Earn a Certificate in Technical Writing Online 

As technology and innovations hubs grow across the country, so does the need for skilled technical writers. More so, the ability to provide clear explanations about complex subjects is one of the most in-demand skill sets a communications professional can have today. This 100% online course will help you master technical writing and build a robust portfolio that showcases this highly marketable skill.

Registration and Enrollment

This course is 100% online. Start anytime.

Job Outlook for Technical Writers

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) estimates that jobs for technical writers will grow 11% through 2026, which equates to 5,700 additional jobs.

While entry-level technical writers start out around $45,000 per year, the BLS reports that the median annual salary in this profession was $71,850.

Similarly, Payscale estimates $70,616 with the highest paying jobs located in San Francisco, San Jose, and Seattle. The top earners in this profession take home up to $115,000 and upwards annually.

Accounts Technical Writer FAQs

WHAT DO TECHNICAL WRITERS DO?

Technical writers help keep our technology-driven economy in motion. They provide clear explanations and precise detail about often-complicated subjects to help consumers understand and use products and services around us. More specifically, technical writers may prepare instruction manuals, how-to guides, articles, or white papers and other documentation that explains technical information.

WHAT CONSTITUTES AS TECHNICAL WRITING?

According to the Society for Technical Communication, technical communication is any form of messaging that:

  • Provides information about complex or specialized topics
  • Facilitates or assists communication that uses technology such as web pages, graphics, or computer files
  • Provides instruction about anything, whether the topic is technical or not

DO TECHNICAL WRITERS NEED A COLLEGE DEGREE?

Some technical writer positions require a degree, but many writers thrive when they specialize in a particular niche and maintain a writing portfolio. Beyond this, a professional certificate in technical writing proves a writer’s craft and expertise.

WHAT SKILLS DOES A TECHNICAL WRITER NEED?

To succeed as a technical writer, you will need advanced grammar skills, research methods and practices, a clear and informative writing style and the ability to create various technical documents including reports, memos, white papers, instruction manuals, analyses, executive summaries, and scripts for audio or video.

Course Objectives

Develop any type of communication used to explain complex technical processes. This includes executive summaries, reports, briefs, press releases, and emails. As long as a piece is designed to help others understand technical information, a technical writer is needed. Our technical writing course will teach you how to:

  • Develop effective research methods
  • Consider the needs and abilities of the audience
  • Know how to incorporate clarity and utility
  • Create memos, analyses, and reports

Prerequisites and Requirements

There are no specific prerequisites for taking this course.

Curriculum

INTRODUCTION TO TECHNICAL COMMUNICATION

Defining technical writing, the technical communication triangle and the seven principles of effective writing

YOUR ROLE AS A TECHNICAL WRITER

Introduction to ethics and codes of conduct for technical writers

THE COMMUNICATION TRIANGLE

Principles of communication, establishing common ground and the Communication Triangle

TYPES OF TECHNICAL CORRESPONDENCE

Writing emails, memorandums, and letters; instructional writing and memos; various reporting methods

SEVEN PRINCIPLES OF GOOD WRITING

Techniques in grammar, structure and syntax; mechanical conventions of strong writing

WRITING AS A PROCESS

The stages of writing: prewriting, outline, rough draft, editing and revision

PREPARATION

Applying the Communication Triangle to the prewriting process; analyzing the rhetorical situation

RESEARCH

The research process; using primary and secondary data; documentation and plagiarism

ORGANIZATION

Common organization and writing patterns; factors of the thesis and claims

ROUGH DRAFT

Writing the introduction, body and conclusion; voice and tone

REVISING AND EDITING

The revision process and developing a revision statement; editing and self-check

CONCLUSION

Course Conclusion and summary of lessons

FINAL

Final essay writing assignment

Instructors

Lynn Atkinson

Lynn Atkinson earned a B.A. in English from the University of Texas at Arlington (UTA) in 1993 and an M.A. in English with an emphasis in rhetoric in 1996. A published writer and editor, including contributions to college textbooks, she considers her greatest accomplishment educating thousands of students at UTA, DeVry, Tarrant County College, Southeast Career Institute, and Everest College. She has also been nominated for and awarded “Outstanding Teacher” at several of these institutions. Lynn has developed or co-developed several writing curriculums, won writing contests, and conducted over 10,000 hours of tutoring.