Re: Why You NEED to be technical - BUT WHEN YOU'RE NOT!

Subject: Re: Why You NEED to be technical - BUT WHEN YOU'RE NOT!
From: "neha ." <snehasn -at- hotmail -dot- com>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com>
Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2001 16:02:46 +0000

This is an important question. It speaks to what makes a good technical writer. The reason we question how *technical* a tech writer should be is probably because many of us are not technical (enough).

Obviously being *technical* is a matter of degrees; and knowing the inner workings of a product is also a matter of degrees. The more you understand, the more likely you are to achieve the things Andrew Plato mentioned (accuracy/reliability, comprehensiveness, extracting/assessing pointed information from SMEs, and so on.)

AND the less you understand what a product does and how it does it, the harder it is to collect and evaluate information, and write for the user, particularly advanced users.

But sometimes it is not possible to be technical enough. Especially when employers have a hard time finding people with both the appropriate technical knowledge AND the writing skills.

So then what do you do? One thing we DON'T want is to find ourselves being a technical writer who struggles with highly technical information, digests it half-way, and writes detailed content that is irrelevant and confusing - making the product harder to use than it is. (Incidentally, I have seen this happen even when a subject matter expert writes a user guide, and includes too many irrelevant details; and leaves out or buries useful procedural information.)

So let us say you are hired to document a rocket-science product that is without question beyond your understanding (for example, laser radar technology).

One way to handle the situation is (after being up-front in resume and interview) to wear your editor's hat on top of your writer's hat. That is to say, guide the subject matter experts in articulating, in writing and through taped interviews, information such as inner workings; key functions, and procedures. Email follow-up questions to the techies and customer support folks; and have them answer in writing or taped interviews. Then EDIT their answers; have them review your edits. Understand who the typical reader is, and and go through the text as a substantive editor. Your skill as a technical writer will show up in the follow-up questions you ask; and in the structure/organization and the quality of writing that ends up in the user guide.

The job is not easy, but someone's gotta do it :)

-Neha Sharad

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