Technical Writing

When I first graduated with my journalism degree from Penn State, I landed my first gig as a technical writer for The Vanguard Group in Malvern, PA. At the time, I didn’t even know what technical writing was. Once I learned this extremely useful skill, I have been using it in all of my work since.

Basically, technical writing is documenting a process or procedure in a simple way, making it accessible and easy for the average, non-technical person, to understand.

Types of documents created:
Technical writing can take many forms. The list below includes some of the types of documents I have created over the years:

  • Division directives/guidances
  • Standard operating procedures (SOPs)
  • Disaster recovery policies and procedures
  • Proprietary software documentation
  • Tutorials
  • Help menus
  • PowerPoint and online software training materials
  • User Specifications
  • Test Scripts
  • Glossaries

Industries served:
Software and technology companies
Government
Publishing
Financial Services
Healthcare/Pharma

Tools/software used, developed:
Depending on the industry and company, technical documentation maybe be hosted or distributed via a number of tools. I have included a list of tools and software I have used below: 

  • GitHub pages
  • CRMs
  • Internal repositories
  • Confluence
  • wikis
  • Training systems
  • MadCap Flare
  • Success Center
  • SharePoint