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What Is Technical Communication?
The Challenges of Producing Technical Communication
Characteristics of a Technical Document
Measures of Excellence in Technical Documents
Skills and Qualities Shared by Successful Workplace Communicators
How Communication Skills and Qualities Affect Your Career
A Look at Three Technical Documents
EXERCISES
LEARNINGCURVE: Understanding the Technical Communication Environment
CASE 1: Using the Measures of Excellence in Evaluating a Résumé
This textbook explores how people in the working world find, create, and deliver technical information. Even if you do not plan on becoming a technical communicator (a person whose main job is to produce documents such as manuals, reports, and websites), you will often find yourself writing documents on your own, participating in teams that write them, and contributing technical information for others who read and write them. The purpose of Technical Communication is to help you learn the skills you need to communicate more effectively and more efficiently in your professional life.
People in the working world communicate technical information for a number of purposes, many of which fall into one of two categories:
Notice that when you communicate in the workplace, you always have a clear purpose—what you want to achieve—and an audience—one or more people who are going to read the document, attend the oral presentation, visit the website, or view the video you produce.