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You are here: Home / Career Development / WHY WEB 2.0 IS RELEVANT FOR TECHNICAL WRITERS

WHY WEB 2.0 IS RELEVANT FOR TECHNICAL WRITERS

January 8, 2011 by RDesprez 3 Comments

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In Decem­ber, I start­ed a dis­cus­sion in a few LinkedIn groups titled, “Most tech­ni­cal writ­ers are not embrac­ing Web 2.0.”

It stirred up a lot of feed­back. Most peo­ple seemed to agree, not­ing that they haven’t had time to research Web 2.0 when wrestling with chal­leng­ing projects, such as set­ting up doc­u­men­ta­tion in XML and DITA.

Some mem­bers, how­ev­er, respond­ed by say­ing that Web 2.0 is just a “mar­ket­ing con­cept,” imply­ing that it has lit­tle val­ue for tech­ni­cal writers.

I strong­ly disagree.

Here’s why I think Web 2.0 is rel­e­vant for us:

  1. Social media is not just a fad and it’s not going away. Quite the opposite—more and peo­ple appear to be using it. Here’s one star­tling fact about Face­book: it has more than 500 mil­lion users and peo­ple spend “700 bil­lion min­utes per month” on the site. In case you’re count­ing, Face­book users out­num­ber the com­bined pop­u­la­tion of Cana­da and the U.S. (Check out Facebook’s sta­tis­tics page.)
  2. We’re no longer the gate­keep­ers of con­tent. In decades past, tech­ni­cal com­mu­ni­ca­tors wrote the tech­ni­cal doc­u­men­ta­tion for a prod­uct and it was the offi­cial con­tent for a com­pa­ny. These days, we no longer have a monop­oly on sup­port con­tent. Online dis­cus­sions may abound about your prod­uct, and most of it is indexed by Google and is read­i­ly acces­si­ble. It’s not uncom­mon to find that this “unof­fi­cial” sup­port con­tent (i.e. forums) is often dis­played before our offi­cial con­tent in search results. This pos­es a chal­lenge to writers—how do we ensure that our con­tent is eas­i­ly found by all users?
  3. Peo­ple are already shar­ing their thoughts on your prod­ucts. With Web 2.0, online com­mu­ni­ties and dis­cus­sions are some­thing we all take for grant­ed. Online com­mu­ni­ties are rat­ing books on Ama­zon. Vaca­tion­ers are rat­ing hotels on Tri­pAd­vi­sor. And they may be rat­ing your prod­uct and your doc­u­men­ta­tion. In short, dis­cern­ing online users have nev­er had so much con­trol over their pur­chas­ing deci­sions. For writ­ers, we should mon­i­tor if users are writ­ing feed­back on our prod­ucts using tech­nolo­gies like Google Alerts.
  4. Writ­ers are already using Web 2.0. Anne Gentle’s book Con­ver­sa­tion and Com­mu­ni­ty doc­u­ments a few exam­ples in which com­pa­nies are using tech­nol­o­gy like wikis for tech­ni­cal doc­u­men­ta­tion. The Adobe Labs wiki, for exam­ple, tar­gets devel­op­ers using Adobe tech­nol­o­gy and is appar­ent­ly one of the top wikis for daily-use.

I believe that Web 2.0 is one of the trends that will for­ev­er change how we do our jobs. Ignor­ing it or sug­gest­ing it’s just for mar­ket­ing folks is seri­ous­ly under­es­ti­mat­ing its importance.

Filed Under: Career Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Social Media, Technology, Web 2.0 Tagged With: social media, technical writing, Web 2.0

Comments

  1. Mellissa Ruryk says

    March 21, 2012 at 6:55 pm

    Hear, hear!

    Reply
  2. Robert Desprez says

    March 21, 2012 at 6:55 pm

    In case you’re not sure what Web 2.0 is, here’s my def­i­n­i­tion of it in two paragraphs.

    In decades past, as a soci­ety, we could all watch the finale of a pop­u­lar TV show. The next day, we might dis­cuss the episode with fam­i­ly mem­bers or col­leagues around the water cool­er. The main thing to remem­ber, though, is view­ers had no say on the cre­ation of the show. For most of us, we were pas­sive view­ers of enter­tain­ment and media.

    Web 2.0 changes that. We’re now active con­trib­u­tors of con­tent. Any­one with an Inter­net con­nec­tion and a com­put­er can cre­ate a YouTube video, add some con­tent to a Wikipedia page, write a blog, and so on. As a soci­ety, we can remain pas­sive or choose to be active contributors.

    Reply
  3. Anonymous says

    March 21, 2012 at 6:56 pm

    I agree with your point about tech­ni­cal com­mu­ni­ca­tors embrac­ing and tak­ing advan­tage of the oppor­tu­ni­ties that Web 2.0 presents.

    One thing Web 2.0 has done is pro­vide a means for audi­ences to be more engaged as opposed to just being “con­sumers of infor­ma­tion”. Audi­ences now have a way to pro­vide feed­back on the infor­ma­tion that was pro­vid­ed. And that’s a very impor­tant tool for tech­ni­cal com­mu­ni­ca­tors to gauge how effec­tive their work is.

    All the best to you Robert.

    Reply

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About Robert Desprez

I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at some of British Columbia's largest high-tech firms. I have served in leadership positions for the Society for Technical Communication and have worked as a writing instructor at Vancouver's Simon Fraser University.

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Robert Desprez I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at Kodak, Boeing, Teck Resources, and FortisBC. In addition, I have worked as a writing instructor at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.

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