Career change to tech writing
John Garison
john at garisons.com
Thu Jul 27 10:33:01 MDT 2006
I have to pretty much echo what Dana says, with maybe a little caveat
and a war story.
I have taught tech writing for over 15 years, and I do think that a
little bit if training can go a long way. Not to dislocate my shoulder
while patting myself on the back, but I've had two separate instances
where former students of mine have come up to me and said that they took
my Intro to Tech Writing course and have been working as writers ever
since. It was a 14-week course, based on real world issues and
approaches, and taught people what writers really have to do, what it's
like to do it in the environment they'll face, and what skills and
aptitudes they'll need to succeed. So, if you can find a course like
that, take it.
OTOH, don't put an impediment in your way that doesn't really exist. Put
yourself out there and look for work as a writer. If the first two dozen
interviews all tell you that you need some sort of training before
they'll consider you (despite you showing them you have the skills and
some practical experience already), then take the message and go get the
training. If not, then keep at it until you find someone that will hire you.
My 2¢,
John
Dana Worley wrote:
>
>Forget the certificate and start marketing yourself as a technical writer.
>
><snip>
>
>Soo.... long story short.... you have a background in presenting information. You have demonstrated your ability to write and edit. I think you should go for it :)
>
>
>
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