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This
month, I found myself in Portland, Oregon, for the STC board meeting
and the Willamette Valley's season kick-off meeting, which the chapter
organized to coincide with the board meeting. The topic was the
future of technical communication, a panel discussion that included
a workforce analyst, two STC board members, and two local technical
communicators who weathered the turndown in the economy and embody
the characteristics of career survivors.
As context for the panel discussion, it happens to be that Oregon
is the hardest hit state of all the US. Many software development
jobs have been sent offshore, and the technical communication jobs
that accompanied those jobs dried up, as well. Even in companies
retaining their North American-based staff, the continual effort
to trim "waste" continues to erode jobs in departments
seen as cost centers.
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Commodity
writing is the type of technical communication characterized as
the creation of formulaic documentation on demand, and is closely
tied to writing code. Companies are increasingly comfortable outsourcing
both of these tasks. Those are the jobs being sent offshore, as
evidenced by the surge in job openings on STC job boards in the
Asia-Pacific countries.
Increasingly,
the jobs that remain are for "strategic contributors,"
technical communicators who can be entrusted to look beyond the
pages of their manuals, beyond the screens of documentation, beyond
the department of documentation, and even beyond the GUI. These
strategic contributors look at the product from a business point
of view and ensure they contribute to the bottom line through their
contributions to the company's product. The actual contribution
may be content, user-centered design, or specific communications
products, but the content arises from a perspective of problem-solving.
The successful strategic contributor is recognized by management
as a valuable part of the team, and may be part of the management
team. (See Andrea Ames' presentation slides here.)
What impressed me were the remaining panelists who embodied the
principles of strategic contribution. Sheila Reitz, a contractor
for an Oregon power company, made a conscious choice to move from
commodity work to strategic contribution. Using a performance-based
résumé—coincidentally, I discuss these techniques
in "Using a Résumé to Showcase Your Talents"
in the September/October 2003 issue of Intercom— Reitz demonstrated
her ability to contribute her analytical and communication skills
documenting work flow processes. As a result, her first phone call
to user-test the new résumé format resulted in a landing
a dream contract, when her tester exclaimed, "We need you!"
The landscape for technical communications has changed, and will
continue to change. Whether you are a technical communicator outside
of North America who is benefiting from the windfall of technical
writing jobs coming to your area, or a technical communicator called
upon to stretch your imagination, the quest is the same one posed
by Dick Bolles, author of What Color Is Your Parachute?: Which of
my skills fills the changing needs in the local market, and how
can I market myself to meet those needs?
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