At 03:26 a.m. 8/10/2013, Stephen O'Brien wrote:

>Hi,
> 
>A few mechanical engineers have been asked, as part of their varied workload, 
>to author certain documents in English (How To, Webinars, software essentials) 
>in the near future.
> 
>Working with authors who are not formally trained is a new experience for me. 
>I am wondering how to best define their tasks and the tasks of my technical 
>writing group who will work together to ensure quality documents. For example:
> 
>·         I could provide the engineers with templates in FrameMaker and an 
>introduction to the basics of technical writing and English grammar and bring 
>them to write good documents over time. Some formal training in technical 
>writing could be offered. The technical writers would then review the final 
>documents (container and content) to ensure the overall quality of the 
>documents.
> 
>·         Or, maybe the role of the engineers should be to write rough content 
>within guidelines (get the ideas and workflows on paper), and my team of 
>technical writers could be responsible for formatting the content and 
>expressing their ideas/workflows correctly in English. This would take much 
>less time for the engineer (less of a learning curve).
> 
>Do you have some experience in this matter? Any hints for what may work best?

Is your task to train them to be tech writers or to be good informants?  Are 
you tasked with producing the documentation or just with editing it? The 
differences are crucial.  If they had meant to be tech writers, they wouldn't 
(usually) have ended up as mechanical engineers.  And that's discounting the 
built-in problem you possibly have there in Quebec, where numbers of the 
engineers may not have learnt their composition skills in English....

Remember that old adage: "Don't keep a dog and bark yourself."  What sense 
would it make to hire a team of tech writers and then make the engineers 
produce near-final content?

My best advice is to CONSULT THE ENGINEERS.  Between you, you have to establish 
the reader audience and what needs to be got - from whom and by whom -  in 
order to produce each of the docs.  That needs Q & A on both sides, both 
initial and ongoing  The "how" will follow on once the basics are clear.

The engineers will have their own distinct preferences as to the tool they 
would use to deliver content to you.  In my experience, engineers often don't 
"get" word processors and just use them like a text editor.  Making them use 
Word templates is unreasonable for them.  Many prefer to use simple text 
editors or email.  You can put them in the way of using a freely available text 
editor like MS Notepad or free Notepad++ and offer elementary training to those 
who want it.  

Give them plain-text templates with headings and blocks that cover the 
information you've all agreed you need.  They can use those to build topic 
outlines and, subsequently, to fill up with content.  On your side, you can 
build your formal document outlines in Frame and "stuff them as you go".  The 
engineers are likely to be interested in the outlines of 
sections/chapters/volumes for which they, individually, will provide content.  
Those may or may not be congruent with the organisation of the published docs, 
so making and maintaining road maps may be a task for you and your team.  A lot 
depends on the intended audience, change management and other stuff they might 
not be involved in directly.

One place where you will need more source tool consistency is in figures, 
especially if the company uses one main CAD tool.  Your tech writers will need 
a tool for converting CAD output to Frame-friendly images if the software 
itself doesn't provide one.

Helen

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