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Why Technical Communication is Essential to Your Success

Discover the importance of technical communication in STEM fields and how it contributes to your success. Learn about effective communication strategies and how it impacts team collaboration and project outcomes.

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Why Technical Communication is Essential to Your Success

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  1. Instructions Not Included: Why Technical Communication is Essential to Your Success Linda Hobrock The Boeing Company

  2. ET&T | Product Standards Office About Me • I started in aerospace in 1995, and I have been with Boeing since 2000. • Originally, I wanted to be a high school teacher. I actually have a B.A. in English Literature from UCLA and an M.A. in Communication from Gonzaga University. • The year I finished my B.A., school districts were downsizing. Aerospace, however, was hiring, and they needed technical writers. • I thought I would stay for a year, but that first tech writing job surprised me, waking up a passion for STEM and STEM education I didn’t know I had. I never looked back.

  3. ET&T | Product Standards Office About This Presentation • My current job requires me to mentor engineering teams on various forms of communication. I usually do this on an informal basis. • Last year, my site hired a lot of new engineers, many of whom were struggling with the basics of technical communication. • I talked to management and senior staff about developing group training sessions. I wanted to do something structured but informal, providing our new hires with an experience that introduced them to foundational topics in a fun way. • This presentation is a version of the intro course in that developing series.

  4. ET&T | Product Standards Office What is Technical Communication? • Technical communication = Any form of communication about specialized topics in STEM fields. • That includes writings, drawings, demonstrations, models, presentations, TED talks, etc. • Bottom line: If you are talking about your job as an engineer, you are engaging in technical communication.

  5. ET&T | Product Standards Office Putting Technical Communication in Perspective • It’s easy to think technical communication is just about documenting scientific and engineering theory, principles, practices, and processes. • HOWEVER, the only reason to write anything down is so people can retrieve the information later. • Bottom line: Technical communication is all about people.

  6. ET&T | Product Standards Office There’s Always a Community in Communication • Every time you communicate, you participate in a community. • To be successful, you have to understand both the concepts you want to talk about and the audience you want to talk to. • You need to know what “concepts, values, traditions, and style” define your community.* • Bottom line: If you understand who your audience is (what they want and need), you will have a better understanding of how to connect with them. *From Teaching Technical Communication: Critical Issues for the Classroom. Boston: St. Martin's Press.

  7. ET&T | Product Standards Office Why Should You Care? • Building complex products is team sport. • Coordinating the efforts of many people—and keeping everyone on task—requires clear communication of both goals and work plans. • All that project planning and execution necessarily includes specifics about the technologies your teams use or create. • Bottom line: Your success in engineering is largely determined by your ability to communicate goals and ideas to people who can help you achieve them.

  8. Let’s Try It Out: Identifying and Developing Good Requirements

  9. ET&T | Product Standards Office The Game • Your identity: You are a hermit, working alone in a basement as a subcontractor. Your biggest contract is with Omni Corp. Omni Corp sent you requirements for a new product. No additional guidance or information was included. No one from Omni Corp is available to answer questions. • Your mission: Use the requirements as-received to deliver the product on time. • You have 5 minutes.

  10. ET&T | Product Standards Office The Requirements(as-received from Omni Corp) • Create an illustration that meets the following parameters: • Illustration must contain three overlapping triangles. • Triangles should have a circle at the top, two straight lines at the base, and curved lines at the sides. • Decorate as appropriate. • If necessary, label per standard practice.

  11. ET&T | Product Standards Office Let’s Talk About It • Share your illustrations. • Are there variations in the results? • Did everyone meet the requirements? • So, what’s (potentially) wrong with these pictures?

  12. Ready to See the Model?

  13. ET&T | Product Standards Office Time Out • I need some volunteers. One member of each team. • Your new identity: Quality Checker (QC). As the person who will verify your team’s work, you are critical to their success!

  14. ET&T | Product Standards Office Vector Drawing I: Three Triangles Must contain 3 overlapping triangles. Triangles should have a circle at the top, 2 straight lines at the base, and curved lines at the sides. Decorate as appropriate. If necessary, label per standard practice. green yellow blue

  15. ET&T | Product Standards Office Time for Teamwork • Work with your team to rewrite the requirements so they accurately describe the model. • As you work, have your QC try to draw the illustration (i.e. continuously verify your requirements). • QC: Only draw what is required per your team’s written specifications. • Continue to edit the requirements with your QC until the team agrees they are clear and complete. • The team with the best match to the model wins a (tiny) prize! • You have 15 minutes.

  16. Report Out: Share your final results

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