vote up 70 vote down star
14

I need advice from people who might understand where I'm coming from. I'm the lead engineer on a software product. The company I'm working for recently expressed serious interest in having me blog about it (much to my dread). They even had someone set me up a blog.

I have aspergers disorder.. I'm really good at taking complex software problems and finding wonderfully elegant solutions. I don't know the first thing about writing interesting and engaging text. Writing for me is a difficult problem, one that doesn't have a defined solution.

I'm really struggling with this and it eats into a lot of time I could spend getting things done. I love the company I'm working for, but I'm worried what it'll mean if I tell them I can't do it.

I don't know how to tell my employer that what they are asking for is something that's totally beyond me.

Help or advice anyone?

UPDATE:

Thank you everyone! Wow, such great responses, lots of great advice!! It was very hard and took a long time, but I was able to do it. I'm going to stick with it a bit longer in hopes that it gets easier (the first post is probably the hardest, because it sets the tone and such). Thanks for the kind words, all the advice, and even for the kicks in the pants!! =)

flag
8  
+1 for autistic programmers! wired.com/wired/archive/… – Byron Whitlock Oct 13 at 22:25
18  
Someone set us up a blog!!!! – DVK Oct 13 at 22:32
110  
You know, the way you've written this question is actually quite well formed and interesting. Give it a try. – Nick Bedford Oct 13 at 22:34
11  
Progs before blogs, man. – Mark Rushakoff Oct 13 at 22:51
15  
Dammit, Jim, I'm a doctor, not a blogger. – Jeanne Pindar Oct 13 at 23:33
show 10 more comments

31 Answers

1 2 next
vote up 112 vote down check

You might not like this, but don't use asperger's as a crutch. What you've written here is clear and succinct, so you've shown you can write prose. It doesn't have to be good, or even interesting to anybody but yourself, but just spend some minutes a day writing something about something.

link|flag
4  
+1 - Excellent point. – ocdecio Oct 13 at 22:43
2  
@DVK: Writing prose takes effort for me too; I certainly appreciate the difficulty. – Greg Hewgill Oct 13 at 22:54
3  
You should ask your employer if they're looking for a particular kind of style in the blog. If the style of your question is okay with them, I would encourage you to give it a try. For many people, writing gets quicker and easier with practice. – Bob Murphy Oct 13 at 23:35
3  
Well, here's the point. He's NOT saying he'd write badly. He's saying it is extremely difficult, causes a lot of anxiety, and takes a whole lot of time. It makes sense that if you torture yourself over a couple paragraphs for a few hours the end product might be good. While I agree that people should always push themselves to do more (including the uncomfortable), they are personally the only ones who can decide what is and is not simply too much. – dblack Oct 14 at 13:13
show 2 more comments
vote up 46 vote down

Consider the following:

  1. "I have aspergers disorder" No one cares. Seriously. If you've written any good code, we don't care about your personal life. If we knew you, we probably would care. However, we don't know you -- we only know your writing.

  2. "I don't know the first thing about writing interesting and engaging text". Neither do 85% of the bloggers I read. No one cares. Seriously. if you've written any good code, we don't care if your text is not "interesting or engaging" We value factual and helpful.

  3. "Writing for me is a difficult problem, one that doesn't have a defined solution." You're wrong. It has a defined solution. Simplicity, clarity, accuracy, and a good fit with other people who are simple, clear and accurate. Read Knuth or Dijkstra or Wirth. Copy their style.

Get over it. Share your insights. Help other programmers.

link|flag
21  
-1 for excessive callousness. – TrueWill Oct 13 at 22:32
3  
Bit harsh don't you think? – Nick Bedford Oct 13 at 22:32
4  
At the end of the blog post, the name is just a name. Not a "person" with a personal life narrative and issues to overcome. Look at all the blogs you read. Seriously. How many of those writers do you know as a person? A writer is their words, not their personal life history. Hiding behind a personal life narrative is a cop-out. I am intentionally harsh because the question is an attempt to hide behind a personal problem. – S.Lott Oct 13 at 22:59
17  
+1 for telling it like it is – Polaris878 Oct 13 at 23:33
6  
#2 and #3 - 90% of the time if your company wants you to write a blog, they are not doing it to help other programmers. they are doing it hoping that you include a lot of keywords that will enhance their Google positioning in your particular industry. – mmc Oct 14 at 2:32
show 12 more comments
vote up 6 vote down

How about hiring a profesional writer?

You could explain your ideas and thoughts, and she/he will put it on paper.

link|flag
1  
The difficulty might be getting the company to pay for that service. – Jonathan Leffler Oct 13 at 22:32
7  
They'll be paying for it one way or another. – Cade Roux Oct 13 at 22:35
1  
If the blog is for internal use, then the actual content is probably more important then how it is pronounced. However, these blogs are sometimes used to show customers/investors how skilled the tech team is. In that case hiring a professional writer might mean more income. – Am Oct 13 at 22:43
3  
I think this is a good suggestion, but instead of hiring a pro, he should write what he wants to say in the bluntest possible terms and give it to the marketing department to edit before he posts it. Blogging is likely a "social media outreach" brainchild of marketing, so they should be supporting him. – Sarah Mei Oct 13 at 22:49
3  
@Phil Like I said, short-term-minded business folks will be paying for it one way or another. Having a highly compensated programming lead blogging is a massive intangible cost - and a huge opportunity cost. I'm not saying it's a waste, I'm just saying they'll be paying for it. – Cade Roux Oct 14 at 2:36
show 1 more comment
vote up 10 vote down

Blogging, unlike a book or a column, is for you and not for someone else - if you realise this I think it will reduce your anxiety level a lot.

link|flag
6  
Not always. Sometimes company-sponsored blogs are a hidden form of corporate marketing communications. You have to find out beforehand whether the company really wants spontaneity and candor, or just different versions of "W00t we're having a great time writing X it's so cool working here we have a pinball machine u need to buy it when we ship." – Bob Murphy Oct 13 at 23:41
show 3 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

If you have a valid reason for not wanting to do the blog, and in my estimation Aspergers would probably count, then I think you should explain your situation to whoevers in charge. If you're working somewhere reasonable, then it shouldn't be a large problem.

Other than this, I do agree with Greg. As someone who's written fiction, the biggest problem with writing is actually writing. Write something, even if it's incomprehensible garbage. As long as the ideas are all there, you or anyone else can clean it up. Most programming blogs aren't written in an 'interesting' manner, it's the facts and details themselves which are engaging to your target audience. As long as it's written clearly, the interest will come. From the way your question is written, writing clearly doesn't seem to be an issue for you. So write. Get stuff on paper. Give it a few weeks. If it still isn't working out, then talk to someone. But give it a try first. You may even find you like doing it by the end.

link|flag
vote up 8 vote down

They want you to blog, they are willing to pay you to do it and willing to give you the time to do it? Public or private?

Seems like a good deal to me. Just like writing documentation or whatever. There's always downtime - waiting on builds, waiting on installs, etc., this is when I usually work on little things. If a blog post takes hours of new research/coding/samples, there needs to be commitment by the company that this is valuable.

If, however, there is no extra compensation or reduction in other expected workload or assistance to build test cases/samples, I'd give it a pass - like so many corporate initiatives, it could just be management following a fad, with no actual commitment.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

Be honest and tell them that you cannot do it and why. HOWEVER, you are willing to give tips to someone that will do it (assuming you are). It is as simple as that. You can also suggest that they have someone more business-oriented (aka someone working in the business) to do it and use you as a technical reference to increase the blog's relevance.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Have you thought about asking what you are supposed to put into the blog? There are a couple different routes you could take to my mind:

  • Features of product - Why should someone want to use the product? What cool new features are you putting into it? Alexey Rusakov on Sitecore development could work as an example with Sitecore as his employer.

  • Development of software - In a way this may be more personal but is more interesting to other developers, IMO. Here you'd discuss what method and tools you use and what cool things you did with them in building the product.

Each could have their appeal and maybe the company wants you to pick which way you want to go. The first category does have the cavaet of being labelled as propaganda if the company's marketing department has too much control over it.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The essence of programming and the essence of technical writing (all writing, for that matter) are the same — the clear expression of ideas. Treat your blog entries like a programming task for which you're seeking the clearest expression and you should be fine.

link|flag
vote up 24 vote down

maybe do a "problem:solution" type of blog. present a problem you faced at work (could be very low level "got this compiler warning" or high level "had to design a system for x") and explain how you solved it.

It will be a good reference for yourself, and others may also read it.

link|flag
2  
+1 good suggestion to provide structure for a blog, to get over that "blank page" anxiety. – Bill Karwin Oct 13 at 23:52
show 3 more comments
vote up 4 vote down

I'm not an expert on your condition, but from what I do understand, perhaps you would have better luck with it if you consider it writing for yourself. What advice or documentation (or even experiences) would you like to have seen written before you started your latest misaventure in software development?

I do most of my documentation as a similar exercise.

link|flag
show 3 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

Presumably they are impressed by the quality of your programming and the coding solutions you provide them with.

So I would say: publish your actual code or samples - if you can - and say what you can about it in explanation. Don't worry about the structure, the grammar or the professionalism of the blogging itself.

If you aren't a natural educator, then you just aren't; whatever the reason. But if you can bring out some of your thinking in the production of your code, then at least you are broadening access to it and the thought processes, analysis and design, that led to it.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

One of the most important tasks we face as programmers is communicating our ideas to other people. It's arguably just as important as communicating our ideas to machines. Most projects are done in collaboration with other developers, managers, and designers. And they need to be documented well enough that future developers can maintain them.

So your job is to explain your work in such a way that anyone can understand it. In this case your audience is wider than you're used to, but it's basically the same task. Take a complex technical concept and reduce it to its essentials. Get out of your head a little, and try to look at it from other people's perspective.

Of course, it's difficult for people who don't have Aspergers (I don't) to understand exactly how it affects your ability to communicate. You might want to expand on that in your question. But in any case, it seems like a worthwhile effort to make.

Or -- how about explicitly writing from the perspective of someone with Aspergers? Not sure if your company would go for that, but it could be interesting.

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

I couldn't agree with Nick Bedord more. You've already written a correct, well-formed, easy-to-understand piece about what you're doing at work and posted it on the internet. How is it different whether you're writing about them asking you to blog, or them asking you to code some nifty widget? Maybe it would help you to think that you're writing it to the SO crowd :)

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 3 vote down

I sympathize with your plight. Obviously, blogging is not your vocation. Even if you could do it, this is not what you WANT to do, and you shouldn't be forced to do it! I understand the "suits" PR need for a blog, "keeping in touch with our customers", "opening windows into our company". But, hey, some of us just want to code! Next they would ask you to do community service to improve the company's image.

So what I would do is follow Mr. Ferriss's suggestion and outsource this work to someone in India, and pay for it out of my own pocket.

The 4 Hour Workweek

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

is it a must to write interesting and engaging things? interesting and engaging to who? I see a lot of people opening blogs and trying to be interesting and engaging to others, to the rest, a lot of times forcing their natural behaviour in the interest to sound "cool".. well, it is really an effort, hours spent trying to be fun to others... but a blog is not just for that.

i'd really love to read about how you elegantly solved a complex problem; what were the other not so elegant solutions. that is interesting.

just write about what you do. interesting is what you do, no how you write it. just write about what you do and don't waste time forcing it to sound "engaging", I personally don't care.

good luck =)!

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Read Elements of Style!

This book was written a long time ago, but it explains how to write prose in a way that could have been custom made for programmers. The similarities between writing and programming are larger than you might think.

Also, I agree with S.Lott.. most bloggers have no idea how to write.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Judging by your question, you're a very good writer. Is it that you don't want to write on a blog, or more that you feel you don't have anything to say?

I honestly don't believe that you'd have any problems writing a blog... I'd read it! The way you wrote your question made me read it right to the end, even though I never usually read questions like these. +1

link|flag
vote up 17 vote down

As a developer with aspergers myself, I know where you're coming from. As others have pointed out, your writing skills seem up to the challenge. What others may not realize is how long a person with aspergers might take to generate that. I sometimes take hours writing a couple of paragraphs, trying to be sure I communicate precisely what I intend to communicate. If that isn't a problem for you, blogging might actually be a great activity for you. Even if you do excessively deliberate on your writing like I tend to, it still might be a good activity, a good chance to do something akin to socializing, but with structured boundaries.

If I were in your shoes I would ask exactly what they want to get out of the blog, then write a couple of sample posts. Track how much time it took, then convert it to dollars. Show the person in charge what you came up with, and how much it cost. If they think the post you show them is worth $300 (or however much) of your time, fine, go for it.

link|flag
2  
Yes, this is a very simple way to approach the problem. While it may somewhat emphasizes a weakness... which may not be such a great idea... it's probably the most reasonable course of action. If it does take him a very long time to write blog entries (which I strongly suspect), and he does it on company time... that will come out eventually and may be quite bad for him if they think there's no way they would have wanted him to follow through if they knew. – dblack Oct 14 at 13:35
vote up 1 vote down

Make this your first post. Initially you can have someone post the content if you write it.

Blog what you are interested in and about the problems you are solving. Don;t let it consume you or intimidate you.

Just be yourself and you may or may not have an audience.

Make sure you keep coding well.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

just do it!!! :)

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

check out

http://blog.penelopetrunk.com/

The author has aspergers also and she's a great blogger. Read the blog thoroughly

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

It seems that you can do it, judging by this post. The question then is: 1) how long does it take you (and how much does it take out of you) to write X amount of prose, and 2) how much code could you have written in that time / effort. If you can quantify both of those things, you can go to your employer and ask them to make the tradeoff. (I hope they're not asking you to blog in your spare time, or in addition to everything else you were doing before!)

If they know the tradeoff and still choose blogging, then you have to decide if it's what you want or not -- it might open new doors for you and expose you to new things, but it also might just annoy you and leave you worn out at the end of the day/week. At that point, it's up to you to decide if you want to stay at the job or not.

Another approach, if they really want you to do it but you don't: you could just do it badly until they relent. Presumably they've hired you to be a programmer first and everything else second, and would rather keep the good programmer than lose you to another job over this.

My two cents.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Writing a technical blog does not mean that the content has to be in the same style as any popular non-tech blog on the internet. Focusing on the content rather than worrying too much about the style, at least at the start, might be a good idea.

It does not have to be funny or witty, as long as you are clearly explaining the topic. Not everyone will agree with me on this, but often I find a wikipedia article or a blog written in the same style more useful than a blog explaining the same things and trying to be funny at the same time (even if it does succeed in being funny).

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Aspergers is not the problem, because your audience might also include a number of aspergers people... the problem is, who is your audience, and what is the purpose of the blog?

Many of the most popular blogs are provocative. They come up with very simple statements that are obviously incorrect, but generate a lot of debate. You should ask your boss about the purpose of the blog, and the intended target audience. If the boss asks back, you can inform your boss that making your customers angry is the shortest path to a large audience...

Another solution can be, that you define the target audience that you communicate well to. If your boss wants to attract attention of nerds, an easy way to do that is to tell about company internal stuff, like how did you solve problem XYZ etc. Ask your boss, how you can easily determine, which of your company internal information, that you can reveal to the outside. Unfortunately, again, the most popular stuff will probably be "how your company failed in helping customers" and stuff like that.

If your Boss says: You are so smart, you must know stuff that others want to read, the answer is simple: "Thanks, but if you want a blog about that kind of stuff, then I need 1-2 days off per week, and I will need a couple of months of practice before I get started." Added value usually comes at a cost, and you need to tell your boss, what the costs are.

All these suggestions share one thing: Your boss is probably not willing to pay the costs that make you able to write a good blog well. Use that in your advantage.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

If they have asked you them I'm guessing someone in the companies management has seen what you have written in the past (code documentation ?) and liked it so they must think you are up to the job.

In my experience its best not to outright refuse to do something like this or bring up some kind of medical reason why you can't do it as you will come across as being negative. Try saying you will do it but that you have read there are many pitfalls in corporate blogging and/or don't want to accidentally give away any trade secrets. So ask if someone in the senior management of the company could check your posts before they go "live" it may also be worth asking if you can write the blog for a few weeks before the blog is made public. This way both you and the management get to see if you can do this job with no risk of embarrassment to you or the company.

I do agree with previous posters in that your question was so well written I suspect you may be underestimating your own abilities in this field.

Oh and if you can't think of anything to write about just look at other company blogs for posting ideas.

Good Luck.

Ian

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

You know it's often the case that the most worthwhile things you've done in your life are the things that have been outside your comfort zone.

There can be no success without challenge.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Congratulations first and foremost - even though this is a daunting task it's not one they would have given you if they didn't think you were capable of it. Not an opportunity that comes to many technical people who do enjoy writing!

As a secondary option to reading 'The Elements of Style' (great book) I'd pick a blog that you enjoy, try and articulate five reasons that you enjoy it more than any other and try and apply these to your own work.

May also be worth discussing with the business the amount of time they expect you to spend on the blog each week (or the expected 'blog' output) where you would have an opportunity to mention Asperger's as part of a more 'practical' discussion.

Best wishes.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

You know what, a couple of years ago I would have said that I couldn't write. I did horribly in English/Grammer/Writing in high school.

When I first started blogging it wasn't because someone asked me too, it was just a way for me to write down solutions to problems I'd run into or my thoughts on various programming topics. My intention was just to have a place to store this information in case I needed it again.

To my surprise it didn't take long before I was really enjoying it and other people were liking it and reading it also. Two years later and I am doing some freelance writing at night after my programming day job because I like it so much.

It can't hurt to give it a try. You never know you may be pleasantly surprised.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Try ask questions and answers to others questions in SO (just as you did it). If you'll be good at - writing a blog will be no problem for you.

Tip. Blog entries doesn't need to be long, they should be usefull.

link|flag
1 2 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.