Elixir Magazine
Elixir Magazine is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Elixir Magazine.
Elixir Magazine is a company.
Key people at Elixir Magazine.
Key people at Elixir Magazine.
Elixir Magazine refers to multiple entities in the publishing space, primarily small-scale operations focused on magazines and literary content rather than a tech startup or investment firm.[1][3][6] The most prominent UK-based Elixir Magazine Limited is a dormant company engaged in publishing consumer and business journals and periodicals (SIC code 58142), with its last annual return in 2015.[4][6] Other variants include a media production firm in West Virginia with ~$400K revenue and 4 employees, a publishing company with 10-19 staff and $1-5M revenue, and online platforms like elixirnews.com promoting healthy ageing content.[1][3][8] These are niche media producers serving readers interested in health, wellness, literature, or student arts, solving problems like content discovery in ageing, poetry, or creative expression, but with limited evident growth momentum as some are dormant or not accepting submissions.[2][5]
Elixir Magazine Limited (UK company number 06806068) was incorporated around 2009, with Companies House records showing activity up to 2015 and officers listed but no recent filings indicating evolution.[4][6] Details on founders or key partners are sparse in available records. Separately, Elixir International Magazine Limited (company number 07481091) was formed on January 4, 2011, in Ruislip, Greater London, but has been dormant since.[2] Elixir Press, a related poetry publishing arm, emerged to produce paper editions sold via Amazon, featuring award-winning authors like Derek Graf (2021 Antivenom Poetry Award winner) and editors such as Brianna Noll, with no new submissions accepted recently.[5] Elixirnews.com appears as an active blog-style site covering wellness trends, without a clear founding timeline.[8] Early traction for these includes literary awards and spa/health features, but no pivotal tech or investment milestones.
Elixir Magazine entities operate on the fringes of digital publishing, riding trends in niche content like healthy ageing amid rising wellness interest post-pandemic, but without tech innovation such as AI curation or apps.[8] Timing favors evergreen topics like spas and fitness, boosted by market forces in e-commerce (Amazon sales) and online media, yet their static websites and dormancy limit ecosystem influence.[5][6] They contribute modestly to literary and health media, supporting authors and readers without shaping startups or tech trends.
With dormant filings and paused operations, Elixir Magazine variants face stagnation unless reactivated for digital pivots like newsletters or e-books.[2][5] Rising demand for wellness content could revive elixirnews.com amid longevity trends, but competition from podcasts and influencers poses risks.[8] Their influence may remain niche, potentially evolving through partnerships with health tech if leadership emerges, tying back to their roots in accessible, specialized publishing.