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The technical communicator’s credo

What does it mean to be a professional technical communicator in 2016? What will it mean to be a professional technical communicator over the next decade? After pondering those questions I came up with this credo: I serve my audience.

Sourced through Scoop.it from: larrykunz.wordpress.com

Larry Kunz, with his experienced wisdom, has written an excellent technical communicator’s credo here, and has explained what each of these points should mean. In many respects, these are common sense, but they can easily be forgotten when things get rough. Larry invited his readers to add to his credo, but I can’t think of anything to append to this. Can you think of anything? Include your ideas below! –TechCommGeekMom

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How The Master’s Degree Became The New Bachelor’s In The Hiring World

More employers are looking to hire candidates with advanced degrees than ever before.

Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.fastcompany.com

Adam Helweh found this one and posted it on Facebook (which is where I found this). Reading this, it makes me glad that I spent the time earning my MSPTC (Master’s of Science in Professional and Technical Communication), and it has helped me earn a better income and advance my career.  But what would it mean to get a PhD or other doctorate degree in the working world? That is, if the Master’s degree is what is the new Bachelor’s degree, does that mean a doctorate is the new Master’s?  

In the US, it’s expensive enough to try to earn a Bachelor’s degree, and that’s much cheaper than a graduate degree (knowing the cost per credit at many graduate schools compared to undergraduate schools, it’s tremendously more), how is this going to help the workforce ultimately? It definitely helps the technical communication world, I think, to some level bring up the quality of work that’s out there. But there are plenty of talented people with undergrad degrees that can do the work, too. 

Time will tell how this will all impact the workforce at large. 

What do you think? Include your comments below. 
–techcommgeekmom

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Starting Your Own Business | Fifty Is The New Fifty

Things you need to remember to be successful in starting your own business

Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.fiftyisthenewfifty.com

Craig Cardimon found this article. The pipe dream, for me, is still to start my own business. While I still haven’t gotten my act together to make it happen, I often wonder if, as I approach the age of 50 (I’m not quite there yet), if this is something that can still be done at my age.  This article says, yes, it can happen, but not overnight (obviously).  There are some great pointers in the article that I plan to review again once I’m ready to try to take off again, and move forward with my business. I don’t know when that will be, but for now, there are some pointers that I should heed as I plan. 

What do you think of these suggestions? Include your comments below. 
–techcommgeekmom

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Surviving the Dying Career of Technical Writing :: UXmatters

Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.uxmatters.com

Rahel Bailie had received this article in her email and shared it in Facebook, and I’m glad she did.  I have to say, I don’t agree with the author’s viewpoint, although I understand it. 

Let me start with this: TECHNICAL WRITING IS NOT DEAD. 

Since I’m still a relative newbie to the industry, my response to this author is that this is why the industry is known as “technical communication”, not only “technical writing”.  The reason that these combination jobs are happening is quite simple: employers are cheap. It’s really nothing else. Yes, there are people out there that are talented enough to be both technical writers AND analysts, programmers, instructional designers, etc. But what this shift really involves is a shift in how business is done–a necessity for all technical writers, no matter who they are. They have to have a broader understanding of other aspects of the IT industry to survive, no matter what industry their company is. Let me explain. 

Learning these other skills was inevitable. Once the digital age started, there was no going back. Writing documentation for software and hardware became normal. As time as gone on, social media and mobile have upped the ante for digital documentation, because digital documentation is practically universal now.  When universities have related programs, it’s not degrees in technical writing alone, but rather it’s technical communication, because we are taught about graphic design, UX/UI practices, social media, content strategy, and more. We are taught that now, whether it’s through formal education or through working experiences. This is the “new normal”.  But technical writing is not dead, and having it as a skill is very advantageous. 

My husband is a programmer/web developer. English is not even his first language, even though he’s has about 98% native fluency in American English. He can write better than most people born in this country. HOWEVER, he’s the first to say that while he can write a good sentence, and he can recognize a bad one, he’s not really the best person to write user-friendly text or content. He’s not the best content editor out there. He’s a programmer, so that’s what he does and does best.  He leaves the writing part to others to provide the best solutions possible. 
At one position I was at, I was working with a fellow who felt so proud that he was getting a degree in programming, so learning the company’s CMS system was going to be great so that he could help a team create web pages. When I received the initial content that needed to be added, it was one of the worst things I had ever seen. Poor grammar, text that didn’t make sense, and images that looked like a clown vomitted and didn’t represent the group well at all. A technical writer understands these things. 
Right now, I’m in a position as a UX technical writer. It’s my first real writing position other than blogging. I work with UX designers and graphics designers who are very good at .what they do. While they do have a good grasp of user-friendly language, the other tech writer and I have been tasked with cleaning up the content of the wireframes so that things are consistent, clear, and cogent. The designers don’t have that mentality, and so they add–or sometimes don’t include enough–text that will enhance their customer’s experience. 
So, while this author makes a great point that you can’t limit yourself to writing solely, technical writing is NOT dead, but enhanced.  After all, it’s not the Society for Technical Writing that many of us belong to, but rather the Society for Technical COMMUNICATION. Technical communication is a much bigger umbrella that covers more than technical writing alone, but it is the foundation of it all. Technical communication in the 21st century is about being a multi-tasker and having multiple disciplines. It makes you a better candidate for employment, and it makes you a better employee.  Even in the few weeks that I’ve been at my current position as a UX tech writer, I’ve pointed out things to the UX designers that they hadn’t thought about before, because I had training in UX/UI. They also saw that as a blogger and content strategist, I knew how to write and what would be best for the user reading the content. 
It all works in the end, but this is why all of us need to think of ourselves as technical communicators. We are more than technical writing, but technical writing is far from dead. We have a skill that the analysts, instructional designers, and programmers wish they had. While we should enhance and broaden our skills, we should not think of ourselves as programmers or analysts who can write, because most can’t. We are writers that can program and analyze–that’s much more valuable. 
What do you think? Include your comments below. 
–techcommgeekmom

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Lemme Upgrade Ya: Check Out This Totally Redesigned, Easy-to-Read NYC Subway Map

A man by the name of Tommi Moilanen updated Massimo Vignelli’s sleek design for the year 2015, and here it is.

Sourced through Scoop.it from: spoilednyc.com

Being that I live relatively close to NYC, I could never figure out the subway system to save my life. I always loved the DC Metro maps and London Underground maps, as I found the visual design of Vignelli’s maps not only aesthetically pleasing, but incredibly helpful due to their seemingly simple designs. I had never really thought about the intensive strategy and deep thinking that had to occur for these kinds of designs–which seem simple, but aren’t–until I had taken my visual design class in grad school. 

This is a great study of visual design. Take a look…
–techcommgeekmom 

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