Returning to Britain in 1981, she began writing for the
Daily Mail and
News of the World, and in 1982 she joined the
Mail on Sunday. Initially a medical correspondent, she was promoted to
associate editor of the newspaper, then assistant editor of the
Daily Mail in 1987. Joining
The Sunday Times in 1991, she became deputy editor. Douglas launched the newspaper's Style & Culture sections, relaunched
The Sunday Times magazine, ran the Insight investigative team and introduced many writers and columnists including
Julie Burchill,
Jeremy Clarkson,
Taki,
Melvyn Bragg and her then-husband, historian
Niall Ferguson. At the beginning of 1996, she took up her appointment as editor of the
Sunday Express, then owned by
Lord Stevens. Just under two years later,
Clive Hollick bought the Express group and rolled the Sunday into the Daily title, rendering all Sunday Express journalists redundant. Douglas was chosen by former
Sunday Times superior
Andrew Neil to assist in relaunching
The Scotsman,
Scotland on Sunday and the
Edinburgh Evening News. At the same time, she diversified into magazine publishing, working on the US launch of men's magazine
Gear, then the UK websites Vogue.com, Traveller.co.uk and after she helped launch the new title,
Glamour, in the UK, she ran the contract publishing division of
Condé Nast, with titles such as
tate,
Trader,
Mandarin Oriental,
Harrods and the Post office magazine.
Glamour was one of the most successful magazine launches ever, and Douglas, as President of New Business with Condé Nast, became a director. ==Later career==