If you are a journalist, engineer, teacher, software developer, or other working professional who may be thinking about a career move into technical writing, then here are EIGHT steps to help you get off to a fast start:
- “Functionalize” your resume to emphasize your communication experience–and make your career objective clear. Use headings that highlight your communications skills, professional strengths, projects completed, and authoring (software) tools knowledge.
- Update your LinkedIn profile to reflect you new career objective. This includes modifying your skills section to include software skills and any other newly completed courses, training programs, and/or certifications.
- Consider enrolling in a technical writing certificate program or individual writing course study (options include: University of Minnesota, Metropolitan State University, Minnesota State Mankato, University of Wisconsin Eau Claire, Normandale Community College, and Society for Technical Communication).
- Update your software skills immediately—start with the Adobe Suite (courses offered by Lynda.com, and Science Museum of Minnesota.
- Build a paper and on-line portfolio of samples of your past work. Save samples to flash drive also. Ask for permission if confidentiality of information is in question.
- Join the STC (Society for Technical Communication), AMWA (American Medical Writer’s Association), and/or PEN (Professional Editors Network).
- Start attending networking events and job fairs, talking with professional peers-family-friends, researching on-line.
- Contact JPG for guidance and advice on careers in technical communication.