How To Find Jobs For Copy Editors
Finding Copy Editor jobs may seem hard to find, but you can find many jobs with the qualifications you already have. But if you’re not fully qualified, this may be the time to change that. Becoming more qualified as a copy editor. Landing the quality Copy Editor job requires an excellent portfolio and the skill set to land the right job.
Searching for jobs on the internet, even if you don’t apply for them are still a wealth of information. You can see what skills the market is looking for and how you will best fit into this market. A good way to develop yourself as a freelance business is to look for copy editor job that keep appearing on the net. This is an opportunity to market yourself for the position as a freelancer with the experience, skills and by bidding their job at a competitive price you can gain experience and possibly build a relationship with a steady client. Get your name out there and apply to the jobs you’re qualified for and keep applying.
You’ve got to have the education for writing, editing or proofreading. If you can’t actually go to college, community colleges are an inexpensive alternative for learning the basics. Many colleges and even many community colleges offer their courses completely online. Even if you have the basics of writing, it’s always good to keep your skills sharp and continue to learn.
Keep your portfolio current. Keep your work writing, editing or proofreading work in your portfolio. Even if you didn’t get paid for a project keep it in your portfolio. If you don’t have an establishment portfolio to show a prospective employer or client, doing work for non-profits and charities will not only be appreciated but can build your portfolio and gain some great references.
All of these things can lead to more work, better work, and outstanding employment opportunities down the line.

I wanted to point out that writing is a skill rooted in education, not an education in itself. All too often we find writers on the Internet have a superficial ‘coating’ of education, with neither depth nor breadth. This becomes evident the moment they attempt to write anything more ambitious than a search-engine snippet.
The best advice for any future writer is: READ! Read literature, reviews, the quality press (ignore the tabloids, they will infect your language skills with the “colloquialism virus”). Read constantly and, most importantly, read critically.
Remember: English is not a language that benefits from convoluted construction and complex phrasing, it reads best at its most linear simplicity. “The cat sat on the mat” can be the beginning of prose and poetry, one can follow-up with almost anything, while “the mat was sat on by a cat” is the beginning of the end!