Re: Technical writing in the development process

Subject: Re: Technical writing in the development process
From: "Gene Kim-Eng" <techwr -at- genek -dot- com>
To: "Melissa Nelson" <melmis36 -at- hotmail -dot- com>, <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com>, "Diane Haugen" <WhiskeyCreek -at- wcdd -dot- com>
Date: Sun, 25 Jun 2006 12:15:43 -0700

No, it's the standard definition of a badly managed development process. Unfortunately, it seems to me that it's becoming more
frequent, especially in products like software where manufacturers
figure that they can ship all sorts of <insert expletive here> and
then just post "bulletins" and "hotfixes" every couple of days instead of actually performing some sort of planning and testing before they ship to ensure the product really works and its users
can figure out how to make it work.

You can try to develop strategies for "justifying your existence"
and your place on the development team (I have many times),
but ultimately, the answer to the question "who gives you the right" should properly be the name of someone whose instruction
the person asking the question is bound to respect. If it isn't, you need to be prepared to face the possibility that those who hired you really had no business bringing in a writer because they weren't prepared to define his or her role on the team.
Gene Kim-Eng


----- Original Message ----- From: "Diane Haugen" <WhiskeyCreek -at- wcdd -dot- com>

At 7:17 PM -0400 6/24/06, Melissa Nelson wrote:

Presently, at my office I am not involved at all until the very end and then I find myself trying to do eight weeks of documentation in two or three weeks, as the developers tend to see a July 30th deadline as meaning they should have it done on July 29th. :)

As Geoff Hart has indicated, isn't this the standard definition of technical writing?

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References:
Technical writing in the development process: From: Melissa Nelson
Re: Technical writing in the development process: From: Diane Haugen

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