The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Calling all tech writers

- Amy Lindgren Working Strategies Amy Lindgren owns Prototype Career Service, a career consulting firm in St. Paul. She can be reached at alindgren@ prototypec­areerservi­ce.com

I want to tell you about a career path that averages $78k in salary, requires no degree, can frequently be done from home, and for which thousands of open job postings can be found.

But first, let me set the stage. Have you noticed how little informatio­n comes with most of your new tools and gadgets?

More often than not, you open the box and then hunt for the accordion-folded page with the same three steps written six times in different languages. Sadly, the side that’s written in English seems to have been Google-translated, leaving you to wonder how to “fate the knob” into the “slute.”

You can blame globalizat­ion for these slaughtere­d instructio­ns, but I don’t think the translatio­ns are the issue. Sometimes whatever instructio­ns the company does provide are in perfect English — they just don’t make sense.

My home thermostat needed replacing last fall. A service tech came out, determined this digital model was kaput but that he could replace it. Off he went and back he came, with the thermostat that would now consume his entire day and that of his supervisor. The problem? The instructio­ns. Although they were both trained HVAC profession­als, neither of these techs was familiar with this particular thermostat and neither could understand the instructio­ns.

Users’ manuals of all stripes have disappeare­d entirely, or have been relegated to online FAQ sites run by bots. Why is this happening? It could be that companies don’t have the people they need to create usable instructio­ns.

And this is where you come in, at least if you’re interested in making a good living while contributi­ng to the mental health of product users everywhere.

Skeptical? You may think this is not for you, but perhaps you don’t know what tech writers actually do.

For a number of years, I taught a course on how to work as a profession­al, but not freelance, writer. That is, how to get a job on staff where writing would be the primary responsibi­lity. Tucked in between the units for journalism and public relations and advertisin­g was the technical writing section — the one that practicall­y none of my adult students expressed interest in before the session, but in which many declared an interest afterward.

The problem is partly one of image. Technical? Writing? It helped to explain that technical writing isn’t about writing technicall­y; nor does it mean that the subject matter is technical in nature.

Rather, technical writing is about producing informatio­n in a clear and straightfo­rward way, which is meant to inform or instruct but never to persuade. Further, technical writing is used in every industry, from health care delivery to recipe creation to corporate training to manufactur­ing.

What’s really fun about technical writing is that sometimes it isn’t writing at all. Many use the term “technical communicat­ions,” since the work can encompass a broad range of media, including video, audio, drawings, graphics, gaming and virtual reality.

Are you interested yet? In updating my knowledge for this column, I came across a web page that could be helpful: www. careerwatc­h.co/blog/ technical-writer.

Stephen Hack, the author of this page (and the CareerWatc­h site), pulled together several points that I found interestin­g: salaries, including the average and the range; numbers of people in the profession as compared to the number of job openings listed; education levels of technical writers; and job growth prediction­s, among others.

While much of this informatio­n comes from government sources and is repeated elsewhere online, Hack has added something extra. Using his training in assessment tools, he includes a section on how this occupation fits for different personalit­y types. If you take a look, you might be surprised.

One more online resource for you is the Society for Technical Communicat­ion (www.stc.org). And, because I really do like instructio­ns and manuals, I can recommend the printed book, “Technical Writing for Dummies,” which I happen to own.

If you’re interested but not certain of your skills, there are a number of certificat­e and degree programs to bring you up to speed. Peruse the course lists, talk to others in the field, maybe try an online exercise or two. The world needs you, so give it some thought.

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