

Content Creator
Salary:
- £26,512 (£33,140 pro-rata) per annum – London
- £22,538 (£28,172 pro-rata) per annum – Regional
Contract: Permanent, part time
Hours: 28 hours per week – We are open to discussions about flexible working patterns as long they allow for full delivery of the role responsibilities.
Location: Based at our offices in Leeds (LS2) or London (NW1), or at home if you do not live within reasonable commuting distance. Leeds and London based staff can work at home some of the time by agreement.
We’re looking for someone who’s enthusiastic about creating content for social media and is keen to use those skills to explain Quaker faith and action to the wider world and engage people in our campaigns.
Your work will cover a range of audience-focused content creation, including editing audio and video, designing social media graphics and proofreading online documents.
Closing date: 8am, Friday 28 February 2025
Interviews: Wednesday 12 March 2025, in-person at Friends House (NW1)
Alongside the opportunity to transform the experience of Quakers across Britain, we offer a generous benefits package.
Quakers are committed to equality and welcome applicants from all identities and backgrounds. Selection is based solely on skills, experience, qualifications, and abilities. We aim to prevent age, belief, disability, ethnicity, gender, gender reassignment, marital status, nationality, neurodivergence, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation or social class from being a barrier to employment. We aim for an equitable, user-friendly application process, and reasonable adjustments can be made if needed. As a Quaker organisation we expect all applicants and employees to uphold our values.
We are committed to safeguarding children, young people, and vulnerable adults. All candidates will undergo pre-employment checks in line with our Safer Recruitment guidelines.

Quakers are a faith group committed to working for equality, peace, and social justice.
Quakerism is almost 400 years old. It’s the common name for the Religious Society of Friends. It grew out of Christianity and today we also find meaning and value in other faiths and traditions. We recognise that there’s something transcendent and precious in every person. Different Quakers use different words to describe this, but we all believe we can be in contact with it and encounter something beyond our individual selves