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Technical
Writing
by David Odell
The educational background required in technical writing is demanding, because of the inherent
difficulty of the job. It can be quite difficult to write a technical report, but with the right research and
knowledge of basic report formats, you should be on your way to writing a good one. If you enjoy reading and
writing, an education in Technical Writing can prepare you for an exciting career as a proof-reader, editor, or
technical writer.
Online Technical Writing training may be provided by accredited and non-accredited career
education schools and technical writing courses prescribe a dominant format and organization to make information
readable, available, and accessible. These programs may include courses in prose, technical disciplines,
advanced technical skills, and documentation, among others.
If you like explaining hard-to-understand processes and concepts in a plain language and with a consistent
vocabulary, and like simplifying complex processes and make them easily accessible, then you'll enjoy technical
writing while saying goodbye to your financial worries. Unless you are already an expert in a technical field
and limit the scope of your writing to that, you will probably be required to quickly learn the details of certain
processes - even entire industries. Depending on where you live and the local economic conditions, you'd be
surprised at the number of employers who would be willing to give a novice with no track record a head start in
technical writing.
If you are the type of writer who is more creative than systemic, you will find it hard to succeed in a
technical writing job. In other words, the job profile of a technical writer involves writing and designing
user guides, brochures and white papers for a plethora of products.
Business plans, technical report writing, grant writing, instruction manuals, and business correspondence are
just a few of the more common types of technical writing jobs available. So, in the present world of
complicated gadgets, technical documentations require more than just writing. This trend, may give the
Technical Writing profession the impetus it requires.
Substance is, of course, ever the more important part of technical writing. Accuracy in technical writing
means that the technical writer puts out the effort to ensure that the information provided in the document is
accurate. Translation in this context means that a technical writer should have the ability to gather
technical information and translate it into language at the level of the intended audience.
Do not overuse humour, better still do not use it at all - People do not read technical documents to be
entertained, they read them in the hopes of successfully completing a process, or extracting information. By the
end of creating a piece of technical documentation, you will probably be sick of the sight of it but it has to be
proof read, did you give the same screen, action part a different names in different parts of the document, all
important not to do this as it confuses the reader and they are probably confused by the technology
already.
To get a technical writing job you have to prove you are accurate and organized in everything you do. When you
apply for a job ensure that your resume scrupulously accurate, down to the smallest details, and organized in a
clear and logical way?
A tech writing manager I know developed a 30-column spreadsheet to assess technical writing candidates.
Officially, I can say that technical writing has no beginning because any person could conclude "the
hieroglyphics" were writings of technical calibre to communicate to an audience. All writing styles evolve
over time; technical writing is no exception.
Freelance technical writers find themselves in different jobs, from the fields of healthcare, to engineering, to
consumer manufacturing, to business, and then back again. Believe me I have done it, but as a job to be
involved in a variety of fields and work in varied situations you cannot beat it.
Source: http://www.techauthors.co.uk
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