chapter of a marketing association?

Visit the national association’s website and look for a “chapters” or “local” section. Most major associations (AMA, PRSA, AAF) have chapters in major cities. Local chapters typically hold monthly events and have their own membership dues in addition to national dues.

Looking for your next marketing role? Browse marketing jobs on Mediabistro.

Topics:

Climb the Ladder, Networking
NYC

Coldest Aprils in New York since 1895

Coldest Aprils in New York since 1895
By Stacker Feed
1 min read • Published April 6, 2026
By Stacker Feed
1 min read • Published April 6, 2026

yul38885 // Shutterstock

Coldest Aprils in New York since 1895

Stacker compiled a ranking of the coldest Aprils in New York since 1895 using data from the National Centers for Environmental Information. Rankings are based on the lowest average temperature in each month. For each of the coldest months listed below, we’ve included the average state temperature, state-wide highs and lows for the month, and the total precipitation.

#9. April 1971 (tie)
– Average temperature: 39°F
– Monthly high temperature: 49.8°F
– Monthly low temperature: 28.2°F
– Total precipitation: 2.04″

#9. April 1904 (tie)
– Average temperature: 39°F
– Monthly high temperature: 48°F
– Monthly low temperature: 30°F
– Total precipitation: 3.07″

#7. April 1944 (tie)
– Average temperature: 38.6°F
– Monthly high temperature: 48.4°F
– Monthly low temperature: 28.8°F
– Total precipitation: 3.93″

#7. April 1940 (tie)
– Average temperature: 38.6°F
– Monthly high temperature: 48.5°F
– Monthly low temperature: 28.7°F
– Total precipitation: 3.85″

#6. April 1907
– Average temperature: 37.9°F
– Monthly high temperature: 47.4°F
– Monthly low temperature: 28.4°F
– Total precipitation: 3.15″

#5. April 2018
– Average temperature: 37.8°F
– Monthly high temperature: 47.3°F
– Monthly low temperature: 28.3°F
– Total precipitation: 3.86″

#4. April 1972
– Average temperature: 37.6°F
– Monthly high temperature: 48.2°F
– Monthly low temperature: 27.1°F
– Total precipitation: 2.92″

#3. April 1975
– Average temperature: 36.9°F
– Monthly high temperature: 46.8°F
– Monthly low temperature: 27°F
– Total precipitation: 2.31″

#1. April 1943 (tie)
– Average temperature: 36.3°F
– Monthly high temperature: 46.2°F
– Monthly low temperature: 26.4°F
– Total precipitation: 3.7″

#1. April 1926 (tie)
– Average temperature: 36.3°F
– Monthly high temperature: 46.4°F
– Monthly low temperature: 26.3°F
– Total precipitation: 3.01″

Topics:

NYC
LA

Coldest Aprils in California since 1895

Coldest Aprils in California since 1895
By Stacker Feed
1 min read • Published April 6, 2026
By Stacker Feed
1 min read • Published April 6, 2026

yul38885 // Shutterstock

Coldest Aprils in California since 1895

Stacker compiled a ranking of the coldest Aprils in California since 1895 using data from the National Centers for Environmental Information. Rankings are based on the lowest average temperature in each month. For each of the coldest months listed below, we’ve included the average state temperature, state-wide highs and lows for the month, and the total precipitation.

#10. April 1929
– Average temperature: 50.1°F
– Monthly high temperature: 61.9°F
– Monthly low temperature: 38.2°F
– Total precipitation: 1.82″

#9. April 2003
– Average temperature: 50°F
– Monthly high temperature: 60.7°F
– Monthly low temperature: 39.4°F
– Total precipitation: 3.98″

#8. April 1970
– Average temperature: 49.9°F
– Monthly high temperature: 62.8°F
– Monthly low temperature: 37.1°F
– Total precipitation: 0.68″

#7. April 1983
– Average temperature: 49.8°F
– Monthly high temperature: 60.2°F
– Monthly low temperature: 39.3°F
– Total precipitation: 3.12″

#6. April 1955
– Average temperature: 49.6°F
– Monthly high temperature: 61.7°F
– Monthly low temperature: 37.6°F
– Total precipitation: 2.42″

#5. April 1912
– Average temperature: 49.5°F
– Monthly high temperature: 59.9°F
– Monthly low temperature: 39°F
– Total precipitation: 2.83″

#3. April 1963 (tie)
– Average temperature: 49°F
– Monthly high temperature: 59.2°F
– Monthly low temperature: 38.8°F
– Total precipitation: 4.39″

#3. April 1896 (tie)
– Average temperature: 49°F
– Monthly high temperature: 59.6°F
– Monthly low temperature: 38.3°F
– Total precipitation: 4.28″

#2. April 1975
– Average temperature: 47.1°F
– Monthly high temperature: 57.9°F
– Monthly low temperature: 36.3°F
– Total precipitation: 2.08″

#1. April 1967
– Average temperature: 44.9°F
– Monthly high temperature: 54.2°F
– Monthly low temperature: 35.7°F
– Total precipitation: 4.44″

Topics:

LA
Advice From the Pros

Writing Career Advice from 20+ Authors and Editors Who’ve Actually Done It

We pulled advice from people who actually have bylines. Editors at major publications, working freelance writers, journalists building new things. Here's what they said.

author
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
13 min read • Originally published April 6, 2026 / Updated April 6, 2026
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
13 min read • Originally published April 6, 2026 / Updated April 6, 2026

There’s no shortage of writing career advice out there. Most of it is written by someone who has thought carefully about what would sound useful, rather than someone who has actually been in the room. We wanted the other kind.

So we went back and pulled out advice we could find from people who actually have bylines: editors at major publications, working freelance writers, authors with real books, journalists who’ve built new things from scratch. More than twenty of them. What follows is everything they said.

On Pitching: What Editors Actually Want to See

Ruth Spencer was Senior Editor at New York Magazine’s The Cut when she spoke to us about what separates pitches that get assigned from ones that get deleted. She’s not being harsh. She’s describing something most writers miss entirely.

“Come with more than an idea,” she said. “If it’s an essay, you should have a thesis or an angle, not just a topic that you’re interested in ‘exploring.’ If it’s a reported piece, tell me the question you’re interested in answering and who you’re going to talk to to do so.”

She also said this, which is worth putting somewhere you can see it: “Write the pitch like you’d write the piece. Give me a sense of your style, tone, wit, humor. Don’t be lazy. I read pitches closely, and I often assign based on whether or not I like the way it’s written.”

Maximillian Potter was Editor at Large at Esquire when he added the professional layer to that. His favorite writers show up having done actual work before hitting send. “They know they already have the cooperation of X, Y or Z. They knew what would be the best timing for the piece and why. They anticipate me reading their query and basic questions I’ll have, and they have them answered before I ask them.”

That preparation isn’t just impressive. It compounds. Writers who work that way tend to build the kinds of relationships that eventually become a reliable pipeline of repeat assignments rather than a string of one-offs.

Cristina Goyanes, a writer who spent time as an editor at Women’s Health, pushed the package thinking further than most. “It would be a big mistake if you felt like creating visual aids was the job of the editor. They need to see you’ve thought about the complete package.” She’s also the person who pointed out that a great headline can carry a pitch even when the reporting is still loose: “If you’re still working on fleshing out the story details, but the headline is too good to pass up, it can save your butt.” Our own guide to getting more assignments through headline strategy makes the same case.

Stephanie Cain was Real Weddings Editor at The Knot when she offered the simplest advice in this whole collection, and probably the least followed: “I like when writers ask what type of content we are looking for, then craft pitches accordingly. All editors have gaps in the content they want showcased on their sites and in their magazines, so it makes for better collaboration.” She also added, almost in disbelief: “This is so simple that it shocks me it still happens regularly. Check your spelling.”

And then there’s the data point. Florida-based sports writer Jon Finkel has been pitching stories for years, and he knows what gets editors off the fence. “Get an editor excited,” he said. “A good statistic or recent study can give an old topic new life.” Google Alerts, EurekAlert, PR Newswire — these exist for a reason.

Fresh research gives a pitch urgency that no amount of polished prose can manufacture. We’ve covered what editors really want from writers from multiple angles, but Finkel’s version is the most tactical.

On Freelancing: What Working Writers Know

Stephanie Breijo was Restaurants and Bars Editor at Time Out Los Angeles when she told us she was tired of a specific kind of email. “I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve received ‘got any stories for me?’ without any ideas for content attached,” she said. “It makes the editor’s job so much easier if writers are actively pitching relevant content and not just lining up to be told what to do.”

Editors are genuinely stretched. They are not sitting around hoping a freelancer will ask them what to write. If you’ve ever wondered why some freelance careers take hold and others stall, the research and the practitioners point to the same place: the writers who last are the ones who bring problems solved, not problems created. Even something as simple as looking at what a publication hasn’t covered in the last six months can surface a real gap worth pitching into.

Cain also weighed in on the professional basics. “Send us your backup material and contacts for fact-checking,” she said. “It’s a huge help. If you have recorded an interview, email over the audio file. If you worked with a PR rep, send us their phone number.” It’s such a small thing, and it matters enormously. Among the mistakes that quietly end writing careers, treating the assignment as finished when the draft goes in is near the top of the list.

Teri Cettina, a freelance writer based in Oregon whose work has run in major parenting publications for years, was honest about something most people don’t want to say out loud. “The first time an editor sees my name, they might dismiss me,” she said. “If they see my name routinely coming across their email, they start to pay attention.” She broke into the industry through persistence more than any single brilliant pitch. She also said something about where ideas actually come from that stuck with us: “I’ve always loved film. I have a very long list of podcasts, shows and films that I’m constantly trying to chip away at. It keeps me motivated and engaged to create content of my own.” The writers who are never at a loss for story ideas tend to be the ones who consume relentlessly — and who let what they love actually inform what they pitch.

Finkel again, on something the freelance conversation usually avoids. “There are so many places where the goal isn’t just an awesome article but tons of clicks,” he said. “Publications want writers who understand promotion and can help amplify their content.” If you have a newsletter, a social following, or any real community around your work, that belongs in your pitch. It’s business information, and editors care.

This connects to a larger shift reshaping the market: the movement from performance advertising to product storytelling has pulled a lot of companies into the content business who were never there before. The addressable market for freelance writing work is bigger than it’s been in years, even if legacy publishing feels squeezed.

On Craft: Drafts, Word Count, and Waiting

Potter on the writers he kept calling back: “My favorite writers are confident but not cocky. They recognize that a first draft is exactly that, a first draft. My favorite writers know that we will almost certainly do a second, third and perhaps a fourth draft.” Revision isn’t a sign something went wrong. It’s how pieces actually get made.

Spencer has a related frustration she described with real feeling. “Stick to the agreed upon word count,” she said. “If I open your piece and find that you’ve gone way over, that just means I’ve got a lot more work to do than I originally allotted for the piece. And that’s frustrating.” Running long is a form of disrespect that writers often don’t recognize as such. Every extra word is time borrowed from someone else’s day.

Both Spencer and Potter said versions of the same thing about patience. Spencer’s version: “My favorite writers are patient. Good editors know it’s hard out there and you’re busting your ass. And my favorite writers know that we are doing our very best as editors to be decent collaborators and human beings.” Potter added: “We try to get you feedback and communicate as responsively and as quickly as we can, but sometimes it takes a while.”

Waiting is the unglamorous center of a writing career. The writers who handle it well — who follow up thoughtfully and don’t go dark and don’t spiral — are the ones editors genuinely enjoy working with. That’s what actually drives repeat work. Talent is common enough. Reliability is rarer.

On the Creative Life: Curiosity, Boldness, and Knowing When to Ask

Miriam Naggar runs NORTHBOUND, a video production company. She’s been in the business of visual storytelling long enough to have opinions about what makes creative people actually good at their jobs — and it’s not what most people expect. We talked to her about the career path and what she’s learned along the way.

“A good producer is curious about people and how things come together,” she said. “Part of being a producer is learning what talents people have to offer and creating a network of artists and craftspeople with various skills.” That’s a description of craft, but it’s also a description of how you stay employed. The people who build long creative careers are the ones who are genuinely interested in how other people work.

Naggar also made the jump to independent work after years of full-time employment, and she talked about what that actually felt like: “I had worked full-time consistently since college graduation. The idea of leaving stability is constantly nerve-wracking and terrifying. I don’t think I would have made this decision if the possibilities didn’t excite and exhilarate me so much.” There’s no clean version of that leap. It’s just a question of whether the thing pulling you forward is stronger than the thing keeping you in place.

Our look at corporate writing as a path is worth reading for anyone who wants the income stability of an institution without the constraints of a newsroom.

One of her best lines came from a mentor: “When you go to the grocery store, are you the type of person who searches for what you need? Or do you ask for help before looking?” She’s learned to ask. And what she’d tell her earlier self: “Be bolder sooner. I got there after entering my 30s, and I think that’s natural, but I’d say get there faster.”

On Leaving Well: Advice from Authors Who’ve Written About It

How you exit a job is its own kind of writing assignment, and some of the authors in our archive thought carefully about what that communication should accomplish. Media is a small industry. The people you worked with will come back around, sometimes sooner than you’d think. The rules for leaving without burning bridges aren’t complicated, but the tone requires actual thought.

Catharine Bramkamp, who wrote Don’t Write Like You Talk, was clear about the target. “The goal is to not sound petty, small, or mean,” she said. “You want to be the good guy, you want to be the confident one. You want the company to be really sorry they couldn’t keep you around.”

Donna Flagg, author of Surviving Dreaded Conversations, took a more tactical approach. “Your goodbye email should be friendly but vague about your reasons for departing,” she said. “Mentioning a relocation is harmless, but otherwise, leave the reasons alone.” That’s not evasion. That’s professionalism. The reasons you’re leaving are yours to keep.

Sandra E. Lamb, who wrote How to Write It, raised something most people don’t think about until it’s too late. “Farewell emails to close contacts should go to their personal email accounts,” she said. “Many organizations have strict email policies that can create problems.” Which account the message lands in matters more than the message itself, sometimes.

Douglas Hardy, who was general manager and editor at Monster Careers, brought it down to logistics. “Want a clean, quick exit? Send the email on your last day. Want handshakes and hugs? Send it a few days before you leave. A good rule of thumb: don’t let a weekend pass between your announcement and your departure.”

On the Industry: What’s Actually Happening Right Now

The structural shifts in media are real, and the journalists and editors in our archive who’ve spoken about them are not being dramatic. Our media job market analysis tracks three forces in parallel: content operations consolidating, AI producing new titles like “AI editor” and “prompt strategist” that didn’t exist two years ago, and remote work having permanently widened the competition for every open role. More people are applying for things they never could have applied for before. That cuts both ways.

Emma Tucker was Editor of The Wall Street Journal when she was public about what drove the WSJ’s 33 percent digital subscriber growth. Her language was precise: “Deliberate digital infrastructure investment. Editorial repositioning. Organizational discipline about who the publication serves.” The papers that are growing are the ones that made specific decisions, not the ones that waited to see what happened.

Tony Gallagher at The Times of London reported that digital subscriptions now fully cover the cost of a 700-person newsroom. That’s an important data point for any writer thinking about where to build their career. The publications with real subscriber relationships have money for real editorial. They’re not cutting their way to stability. They’re earning it, and they’re hiring people who can help them do it.

Lachlan Cartwright took a different route. He left legacy media entirely to launch Breaker, his own newsletter. One year in, he was matching his previous salary. As we noted in our own coverage, he pulled it off through the combination of a strong reporting reputation, a specific niche, and a real strategy for capturing and retaining subscribers. Most journalists don’t have all three of those simultaneously. Which is why the solo path works for some people and goes badly for others, and why it’s worth being honest with yourself about which category you’re in before you quit anything.

Sara Fischer at Axios has done some of the most useful reporting on what AI is actually doing to media careers. The capabilities that hold value in an AI environment, as she’s tracked it, are source relationships, narrative judgment, ethical decision-making, and complex editorial project management. Things that require relationships, history, and trust. Our piece on creative job security in the age of AI digs into where that value actually lives.

There’s also a less obvious place AI is creating demand: technical writing. Companies are increasingly hiring writers specifically to verify, fix, and restructure AI-generated documentation. Bureau of Labor Statistics data puts the median salary for technical writers at $80,050, and API documentation specialists earn well above that. For writers who are feeling squeezed in traditional media, it’s worth knowing that adjacent field exists and is growing fast.

On Digital Skills: The Practical Stuff

Alyson Jamison was Senior Program Manager at Stalwart Communications when she made the case for analytics literacy that applies to any writer working in digital: “Being familiar with Google Analytics is a must. Are there certain types of blog topics that are attracting more visitors to the website? What social network is providing the most referral traffic? It’s incredibly important to be well-versed in Google Analytics.” A writer who understands their own performance data can advocate for their own work in ways that a writer who can’t simply can’t. That’s a real advantage in editorial roles where resource allocation is always a conversation.

Angela Stairs, who was Content Marketing Specialist at seoplus+ when she spoke to us, was honest about the bar for visual skills: “Basic photo editing and video editing skills are becoming more and more important if you are looking to work in digital media, marketing, advertising or journalism. Even communications positions with smaller businesses are calling for at least beginner-level skills in these areas.” Two to four weeks of focused practice gets most people to functional. That’s a short investment for something that comes up in a lot of job descriptions.

Cassie Galasetti, Co-founder at Social Sidekick Media, talked about something that gets overlooked in conversations about digital skills — that digital relationship-building is a skill too. “On the public relations side of our business it’s extremely vital to learn how to find specific writers, reporters, producers and bloggers,” she said. “Not only that, you need to learn how to connect and build a relationship with them as well. In person versus digitally can be very different.” A thoughtfully maintained LinkedIn profile is still one of the most underused tools for writers who want to be found by people hiring.

Oleg Korneitchouk at SmartSites put the keyword piece plainly. “The ability to choose the right keywords and write enticing, keyword-friendly headlines is crucial,” he said. “It gives you a huge advantage to get more eyeballs to your content.” For any writer who publishes online, this is now baseline literacy. The research consistently shows that going three or four skills deep beats spreading attention across ten. Pick the ones that show up most in the jobs you want and get genuinely good at those.

The Thread

Twenty-something voices, across decades and formats and beats and book deals. A few things come up over and over.

Show up with work done. Build relationships slowly and take them seriously. Understand the business you’re operating inside of, not just the craft. Revision is the job. Patience is a skill that pays.

Naggar put it the most simply: “Keep learning, keep watching. I am self-taught and always learning, so Google is my best friend.”

The jobs in this field will look different five years from now than they do today. They looked different five years ago too. The people who’ve lasted through multiple cycles of that change are, almost without exception, the ones who stayed curious and stayed useful. That combination travels.


Mediabistro is the career platform for media and creative professionals. Browse open jobs, subscribe to the Media Careers newsletter, and find more at mediabistro.com.

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Advice From the Pros
Advice From the Pros

SEO Specialist, Expert, and Consultant: What These Positions Do and How to Get Hired

Job description, skills, salary, and how to break into this in-demand digital marketing role.

SEO Specialist working on digital marketing strategy
Amirah icon
By Jenell Talley
Jenell Talley is a journalist and program analyst with a background spanning media, government, and editorial work. She holds a journalism degree from Howard University and a master's in human resources management from the University of Maryland.
9 min read • Originally published April 26, 2017 / Updated April 6, 2026
Amirah icon
By Jenell Talley
Jenell Talley is a journalist and program analyst with a background spanning media, government, and editorial work. She holds a journalism degree from Howard University and a master's in human resources management from the University of Maryland.
9 min read • Originally published April 26, 2017 / Updated April 6, 2026

An SEO Specialist (also called an SEO Expert, SEO Strategist, or Search Engine Optimization Specialist) is responsible for improving a website’s visibility and ranking in search engines such as Google and Bing. By optimizing content, technical elements, and off-site signals, SEO specialists help businesses attract more organic traffic and ultimately, more customers.

If you’re curious about what SEO specialists actually do day-to-day, what skills you need, how much they earn, and how to become one, this guide covers everything you need to know.

Quick Links

  • SEO Specialist Job Description
  • Essential SEO Skills & Qualifications
  • SEO Specialist Salary
  • How to Become an SEO Specialist
  • Career Path & Progression
  • FAQs

SEO Specialist Job Description: Roles & Responsibilities

google search console
Google Search Console

A search engine optimization (SEO) specialist improves a website’s rankings on major search engines like Google and Bing. The goal is to increase organic (non-paid) traffic, generate leads, and drive revenue.

“The primary purpose of an SEO specialist is the same as any marketer: create more sales for the company,” says Brett Bastello, SEO manager at Inseev Interactive, a digital marketing agency in San Diego.

SEO specialists ensure on-page optimization—keyword targeting, internal linking, clean URLs, and meta tags—to deliver relevant search results and a positive user experience. They also handle off-page optimization, including link building, digital PR, and brand mentions.

Typical SEO Specialist Responsibilities

  • Conducting keyword research and competitive analysis
  • Optimizing on-page elements (title tags, meta descriptions, headers, content)
  • Improving site architecture and internal linking
  • Monitoring and improving Core Web Vitals and page speed
  • Managing Google Search Console and analytics tools
  • Identifying and fixing technical SEO issues (crawl errors, redirects, 404s)
  • Building high-quality backlinks through outreach and digital PR
  • Creating and optimizing content for search intent
  • Tracking rankings, traffic, and conversions
  • Reporting SEO performance to stakeholders
  • Staying current with algorithm updates and industry trends

Many SEO professionals also work closely with content, marketing, and development teams. Some specialize in technical SEO, while others focus on content strategy or link building.

SEO in 2026: AI, GEO, and Search Everywhere

The role of an SEO specialist has evolved dramatically. With the rise of AI Overviews in Google search results and the growth of “Search Everywhere” behavior, specialists now optimize for visibility across multiple platforms—not just traditional search engines.

Modern SEO strategies increasingly include:

  • Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) — Structuring content to be cited by AI models like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity
  • E-E-A-T optimization — Demonstrating Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness
  • Video and social search — Optimizing for YouTube, TikTok, and social platform search functions
  • Voice search optimization — Targeting conversational, question-based queries

Today’s SEO specialist is part data scientist, part content strategist, part brand builder—ensuring a brand’s presence is felt not just on Google’s first page, but in every digital conversation.

The Interplay Between SEO and Other Digital Marketing

SEO doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Its success is intertwined with other digital marketing strategies, including content marketing, social media, email marketing, and paid search (SEM/PPC).

For example, content marketing efforts bolster SEO by generating backlinks and enhancing topical authority. A strong social media presence can amplify content reach, driving engagement signals that indirectly benefit SEO. Understanding SEM is essential—Cost per Click (CPC) data serves as a useful barometer of keyword competitiveness.

The most effective SEO specialists take a holistic approach, aligning their work with broader marketing goals rather than optimizing in isolation.

Essential SEO Specialist Skills & Qualifications

What skills do you need to become an SEO specialist? The role requires a blend of technical knowledge, analytical ability, and communication skills.

Technical SEO Skills

  • Keyword research — Identifying high-value search terms and understanding search intent
  • On-page optimization — Title tags, meta descriptions, header structure, and content optimization
  • Technical SEO — Site architecture, crawlability, indexation, Core Web Vitals, schema markup
  • Link building — Outreach, digital PR, backlink analysis
  • Analytics & reporting — Google Analytics 4, Google Search Console, SEO dashboards
  • SEO tools — Ahrefs, SEMrush, Moz, Screaming Frog, Surfer SEO
  • Basic HTML/CSS — Understanding how websites are structured
  • Content management systems — WordPress, Webflow, Shopify, etc.

Soft Skills

  • Communication — Explaining SEO strategy and results to non-technical stakeholders
  • Analytical thinking — Interpreting data and making strategic decisions
  • Adaptability — Staying current with algorithm changes and industry shifts
  • Project management — Prioritizing tasks and managing multiple initiatives
  • Writing ability — Creating or editing SEO-optimized content

“Communication skills are everything,” says Chris Horton, head consultant and SEO expert at Dr. Rankwell, an SEO consultancy in Lawrenceville, GA. “If a client hires you to grow their site, you have to articulate the best course of action and explain why it’s best for them. They have to conceptualize what you’re doing so they can own it and feel confident you’re making wise decisions for their company.”

Assessing risks—”knowing the difference between changes that can greatly damage a website’s progress and changes that can move the needle forward”—and forecasting trends are also critical, Horton adds.

SEO Specialist Salary & Compensation

According to Glassdoor, SEO Specialist salaries typically range from $65,000 to $114,000 per year, with the median around $86,000. However, there’s significant variability based on location, experience, and company size.

Senior SEO roles (SEO Manager, Director of SEO, Head of Organic) can command $100,000–$150,000+, especially at larger companies or agencies. Many companies also offer performance bonuses tied to traffic or revenue targets.

Freelance SEO consultants often charge $75–$200+ per hour, depending on their expertise and client base, translating to significantly higher annual earnings than salaried positions.

SEO Salary by Experience Level

Experience Level Typical Salary Range
Entry-Level / SEO Analyst $45,000 – $60,000
Mid-Level SEO Specialist $65,000 – $85,000
Senior SEO Specialist $85,000 – $125,000
SEO Manager / Lead $95,000 – $150,000
Director of SEO / Head of Organic $150,000+

How to Become an SEO Specialist

There’s no single path to becoming an SEO specialist. While a degree in marketing, communications, or a related field can be helpful, most SEO knowledge is learned through hands-on experience and self-study.

“Because SEO is so specific, there aren’t a lot of college classes that’ll give you the skills you need,” explains Horton. “I recommend studying the abundance of material available online.”

Steps to Get Started

  1. Learn the fundamentals — Start with free resources from Google Search Central, Moz’s Beginner’s Guide to SEO, and Ahrefs Academy
  2. Get certified — Complete Google Analytics and Google Ads certifications; consider HubSpot or SEMrush certifications
  3. Practice on your own site — Start a blog or portfolio site to experiment with SEO tactics
  4. Learn the tools — Get familiar with Google Search Console, Google Analytics 4, and at least one paid tool (Ahrefs, SEMrush, or Moz)
  5. Stay current — Follow industry publications like Search Engine Land, Search Engine Journal, and SEO Twitter/LinkedIn
  6. Build a portfolio — Document your results (traffic growth, ranking improvements) to show potential employers
  7. Apply for entry-level roles — Look for SEO Analyst, SEO Coordinator, or Junior SEO Specialist positions

SEO Team Structure & Reporting Lines

Where an SEO specialist sits in an organization depends on the company’s size and structure. They may report to:

  • Marketing Director or VP of Marketing
  • Director of Digital Marketing
  • Head of Content or Content Marketing Manager
  • CMO (at smaller companies)
  • Directly to clients (for consultants and agency professionals)

At larger companies, there may be dedicated SEO teams with specialists focused on technical SEO, content SEO, and link building. At smaller companies or startups, one person often handles all aspects of SEO.

Similar Job Titles

If you’re searching for SEO jobs, you may see the role listed under various titles:

  • SEO Specialist / SEO Expert / SEO Strategist
  • SEO Analyst
  • SEO Manager
  • Search Engine Marketing (SEM) Specialist
  • Digital Marketing Specialist
  • Organic Growth Manager
  • Content SEO Specialist
  • Technical SEO Specialist

“This job is really soup to nuts,” says Bastello. “Oftentimes when I’m trying to explain my job to others, I just say ‘digital PR.'” 

Career Path and Progression for SEO Specialists

A career in SEO offers a dynamic and rewarding trajectory. Here’s a typical progression:

  1. SEO Analyst / Junior SEO Specialist — Learning keyword research, on-page optimization, and analytics
  2. SEO Specialist — Executing full SEO strategies, managing projects independently
  3. Senior SEO Specialist — Leading complex initiatives, mentoring junior team members
  4. SEO Manager / SEO Lead — Overseeing SEO strategy, managing a team or agency relationships
  5. Director of SEO / Head of Organic — Setting strategy at the organizational level, reporting to the C-suite
  6. VP of Marketing / CMO — For those who broaden into general marketing leadership

The versatility of SEO expertise also allows transitions into related fields such as content marketing, digital marketing strategy, product marketing, or freelance consulting.

Is SEO a Good Career?

Yes—SEO remains one of the most in-demand digital marketing skills. As long as people use search engines (and AI tools that pull from the web), businesses will need SEO expertise. The role offers:

  • Strong job demand — Every company with a website needs SEO
  • Competitive salaries — Especially at senior levels or in freelance/consulting
  • Remote-friendly work — SEO can be done from anywhere
  • Continuous learning — The field evolves constantly, keeping the work interesting
  • Measurable impact — You can directly see the results of your work in traffic and revenue

 

Looking to break into this career? Mediabistro focuses on delivering high-quality media, creative, marketing, and content roles to our users. Find SEO specialist jobs and others on Mediabistro, a leading job board since 1999.

 


FAQs About SEO Specialists

Q: What does an SEO specialist do?

A: An SEO specialist improves a website’s visibility in search engines like Google. They optimize on-page elements (content, titles, meta tags), fix technical issues, build backlinks, and analyze performance data to increase organic traffic and drive business results.

Q: What skills do you need to be an SEO specialist?

A: Key skills include keyword research, on-page and technical SEO, link building, data analysis, proficiency with tools like Google Analytics and Ahrefs, and strong communication abilities. Writing skills and basic knowledge of HTML are also valuable.

Q: How much do SEO specialists make?

A: SEO specialist salaries typically range from $53,000 to $91,000 per year, with senior roles and managers earning $100,000–$150,000+. Freelance SEO consultants can earn significantly more depending on their client base and hourly rates ($75–$200+/hour).

Q: Is SEO a good career in 2026?

A: Yes. Despite changes in search (AI Overviews, voice search, etc.), SEO remains essential. The role has evolved to include optimizing for AI citations and multiple platforms, making skilled SEO specialists more valuable than ever.

Q: Do you need a degree to become an SEO specialist?

A: No. While a marketing or communications degree can be helpful, most SEO knowledge is learned through online resources, certifications, and hands-on experience. Building a portfolio of results is more important than formal education.

Q: What’s the difference between SEO and SEM?

A: SEO (Search Engine Optimization) focuses on organic (unpaid) search traffic. SEM (Search Engine Marketing) encompasses both SEO and paid search advertising (PPC/Google Ads). Many SEO specialists understand both, as they’re complementary strategies.

Q: How do SEO specialists stay current with algorithm changes?

A: By following industry publications (Search Engine Land, Search Engine Journal, Moz), monitoring Google’s official announcements, participating in SEO communities, and continuously testing and analyzing their own results.

Q: What tools do SEO specialists use?

A: Common tools include Google Search Console, Google Analytics 4, Ahrefs, SEMrush, Moz, Screaming Frog, Surfer SEO, and various Chrome extensions. Most specialists develop proficiency with multiple tools.

Q: Can I learn SEO on my own?

A: Absolutely. SEO is one of the most accessible digital marketing skills to learn independently. Start with free resources from Google, Moz, and Ahrefs, practice on your own website, and build a portfolio of results.

Q: What’s the difference between an SEO specialist and an SEO manager?

A: An SEO specialist typically executes SEO tasks and strategies, while an SEO manager oversees the broader SEO program, manages team members or agency relationships, and is responsible for strategy and reporting at a higher level.

Topics:

Advice From the Pros, Be Inspired
Careers & Education

The nation’s report card has a hard time grading private schools

The nation’s report card has a hard time grading private schools
By Erica Meltzer for Chalkbeat
6 min read • Published April 6, 2026
By Erica Meltzer for Chalkbeat
6 min read • Published April 6, 2026

Primary school students during a class at school.

cfg1978 // Shutterstock

The nation’s report card has a hard time grading private schools

The National Assessment of Educational Progress is known as the nation’s report card. But as more students leave public schools, the test risks becoming less representative of the nation’s students.

Unlike public schools, private schools aren’t required to participate in the test, which is administered every two years to a representative sample of roughly half a million American students. Not enough private school students take the test to report distinct results for that group, even at the national level. Home-schooled students aren’t included at all.

This isn’t a new problem — the last time NAEP reported separate private school results was 2013. But as more students attend private school or homeschool with public money, the significance of the information gap will only grow, NAEP governing board members and independent researchers told Chalkbeat.

“I see it as the most significant challenge facing the NAEP program in the medium term,” said Martin West, a Harvard University education professor and vice chair of the National Assessment Governing Board, “because it threatens our ability to speak with confidence about states’ success in supporting student learning.”

A dispute in Florida over the state’s 2024 NAEP results hints at a future where more states question the validity of their scores and where comparisons among states are trickier. When results were released in early 2025, Florida students’ performance had dropped to its lowest point in 20 years. Then-Florida Education Commissioner Manny Diaz Jr. wrote a letter to the U.S. Department of Education that blamed the decline, in part, on excluding private school students.

“This issue only stands to grow, as Florida has chosen a path that puts students and families before teachers unions and provides universal school choice,” Diaz wrote, before concluding with a call to “make NAEP great once again.”

Observers said the increase in Florida’s private school enrollment between 2022 and 2024 simply wasn’t large enough to account for the decline, but state education officials remain concerned.

Thomas Kane, a Harvard economist who frequently works with NAEP data, said “What happened in Florida in 2024 is a harbinger of the future as private school enrollment grows. It will become increasingly plausible for states to say that our public school results aren’t representative of our achievement.”

“If NAEP is the nation’s report card, then questions about private school achievement will become the dog that ate the homework,” added Kane, who is not involved in administering the test. “It will be a source of evasions and spin.”

Low private school NAEP participation leaves an information void

NAEP is considered the gold standard in student assessment, a no-stakes test that allows reliable comparisons over time and between states.

The drop in NAEP scores after pandemic disruptions put the test in the public spotlight in a new way, fueling competing calls for greater investment in public schools — or more pathways out of them.

Congress intended for public and private school students to take the test, but federal law only requires public schools to participate in the main NAEP reading and math tests administered to fourth and eighth-grade students.

Private schools make up about a quarter of American schools and educate about 9% of K-12 students, according to recent federal data. But a much smaller share of private school students take NAEP. In 2024, they accounted for about 1.3% of students who took the main tests.

Low participation means NAEP doesn’t have enough data from private school students to report separately on their performance. State results only reflect public school students in those states.

That lack of information already complicates state-by-state comparisons. The most recent national data shows private school students account for 15% of Wisconsin students and 13% of students in Florida, Louisiana, and New York, but just 2% of students in Utah and Wyoming.

Higher private school participation would allow their NAEP results to be reported separately at the national level and incorporated into state-level results. That could help answer questions about whether changes over time or differences between states are driven by the share of students in private school, West said.

It would take dramatically higher participation to report private school results separately at the state level. That’s not a high priority, West said, because NAEP data isn’t as useful for comparing the effectiveness of public and private schools.

Meanwhile, 1.2 million students participated in some sort of publicly funded school choice program in the 2024-25 school year, according to data from EdChoice, an advocacy group.

That’s still less than 3% of K-12 public school enrollment, but the numbers have surged in the last few years and are expected to keep growing.

Private school leaders have mixed feelings about NAEP

Catholic schools participate at much higher rates than other private schools, and their NAEP results are reported separately. Catholic school students also showed some declines during the pandemic, but they have continued to post higher average scores than public school students.

“I’m not sure why people wouldn’t do it,” said Steven Cheeseman, president and CEO of the National Catholic Education Association. “The reality for us as Catholic schools is that we’ve always felt like it’s an important accountability measure.”

Michael Schuttloffel, executive director of the Council for American Private Education, said in an email that many private school leaders find the prospect of taking time out of the school day for a test that doesn’t directly benefit them “daunting.”

NAEP tries to minimize the burden on schools by handling all the logistics. Officials hope a Next Gen NAEP initiative can find ways to reduce the testing burden further and make results more useful.

Some private schools also may have a “philosophical disposition against the idea of a standardized test — especially one administered by the federal government — being the principal measure of student learning or school success,” Schuttloffel wrote.

Schuttloffel said he shares that perspective, but added: “Nonetheless, knowing whether kids can read and do math is an important piece of the picture when we are trying to get our arms around what, and how well, our kids are learning.”

Ron Reynolds, who represents non-public schools on NAEP’s governing board, believes private schools are not only “shirking their responsibility” but also missing “a magnificent opportunity for private schools to tell their story writ large.”

The leaders of private school organizations are generally on board with administering NAEP, Reynolds said, but “the challenge is delivering the message effectively to school site leadership and inducing buy-in at the site level.”

A new report from the Bipartisan Policy Center calls for Congress to charge NAEP’s governing board with increasing participation across all school types. Reynolds said he would support making participation a condition of receiving money from the new federal tax-credit scholarship. While he would prefer not to see a mandate, public money brings with it certain responsibilities.

But parents likely would object strongly to mandates as federal meddling, Schuttloffel said.

Rob Enlow, the president and CEO of EdChoice, has used NAEP data to argue that public schools are failing students, but he sees less value in it for private schools. Parents and the public might learn more, he said, if those schools shared more data they already have.

If policymakers want more private school students to take NAEP, incentives such as automatic accreditation would be more appropriate than mandates, he said.

“Everyone says they want apples-to-apples comparisons, but we’ve had rotten apples for years and done nothing about it,” Enlow said.

Ultimately, the case for participating in NAEP is to contribute to reliable information and good policymaking, West said.

“It’s an appeal to the good of the nation or the quality of data we have for everyone,” he said.

The 2026 test administration is currently underway and expected to wrap up later this month. Results for math and reading are expected in early 2027.

This story was produced by Chalkbeat and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

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Careers & Education
media-news

TrustNFT Releases White Paper on Corporate Costs of Email Impersonation, Documenting $2.9 Billion in Annual Losses and Growing Brand Liability Risk

By Media News
3 min read • Published April 6, 2026
By Media News
3 min read • Published April 6, 2026

New research details financial, reputational, and regulatory damage facing utilities, banks, and insurers whose brands are weaponized by criminal phishing operations

MIAMI, FL / ACCESS Newswire / April 6, 2026 / TrustNFT.io, the blockchain-anchored email verification platform operated by Remergify, LLC, today announced the availability of its first major white paper, "The Impersonation Crisis: How Email Phishing Attacks Are Costing Corporations Billions – and Destroying the Trust They Spent Decades Building." The research document, available at no charge at research.trustnft.io , presents a comprehensive analysis of the financial, reputational, regulatory, and operational damage that corporate email impersonation inflicts on the organizations being targeted.

Email impersonation attacks – in which criminals send fraudulent emails using domains crafted to mimic trusted corporations – have become one of the most costly and underappreciated risks facing American business. The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center reported $2.9 billion in direct losses attributed to Business Email Compromise in 2023 alone, a figure that researchers estimate represents fewer than one-fifth of actual incidents.

Key Findings of the White Paper Include:

Direct financial losses from wire fraud and fraudulent payment diversion to consumers and businesses – frequently exceeding $1 million per significant phishing campaign

Support cost amplification: a single major impersonation campaign generates 5,000-25,000 additional inbound customer contacts at a cost of $8-$15 per contact

Reputational damage: 73% of consumers who receive phishing emails impersonating a brand report reduced trust in that brand – regardless of corporate fault

Email open rate degradation: sustained impersonation campaigns reduce legitimate email open rates by 15-30%, with direct consequences for billing collection and emergency communications

Emerging regulatory liability from FTC, CFPB, OCC, and state attorneys general as enforcement frameworks shift from treating impersonated companies as victims to examining their preventive obligations

Total estimated annual cost burden across financial, operational, legal, and reputational dimensions: $580,000 to $8.8 million per year for a major utility or financial institution experiencing sustained attacks.

"Companies have spent decades building the trust that consumers place in a billing email from their electric company or a fraud alert from their bank. Every successful phishing attack using their name is a direct attack on that trust – and the data shows that consumers hold the real company responsible. This is not just a cybersecurity problem. It is a brand crisis and a regulatory liability that demands executive-level attention."

– Stuart Fine, CEO, TrustNFT / Remergify

The white paper also presents a framework for corporate response, including the implementation of the full email authentication stack (SPF, DKIM, DMARC) and blockchain-anchored domain verification – which TrustNFT’s research indicates reduces successful impersonation attacks by up to 67% when fully deployed.

TrustNFT Verify, the company’s enterprise email verification product, allows companies to register their sending domains on the blockchain through a process requiring a single DNS record addition, with full verification typically completed within 48 hours. Companies participating in TrustNFT’s free 90-day pilot program receive monthly threat intelligence reports documenting phishing attempts targeting their specific brand.

White Paper Availability

"The Impersonation Crisis" is available for immediate download at no charge at verify.trustnft.io. The white paper is intended for corporate security, risk management, and marketing leadership at utilities, financial institutions, insurance carriers, healthcare providers, and government agencies.

Companies interested in TrustNFT Verify’s free 90-day pilot program may contact Stuart Fine directly at stuart@trustnft.io or visit research.trustnft.io.

About TrustNFT.io

TrustNFT.io is a company focused on delivering solution using blockchain-anchoring to prevent fraud counterfeiting and many other issues effecting the ability of people and companie to Trust and be safer. The email verification platform conceived by the Remergify team, which is headquartered in Miami, Florida. TrustNFT operates two complementary products: TrustNFT Verify, an enterprise email domain verification service for corporations, utilities, financial institutions, and government agencies; and TrustNFT Guardian, a consumer email protection product that helps individuals and families identify phishing emails before clicking on them. TrustNFT Verify uses blockchain technology to create an immutable, unforgeable record of verified corporate sending domains, displayed as a visible trust badge inside consumers’ email clients in Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo Mail, and AOL Mail.

Media Contact

Stuart Fine, Chief Executive Officer
TrustNFT / Remergify, LLC · Miami, Florida
Email: stuart@trustnft.io
Web: research.trustnft.io

SOURCE: Remergify, Inc.

View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

Topics:

media-news
Job Search

Got a Job Offer? What to Do Next (+ Thank You Email Templates)

7 copy-paste email templates for accepting, negotiating, or declining—plus what to do next.

job seeker shaking hands, thanking the recruiter after accepting a job offer
John icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
13 min read • Originally published February 16, 2016 / Updated April 6, 2026
John icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
13 min read • Originally published February 16, 2016 / Updated April 6, 2026

So it finally happened. You got a job offer. Go ahead, call your mom, and pop that cheap champagne. And then get back to business.

Now, it’s time for strategy—starting with the perfect thank you email.

Before you sign that job offer or even give a verbal commitment, there are a few steps that you’ll need to take to set yourself up for success. We’re breaking it all down for you—complete with thank you email templates for every situation—to ensure you’re making the best moves after the offer. So read on. And—oh yeah—congrats!

Quick Links: Thank You Email Templates

  • Short Thank You Email for Job Offer
  • Formal Thank You Letter for Job Offer
  • Thank You Email After Accepting Job Offer
  • Thank You Email to Recruiter
  • Salary Negotiation Email Template
  • How to Decline a Job Offer (Email Template)
  • Thank You for Hiring Me Email

1. Be Ready for the Call

When HR calls with a job offer, you might be tempted to respond immediately. The key here is to have a line ready, such as, “Thank you so much for the offer. I am so excited for this opportunity. When would you like a response?”

By using non-committal phrases like the one above, you’ll show excitement for the role while giving yourself time to make a well-informed decision.

Most companies will be more than willing to give you time to review materials and consider the offer. If an employer requires an immediate decision, that’s a red flag. Consider it carefully if this is a company you want to work for.

Quick Guide: How to Respond to Your Offer

Depending on your situation, your immediate response will fall into one of three categories:

If you are… Say this on the phone/email: Next Step:
100% Ready to Accept “I am thrilled to accept! Please send over the written agreement.” Formally sign and send a Thank You.
Evaluating / Unsure “I’m very excited about the role. When do you need a final decision?” Review the full benefits package.
Negotiating “I’m eager to join, but I’d like to discuss the compensation details.” Draft your counteroffer letter.

2. Review the Written Offer

You should receive a written offer letter from HR around this time. This is your time to review the offer amount and, if included, perks, benefits, time off, and a sign-on bonus.

To find out if the salary offered is in line with market standards, check sites like Payscale or Glassdoor.

When considering whether your salary is on par, take a careful look at each perk and weigh them against one another. For example, if your salary is slightly below industry standard but the vacation time is overly generous, you may not need to ask for a raise.

3. Negotiate a Counteroffer

If the offer is below what you expected after factoring in all other company benefits, you might want to negotiate a more fitting salary.

Now’s the time to create a counteroffer letter.

Beginning your letter with a statement of interest and enthusiasm for the job, include your key selling points, such as how you plan to contribute to the company. Following that, write your counteroffer, a salary that should be supported through your research on the market, and the added value you plan to bring to the company.

Be ready for the company to come back, either rejecting or accepting your counteroffer.

Whatever the outcome, show your gratitude and leave the conversation on a high note.

How to Negotiate Without Losing the Offer

A common fear is that negotiating will make the employer rescind the offer. In reality, most companies expect a negotiation. To do this successfully:

  • The 10-20% Rule: Generally, a counteroffer at 10-20% above the base salary is considered standard practice.
  • Focus on “Market Value” over “Personal Need”: Don’t mention your rent or bills. Instead, use phrases like: “Based on my research for similar [Job Title] roles in [City/Remote], the market average is closer to [Amount].”
  • Leverage Non-Salary Items: If the budget is firm, ask for a one-time signing bonus, an extra week of PTO, or a professional development stipend for Mediabistro courses.

Salary Negotiation Email Template

If you need to negotiate but still want to express gratitude for the offer, here’s a template that strikes the right balance:

Subject: Re: [Job Title] Offer – Compensation Discussion

Dear [Hiring Manager Name],

Thank you again for the offer to join [Company Name] as [Job Title]. I am genuinely excited about this opportunity and confident I can make a significant impact on [specific project or goal discussed in interviews].

After carefully reviewing the offer and researching market data for similar roles in [location/industry], I’d like to discuss the base salary. Based on my [X years of experience in Y] and [specific skill or achievement], I was hoping we could explore a base salary closer to [target amount].

I understand that budgets have constraints, and I’m open to discussing other ways to bridge the gap, such as a signing bonus, additional PTO, or an accelerated review timeline.

I’m very much looking forward to joining the team and am confident we can find an arrangement that works for both of us.

Best regards,
[Your Name]

4. Let Other Potential Employers Know

If you’re also interviewing with other companies, you’ll need to inform them that you’ve accepted another job offer. A simple email will do. State to them something along the lines of:

I wanted to express my sincere appreciation to you for considering me as a candidate for the [position name] position. I truly enjoyed meeting your team and learning more about the outstanding work you do.

I am writing to respectfully withdraw from consideration, as I have been offered another position that more closely aligns with my skill set and goals.

I wish the best for everyone at [company name] and hope we have another chance to work together in the future.

Thank you again for this opportunity.

Sincerely,
[Your Name]

Related: How to Withdraw from a Job Application (5 More Email Templates)

5. Thank You Emails for Job Offers: Templates for Every Situation

After receiving or accepting a job offer, sending a thank-you email is essential. Not only does this help show your excitement for the position, but it also helps keep you on good terms with the company as they finalize your paperwork.

Below are thank-you email templates for every stage of the job offer process—from the initial offer to after you’ve been hired.

Short Thank You Email for Job Offer

Keep it simple when you just need to acknowledge the offer quickly:

I wanted to formally thank you for the job offer at [Company Name]. I am very excited to begin working, learning more about the company, and finding ways to contribute my skills to the team.

Please reach out at any time if you need anything else from me. The best way to contact me is through email, but feel free to call me at [number].

Again, thank you for this opportunity. I can’t wait to begin working for such a talented team.

Sincerely,
[Your Name]

Formal Thank You Letter for Job Offer (Corporate/Executive Roles)

For more senior positions or formal corporate environments, use this polished template:

Subject: Thank You – [Job Title] Offer

Dear [Hiring Manager Name],

I am writing to express my sincere gratitude for the offer to join [Company Name] as [Job Title]. I am honored by this opportunity and excited about the prospect of contributing to [specific company initiative or team].

I have reviewed the offer letter and am pleased to confirm my acceptance. As discussed, I will begin on [start date] with a starting salary of [amount] and the benefits outlined in the offer.

Please let me know if there are any forms, background checks, or onboarding materials I should complete before my first day. I want to ensure a smooth transition and hit the ground running.

Thank you again for your confidence in me. I look forward to joining the team and making meaningful contributions to [Company Name].

Warm regards,
[Your Name]
[Phone Number]
[Email Address]

Thank You Email After Accepting a Job Offer

Already said yes? It’s still a great idea to send a follow-up thank-you email to solidify the relationship:

Subject: Looking Forward to Joining [Company Name]

Dear [Hiring Manager Name],

Now that the paperwork is signed, I just wanted to send a quick note to say how excited I am to join [Company Name]. Thank you for making the hiring process so smooth and for answering all my questions along the way.

I’m looking forward to starting on [date] and getting to know the team. If there’s anything I can do to prepare beforehand—reading materials, software to familiarize myself with, or team members to connect with—please let me know.

Thanks again for this opportunity. See you soon!

Best,
[Your Name]

Thank You Email to Recruiter After Getting the Job

Don’t forget the recruiter who helped you land the role—whether they’re internal or from an agency:

Subject: Thank You for Your Help!

Hi [Recruiter Name],

I wanted to reach out and thank you for all your help throughout the hiring process at [Company Name]. I officially accepted the [Job Title] position and couldn’t have done it without your guidance.

From prepping me for the interviews to keeping me updated every step of the way, you made the whole experience so much easier. I really appreciate you advocating for me.

Let’s definitely stay in touch—I’d love to return the favor someday if I can ever refer candidates your way.

Thanks again!

Best,
[Your Name]
[LinkedIn Profile URL – optional]

Thank You for Hiring Me Email (After You’ve Started)

After your first week or two on the job, sending a thank you email to your manager and/or the hiring team is a classy move that makes a lasting impression:

Subject: Thank You for the Warm Welcome

Hi [Manager Name],

Now that I’ve completed my first [week/two weeks] at [Company Name], I wanted to take a moment to thank you for hiring me and for making my onboarding experience so welcoming.

I’m really enjoying getting to know the team and diving into [specific project or responsibility]. The culture here is everything I hoped it would be, and I’m excited to contribute to [team goal or company mission].

Thank you for giving me this opportunity. I’m looking forward to growing with the team and making an impact.

Best,
[Your Name]

How to Decline a Job Offer (While Still Saying Thank You)

Sometimes, the right move is to say no. Maybe you received a better offer, the salary didn’t meet your needs, or after reflection, the role just isn’t the right fit. Whatever the reason, you’ll want to decline gracefully while still expressing gratitude—burning bridges is never a good look.

Email Template: Declining a Job Offer Politely

Subject: [Job Title] Position – Thank You

Dear [Hiring Manager Name],

Thank you so much for the offer to join [Company Name] as [Job Title]. I truly enjoyed learning about the role and meeting the team during the interview process.

After careful consideration, I have decided to pursue another opportunity that I feel is a better fit for my career goals at this time.

I have great respect for [Company Name] and the work you’re doing in [industry/area]. I hope we have the chance to connect again in the future.

Thank you again for your time and consideration.

Best regards,
[Your Name]

6. The “What Next” Checklist: After You Sign

Once the digital ink is dry, the real transition begins. To ensure a smooth handoff from candidate to employee, follow these “what next” steps:

  • Confirm your start date and arrival details: Don’t assume. Ask if you are reporting in person or logging on remotely, and at what time.
  • Complete your background check and I-9s: Most media and corporate roles require third-party verification. Complete these immediately to avoid delaying your first paycheck.
  • The “Notice” Period: Resign from your current position professionally. Standard practice is two weeks, but check your current contract for specific requirements.
  • Request a Tech Onboarding list: Ask HR what hardware or software you’ll need to be familiar with. In digital media, knowing if you’re on Slack, Microsoft Teams, or Google Workspace ahead of time reduces Day 1 anxiety.

7. Don’t Update Your Online Job Status—Yet

Sure, you’re excited to update your LinkedIn and other social networks with your newly minted job title. But it’s better to wait.

Once you’ve been with your job for a few months and are sure it’s the place for you, it’s a safe time to update your social networks with your new job title.

Brush up on a skill to get a jump-start on that new job. Check out Mediabistro’s online courses to get started. Whether you’re looking for a crash course or a full courseload, our instructors deliver the most in-demand skills for today’s digital media jobs.


FAQs: Thank You Emails for Job Offers

Q: Should I send a thank-you email after accepting a job offer?

A: Yes, absolutely. Sending a thank-you email after accepting a job offer is a professional courtesy that shows your enthusiasm and leaves a positive impression. Keep it brief—express your excitement, confirm key details like your start date, and let them know you’re looking forward to joining the team.

Q: How should I respond when I receive a job offer call?

A: Express gratitude and excitement for the opportunity, and ask for time to review the offer details before giving a response. A good line: “Thank you so much for the offer. I am so excited for this opportunity. When would you like a response?” It’s important to communicate your interest while ensuring you have enough time to make an informed decision.

Q: How long do I have to respond to a job offer?

A: Most employers expect a response within 3-5 business days. If you need more time, it’s perfectly acceptable to ask—just be professional about it. Anything longer than a week without communication may signal disinterest to the employer.

Q: What are red flags to watch out for when I get a job offer?

A: A major red flag is if the employer pressures you for an immediate decision. Other warning signs include: a verbal offer with no written follow-up, vague job responsibilities, significant changes from what was discussed in interviews, and reluctance to share compensation details. Companies should allow you time to review the offer and make a well-informed decision.

Q: How can I determine if the salary and benefits are competitive?

A: Use websites like Payscale, Glassdoor, or Levels.fyi (for tech roles) to research market standards for the position. Evaluate the entire compensation package, including perks and benefits, against industry norms.

Q: What steps should I take to negotiate the job offer?

A: Draft a counteroffer email expressing your enthusiasm for the position, highlighting your key selling points, and proposing a revised salary based on your market research and the value you bring to the company. Use the salary negotiation email template above as a starting point.

Q: How do I thank a recruiter after getting the job?

A: Send a brief, genuine thank-you email acknowledging their help throughout the process. Mention specific ways they supported you (interview prep, updates, advocacy) and offer to stay in touch or refer candidates in the future. Use the recruiter thank you template above.

Q: What should I say after accepting a job offer?

A: After verbally accepting, send a follow-up email that: (1) thanks them for the opportunity, (2) confirms your start date and key terms, (3) asks about any pre-boarding paperwork or preparation, and (4) expresses your excitement to join the team. See our thank you email after accepting template.

Q: How do I inform other potential employers about my job acceptance elsewhere?

A: Send a courteous email to withdraw your application, expressing appreciation for the opportunity and possible future collaboration. Be prompt—once you’ve accepted an offer, let other companies know so they can move forward with other candidates.

Q: What should I include in a thank-you email after accepting a job offer?

A: Thank the employer for the opportunity, express your excitement about joining the team, confirm key details (start date, salary), ask about any documents or preparation needed, and provide your contact information. Keep it professional but warm.

Q: When should I update my job status on social media after accepting a new position?

A: Wait until you’ve been in the position for a few months and are sure it’s the right fit before updating your job status on social media platforms. Updating immediately can be awkward if the role doesn’t work out.

Q: Should I send a thank-you email after I’ve been hired and started working?

A: Yes! Sending a thank you email after your first week or two is a thoughtful gesture that makes a great impression on your new manager. Thank them for hiring you, mention something positive about your onboarding experience, and express your excitement about contributing to the team. Use our “thank you for hiring me” template above.

Topics:

Get Hired, Job Search

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