Writing Corrective Actions for customers?
Ned Bedinger
doc at edwordsmith.com
Mon Apr 21 18:34:12 MDT 2008
Gene Kim-Eng wrote:
> There is certainly nothing wrong with a contractor choosing
> to turn down a contract, or choosing not to do a particular
> kind of work. The difference is between "I don't do that
> type of work" and "what kind of underhanded trick are
> you trying to pull on me, that's not proper work for a
> technical writer," as voiced by several posters in this
> thread. If the distinction between these two attitudes is
> not immediately evident, we'll just have to agree never
> to discuss potential contracts in the future.
My reading of the response you're referring to was a little less
judgemental, but I am looking at this as an individual who owns the
responsibilty for what I say and do, not a manager who will have to pick
up the slack if I bail or beg off of an assignment that touches the
wrong nerve for me.
The poster said he is an individual who feels that the workplace can be
opaque and boobytrapped with pitfalls (minefield was the expression).
He's not delusional, the workplace CAN be a real snakepit. When he
wonders why such Public Relations (not CRM, I would guess he meant) work
suddenly gets routed to him, I see critical thinking. I think he's wise
to follow his instincts in hoping to avoid the vicissitudes of being
exposed to every drib or drab of the stuff that runs downhill. With no
one else watching his six o'clock position, he's entirely right to fret.
Honestly, one can understand the need for a technical writer without
abandoning the self-preservation instinct, and I think that's what the
correspondent was trying to say, if from the hip.
Hope this helps,
--Ned "could have been a mouthiece"
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