Career & Portfolio
How to show proof of your content work when applying for media jobs
Editors and hiring managers don't want your CV. They want to see what you've actually made, where it performed, and that you can prove it's yours. Here's how to build that case.
Key Takeaways
- Hiring decisions in media are made on evidence of output, not job titles on a CV
- Employers want: what you made, where it lived, what it achieved, and proof it's yours
- A verifiable portfolio (with platform, date, and role documented) is far stronger than a list of URLs
- Start building your evidence trail now — don't wait until you're job-hunting
What media employers actually look at
When an editor reviews a candidate for a writer, producer, or content role, they're looking for one thing: evidence you can do the job.
Your CV tells them where you've been. Your portfolio tells them what you can actually do.
The difference matters more in media than in almost any other industry. A journalist with a strong clips portfolio from smaller publications will often beat a candidate with impressive job titles and weak samples. A social media manager who can show documented content performance data will stand out over someone who just lists platforms they've "managed."
The question every hiring manager is asking — even if they don't say it out loud — is: can you show me proof?
The three things a strong media portfolio proves
1. You made real things
Not planned things. Not strategy decks. Not ideas. Actual published, public pieces of work.
This means: articles with your byline, videos with your name in the credits or description, social media content you produced, episodes you presented or produced, investigations you contributed to.
The more specific your claim, the more credible it is. "I wrote this article" is a claim. "I was the lead reporter on this investigation, published in [outlet], on [date], which resulted in [outcome]" is evidence.
2. It performed
Numbers matter, but context matters more than the number.
10,000 views on a YouTube video for a new channel with 200 subscribers is a different story from 10,000 views on a channel with 2 million subscribers. A LinkedIn article that drove 50 applications for a job posting is more valuable than one with 5,000 likes but no action.
When you document your work, document the performance in context. Not just the view count — the platform, the account size at the time, the purpose of the content, and what it achieved.
3. It's actually yours
This sounds obvious, but it's where most portfolios fall apart.
A link to a YouTube channel doesn't prove you made the video. A screenshot of an Instagram post doesn't prove you produced it. An article on a publication website doesn't prove you wrote it if there's no byline.
Strong evidence includes: your name in the byline or credits, a URL where your authorship is visible, your role documented in your own words at the time of publication, and (for organisation content) context about your specific contribution.
getBylines captures all of this: the URL, your stated role, the platform, the date — creating a timestamped record of your contribution that you can share or keep private.
How to structure your portfolio for a media application
Lead with your best three to five pieces, not your longest list. Quality over quantity every time. Pick work that shows range, craft, and results.
One-line context for each piece. Before the link, write one sentence: what it was, where it was published, what it achieved, and your specific role. "Lead writer and interviewer for a three-part investigation into X, published in Y, which reached Z readers and resulted in A."
Show platform variety if you have it. Print + digital + video + social signals versatility. If you're specialised, go deep not wide.
Include metrics where you have them — but only credible ones. "4.2 million impressions" with no context is weaker than "47,000 views in the first week, highest-performing piece on the channel that quarter."
Keep it current. Update your portfolio at least every six months. A portfolio with your most recent work dated three years ago signals you've stopped producing.
The mobile-first reality of modern content work
Here's something most portfolio advice ignores: the majority of content work is now discovered, consumed, and shared on mobile.
If you're a creator or journalist in 2025, your audience — and your future employers — are primarily encountering your work on phones. Your portfolio should reflect this.
This also means your capture workflow should be mobile-first. The moment a piece goes live, you're usually looking at it on your phone. That's exactly when to save it: share the URL, add your role, done.
getBylines is built as an Android app specifically because this is where modern content work lives — in the share sheet, on the go, in the moments right after publish.
A note on social media content specifically
Social media content is the hardest category to document for a portfolio — and the one that gets most frequently dismissed by hiring managers who should know better.
A post that reached 2 million people and started a national conversation is significant professional work, even if the URL is just an Instagram link. The problem is that most people can't prove they made it, can't show what it achieved, and can't separate their contribution from the brand account it was published on.
If you produce social content professionally:
- Save every significant post the day it goes live
- Document your specific role (wrote copy, directed shoot, edited video, managed account)
- Record the performance within the first week (before analytics decay)
- Note the account context (follower count, audience, brand, campaign goal)
This turns "I ran Instagram for a brand" into documented, provable professional output.
Frequently asked questions
My best work was for a brand and I can't share it publicly — what do I do?
Many brand content creators face this. Document the work privately with full context, then share selectively under NDA or provide a summary with verifiable details. A record you can reference in an interview is still valuable even if you can't post it publicly.
How do I handle work I'm proud of but that performed poorly?
Honest context is more respected than cherry-picked stats. "This piece underperformed on views but led directly to a commission from [outlet]" is a real story. Include what you learned.
Should I include student or early-career work?
Yes, for early-career applications. Show the range of what you've made, even if the outlets are small. Early bylines in small publications show initiative. Significant views or shares on early social content show instinct.
getBylines Team
The getBylines team builds tools for journalists, creators, and media professionals to claim, track, and prove their published work.
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