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Online Conferences for Technical Writers in 2022

January 30, 2022 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

Here’s a list of inter­est­ing North Amer­i­can and vir­tu­al con­fer­ences. With the pan­dem­ic still with us, it seems that the num­ber of con­fer­ences has dwin­dled, com­pared to pre­vi­ous years.

Lava­con, Octo­ber 23 to 26, 2022, New Orleans, LA
http://lavacon.org

Mad­World Con­fer­ence, June 12 to 15, 2022, Austin, TX and online ver­sion
Mad­World

STC annu­al con­fer­ence, May 15 to 18, 2022, Rose­mont, IL
http://summit.stc.org/

Write the Docs, May 22 to 24, 2022, Port­land, OR
Write the Docs

Filed Under: Professional Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Training Tagged With: career development, conferences, technical writer | Blog, technical writing, vancouver technical writer

Online Conferences for Technical Writers in 2021

March 20, 2021 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

Here’s a list of inter­est­ing con­fer­ences this year.

Evo­lu­tion of TC 2021 con­fer­ence, June 9 to 11, 2021
https://evolution-of-tc.com/

Lava­con, Octo­ber 24 to 27, 2021
http://lavacon.org

Mad­World Con­fer­ence, Octo­ber 3 to 6, 2021, Austin, Texas
https://www.madcapsoftware.com/madworld-conferences/madworld-2021/#content

STC annu­al con­fer­ence, June 5 to 9, 2021
http://summit.stc.org/

Tcworld con­fer­ence, Novem­ber 9 to 11, 2021
https://www.technical-communication.org/tekom/conferences/conferences-overview

Write the Docs, April 25 to 27, 2021
https://www.writethedocs.org/conf/portland/2021/

Writ­er­sUA UX Writer Con­fer­ence, June 8 to 9, 2021
https://welinske.com/writersua-conferences/

Any oth­ers I’ve missed?


Filed Under: Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog Tagged With: conferences, technical writing, vancouver technical writer

Online Learning Resources for Technical Writers

April 12, 2020 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

Once a year, I com­pile a list of upcom­ing tech­ni­cal writ­ing con­fer­ences in North Amer­i­ca and pub­lish a blog post. With the coro­na virus affect­ing all aspects of our lives, take a look at the Soci­ety for Tech­ni­cal Communication’s online con­fer­ence in May and some online resources to investigate.

STC Virtual Conference (May 17 to 20, 2020)

https://summit.stc.org/

There are some addi­tion­al “in-per­son” tech­ni­cal writ­ing con­fer­ences sched­uled for lat­er in the sum­mer and fall. I expect that these events will be post­poned or re-imag­ined as vir­tu­al events.

MadCap’s webinars

https://www.madcapsoftware.com/resources/recorded-webinars.aspx#flare

Adobe’s webinars

https://meetus.adobeevents.com/technicalcommunication/

Lynda.com courses

In the region I live, the local library offers res­i­dents a free mem­ber­ship to Lynda.com. If you don’t already have a paid mem­ber­ship, you may want to check whether your library pro­vides com­pli­men­ta­ry access. Here is a sam­pling of some cours­es relat­ed to tech­ni­cal writing.

Acro­bat DC Essen­tial Training

GitHub

Work­ing Remotely

Learn­ing Confluence

Instruc­tion­al Design

Get­ting Start­ed in User Experience

List of Good Technical Writing Books

List of books

Podcast on Technical Writing Trends for 2020

Pod­cast

Other Online Resources

While not spe­cif­ic to tech­ni­cal writ­ing, here’s a list of pop­u­lar mas­sive open online cours­es (MOOCs),  online pro­grams with unlim­it­ed par­tic­i­pa­tion and open access via the Inter­net. The list includes a diverse selec­tion of cours­es on arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence, phi­los­o­phy, the chem­istry behind cook­ing, the future of sto­ry­telling, pro­gram­ming, and learn­ing how to learn.

I hope you find this list help­ful. Stay healthy!

Filed Under: Career Development, Professional Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Training Tagged With: massive open online courses, MOOCs, online courses, technical writing, virtual conferences

Best Practices for Working Remotely

March 23, 2020 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

With the nov­el coro­n­avirus pan­dem­ic unfold­ing, many employ­ees and con­sul­tants are sud­den­ly work­ing from home in an effort to embrace social dis­tanc­ing. I have worked remote­ly for years for dif­fer­ent clients on a part-time basis but this is the first time in my career that I have worked full time at home.

Some peo­ple love work­ing remote­ly. Oth­ers detest it. Over­all, I like it. It has some draw­backs (such as feel­ing iso­lat­ed) but for me the pos­i­tives out­weigh the neg­a­tives.  I love not endur­ing con­gest­ed and stress­ful com­mutes to a client site—especially dur­ing rush hour when it is dark and rainy. More often than not, com­mut­ing feels like a waste of time. Work­ing from home lets me spend more time with my fam­i­ly, play with our dog, or just get outside.

This week­end I skimmed Remote: Office Not Required by Jason Fried and David Heine­meier Hans­son to glean some addi­tion­al ideas on best prac­tices when work­ing at home. Here are some ideas I liked from the book.

  • Be very avail­able: As my cur­rent client can­not see me in per­son, I make more of an effort to set expec­ta­tions of when I am avail­able. For exam­ple, when I go for a lunch, I change the sta­tus mes­sage of my instant mes­sag­ing soft­ware so that any­one who writes to me sees “Get­ting lunch right now.” If I grab a cof­fee in our kitchen, I change my sta­tus mes­sage to “Be right back.”
  • Sched­ule your time: Sched­ule your time so that some of your hours over­lap with col­leagues so you can ask ques­tions about a giv­en task or help oth­ers with their work. As I work in the same loca­tion and time zone as most of my col­leagues, this is easy. If your team works in anoth­er coun­try, sched­ul­ing your time may require more thought.
  • Con­nect with col­leagues: Get­ting work done is not just com­plet­ing tasks. There’s an ele­ment of encour­ag­ing “social cohe­sion” with­in a depart­ment by using chat rooms or instant mes­sag­ing groups to com­mu­ni­cate with each oth­er informally.
  • Pro­vide sta­tus updates: Depend­ing on your man­ager’s style, he or she may want dai­ly or week­ly sta­tus reports. My cur­rent client keeps track of my assigned tasks using a Con­flu­ence page that I update as I make progress on assigned work. This pro­vides vis­i­bil­i­ty to the assigned tasks I am per­form­ing and shows a his­to­ry of suc­cess­ful­ly com­plet­ing work.
  • Get the client involved: I like this idea from the book: “Make sure they (the client) feel that this is their project too…Set up a space online where you can use a shared sched­ule, show them work in progress, ask them about feed­back, and lis­ten to sug­ges­tions. When the client feels part of the project, the clien­t’s anx­i­eties and fears will be replaced by excite­ment and anticipation.”

In addi­tion to the ideas pro­vid­ed in the book, here are some approach­es I’ve used over the years:

  • List your work: Before you sign off for the day, take five min­utes to list what you hope to accom­plish the next day. I find this tac­tic works well for me to keep focused and main­tains momentum.
  • Stick to a rou­tine: Pick a sched­ule you plan to work and adhere to it. If you com­mu­ni­cate to a client or employ­er that you will be work­ing from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and stick to it, it is one way to build trust.
  • Know when you’re most pro­duc­tive: I have always been an ear­ly ris­er and feel that I am the most pro­duc­tive rel­a­tive­ly ear­ly. That means I typ­i­cal­ly start at 7:45 to 8:00 a.m. each day after help­ing get­ting my daugh­ter’s break­fast ready.
  • Make time to be phys­i­cal­ly active: One of the down­sides to being at home is that there is a risk of being seden­tary. Two years ago, I bought a stand­ing desk but I still have to be mind­ful of exer­cis­ing when my “com­mute” is just walk­ing from the bed­room to the office next door.

Contractors know the routine

As I have been a tech­ni­cal writ­ing con­sul­tant for more 10 years, I like this excerpt from the book, high­light­ing how con­trac­tors can make ide­al remote work­ers: “If there’s an ide­al train­ing reg­i­ment for remote work­ers, it’s being a con­trac­tor for a while. As a con­trac­tor, you have to be able to set a rea­son­able sched­ule, show progress at reg­u­lar inter­vals, and con­vert an often fuzzy def­i­n­i­tion of the work into a deliv­er­able. All of the skills are per­fect­ly suit­ed for con­tract work.”

I have includ­ed some ideas that have worked for me as well as ideas in Fried’s and Heine­meier Hansson’s book. When work­ing remote­ly, what best prac­tices do you find work well?

Filed Under: Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog Tagged With: best practices, remote work, technical writing

Preparing Your Content for Bots? I Am Not.

July 4, 2018 by RDesprez 3 Comments

Pre­dic­tions that tech­ni­cal writ­ers will be writ­ing for bots any time soon are overblown. From one upcom­ing tech­ni­cal writ­ing con­fer­ence, here is a sam­pling of some of the upcom­ing presentations:

  • “Con­nect­ing a Chat­bot to Your Tech­ni­cal Content.”
  • “Your Chat­bot Can Lit­er­al­ly Talk Back.”
  • “Prepar­ing for Change in a World of Non-Stop Change: Beyond Chat­bots and Voice.”

Ear­li­er this year, I watched two webi­na­rs on how tech­ni­cal writ­ers can write con­tent for bots. One of the pre­sen­ters acknowl­edged that he felt that writ­ing for bots is in its “infan­cy.” To me, the take­away is this trend isn’t going to take off any­time soon, at least in the tech­ni­cal writ­ing community.

Tech­nolo­gies like bots are tout­ed by indi­vid­u­als who orga­nize tech­ni­cal writ­ing con­fer­ences and con­sul­tants who are more than hap­py to ped­dle clients the “next big thing.” There’s also a lot of fear about arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence and how the robots will usurp all of our jobs. From my per­spec­tive, in my home­town of Van­cou­ver, BC, I find that the adop­tion of new tech­nolo­gies with­in the tech­ni­cal writ­ing com­mu­ni­ty is often slow.

Here is an exam­ple I can share to illus­trate the point. For years, we heard about using the ben­e­fits of struc­tured author­ing using data mod­els for author­ing and pub­lish­ing like Dar­win Infor­ma­tion Typ­ing Archi­tec­ture (DITA). Ten years ago, I was writ­ing in XML using DITA. It seemed like it was going to be the next thing. I was a believ­er. But my unwa­ver­ing faith in all things DITA waned when I real­ized it was a mar­gin­al play­er in a city with a flour­ish­ing high-tech com­mu­ni­ty that employs more than 100,000 peo­ple. More often than not, tech­ni­cal writ­ing depart­ments are writ­ing unstruc­tured con­tent using tools like FrameMak­er, Mad­Cap Flare, wikis, and Microsoft Word.

I am sure that com­pa­nies like Adobe and Mad­Cap will soon intro­duce sup­port for bots. But even when sup­port is intro­duced, I am not expect­ing the change will rev­o­lu­tion­ize life for tech­ni­cal writ­ers in the short term.

Don’t get me wrong: I am not ignor­ing bots. But I don’t feel like I need to jump on the band­wag­on either. There is fre­quent­ly a chasm between what is being pro­mot­ed at con­fer­ences and in webi­na­rs and the real­i­ty of over­worked tech­ni­cal writ­ing depart­ments who may not have time to quick­ly adopt new technologies.

Filed Under: Career Development, Help Authoring Tools, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology Tagged With: bots, technical writing, technologies

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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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Vancouver Technical Writer. Former Instructor at Simon Fraser University. Dog Lover. Coffee Drinker. Tennis and Piano Player.

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26 May 1927021047175430324

How to throw a little luck into your career /via @globeandmail

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How to throw a little luck into your career

What if you could create some of your own luck?

www.theglobeandmail.com

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20 May 1924848939888738806

Is AI helping workers and improving productivity or just creating more work? /via @globeandmail

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Is AI helping workers and improving productivity or just creating more work?

To reap the full benefits of AI, companies must be more creative than using it to automate existing tasks, one expert says

www.theglobeandmail.com

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16 May 1923413647243559161

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I Regret My Tesla | The Walrus

I wanted to be good. Then the car company fell from grace

thewalrus.ca

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Brian Chesky Lost His Mind One Night—and Now He's Relaunching Airbnb as an Everything App

Airbnb's CEO is spending hundreds of millions to relaunch his travel company as an all-purpose service app. Fitness!...

www.wired.com

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  • Online Conferences for Technical Writers in 2023

About Me

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.

Contact Me

Robert Desprez Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Inc.
North Van­cou­ver, British Columbia
Canada
Phone: 604–836-4290

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