Membership Application FAQs
Professional and associate memberships require application. Here are some of the most common questions about that application process.
Associate membership is offered to mid-level freelance writers, who would like to become professional members. Writers working on staff at a media company can join ASJA at this membership level.
Professional membership is for writers with established freelance writing careers that include more than one published book and/or national clips. Professional ASJA members can access Client Connections, Virtual Pitch Slam or Virtual Client Connections.
Membership dues are the same for associate and professional members.
If you are not sure for which membership you qualify, apply for professional membership. If you meet associate membership requirements but not those for professional membership, you will be awarded an associate membership. As an associate member, you can reapply for professional membership with no additional application fee, as soon as you have the needed clips.
Please gather all supporting documents (urls and/or pdfs) before you begin your application. You cannot save your application to finish it later.
To apply for associate membership, you must have:
Articles may be from either national or regional publications. Unpaid articles and clips written while on staff will also be considered for associate membership. Articles or posts on a personal blog cannot be submitted for membership consideration.
Self-published books will not be considered unless the applicant can demonstrate individual quality of the book via sales or reviews.
The following types of writing do not qualify you for ASJA associate membership:
Please gather all supporting documents (urls and/or pdfs) before you begin your application. You cannot save your application to finish it later.
To apply for professional membership, submit either:
Regional publications do not qualify for professional membership. If you submit short articles (fewer than 1,000 words or so), submit more articles. Submissions should be from at least two markets.
Staff-written clips from a job that ended at least six months ago at an established media company can be considered for up to half of the qualifying credentials. In addition, you must submit at least three substantial freelance credits (which could include long articles, editorials, paid blogging, or a book).
Ghostwritten books will require proof in the form of a contract signature page. If applying for membership with only ghostwritten books, at least one book must be traditionally published. The other ghostwritten book may be self-published by the name author, but you should provide concrete data of extraordinary sales or reviews.
The applicant’s own self-published books will not be considered unless you can demonstrate the notable quality of the book via extraordinary sales or reviews.
Custom, non-bylined content may be considered qualifying under these conditions:
The following types of writing do not qualify you for ASJA professional membership:
Current members who have retired from publishing can pay half-dues membership to receive benefits such as the ASJA Magazine and access to ASJA’s member-only discussion groups. This new category replaces the current half-dues membership offered to members who are ages 65 and older with 25 years of ASJA membership. Rather than set specific requirements, this category allows members to elect to receive reduced rates but remain an active ASJA member. Retired members will receive the ASJA Magazine and conference discounts, but cannot participate in Client Networking events, like Client Connections, and cannot receive member pricing for the Annual Awards program.
Professional and associate memberships require application. Here are some of the most common questions about that application process.
Applications are required in two instances: professional and associate membership. Associate members wishing to move up to professional membership can reapply without paying an application fees.
With ASJA, you have access to resources to take your writing career to the next level. You also have access to smart colleagues, events and professional development tools.