Why would you want a technical communicator on your staff?

Not too long ago, a senior manager asked me to write a short page of talking points explaining why it was a good idea to have professional communicators–in this case, technical communicators–on staff.  Here’s what I came up with. Maybe you can use it too (or refine it–comments are welcome!)


What do technical communicators do?
  • Research, write, edit and refine technical and marketing documentation, either as lead authors or as team participants.
    • Policy and procedure manuals
    • Proposals and RFPs
    • Training materials
    • Web pages
    • Product manuals and online help
    • White papers
    • Reports and presentations
    • Project documentation
  • Research and recommend best practices for communications.
  • Set and propagate documentation standards and style guidelines.
  • Manage your documentation library and collaboration tools.

Why should you care?

An experienced technical communicator can help you save money, make money, establish and maintain a competitive advantage, and comply with legal and regulatory requirements.

Save money

  • Reduce support and overhead costs by delivering improved training material and reference documents.
  • Increase buy-in from colleagues and clients by delivering persuasive and easy-to-understand policy and procedure documentation.
  • Help your staff “do it right the first time” by providing clear directions, reducing the necessity for costly rework and revision due to ambiguity and misunderstanding.
  • Bring new employees and client staff up to speed quickly by providing clear documentation and training material; they will become more productive, faster.

Make money

  • Win new business by crafting more compelling proposals and RFPs.
  • Add considerable value to the services that you deliver and the processes and tools that you support by being able to offer high-quality training and documentation and turning it into a selling point.

Establish and maintain a competitive advantage

  • Clear communication helps you align business and IT goals and practices to improve your organization’s effectiveness.

Comply with legal and regulatory requirements

  • Stay out of the liability zone by clearly documenting your policies and procedures and communicating them to clients and staff.
  • Comply with Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, and related global and industry-specific statutory requirements.

This entry was posted on Monday, February 6th, 2006 at 6:53 AM and filed under Technical communications, Instructional design, Knowledge work. Follow comments here with the RSS 2.0 feed. Post a comment or leave a trackback.

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