Where would you look to find great tech writers to write user manuals for software? Are there specific sites, areas of the web, etc. that are best to look for them?

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Good question but is it a programming question? – James Westgate Apr 27 '10 at 20:42
There are lots of good tech writers... yep you will have no problems finding them. – ChaosPandion Apr 27 '10 at 20:44
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I believe it is a programmer question, because often the developer ends up writing the user manual (which is generally not a good idea). It would be nice if developers had a resource to point to ;) – Stephane Grenier Apr 27 '10 at 20:45
@ChaosPandion if there are lots they are not writing manuals. I'd quote a passage from the documentation of my digital camera's software but they didn't provide me with the English version. The two or three great tech writers I know are working as journalists (David Pogue, one of them, also writes books). – Pascal Cuoq Apr 27 '10 at 20:48
Thing is, programming-related doesn't mean related to anything a programmer might wind up doing, so I think this is off-topic. – David Thornley Apr 27 '10 at 20:53
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Aside from the usual places to find people to fill a position (résumé and job posting sites and networking), you may want to contact the Society for Technical Communication chapter in your area. Many chapters maintain a mailing list or have a specific person who helps communicate job opportunities to members. The Society at large also has a jobs site.

I'm a technical writer (who sometimes ends up programming, FWIW) and I've been quite involved with STC in the past. There are plenty of talented and professional STC members, so it's definitely a resource I'd consider.

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And just as a side note, technical writers can be a lot more valuable than just creating user guides. In addition to user guides, I've written API documentation, written internal documentation (like build and setup procedures), recorded screencasts, and made a source-code-comments-to-documentation tool. There's a lot of opportunities for tech writers to take on responsibilities which aren't obviously those of a "writer." This is also why many technical writers position themselves as "technical communicators" and other titles. – ddbeck Apr 27 '10 at 23:33
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It's a standard position in IT industry. Do whatever you usually do to find developers, or system administrators, or testers. Contact a recruting agency, post a vacancy on some Web site, etc.

Ask for writing samples and if you like the docs and they describe something similar to what your company does, it's your writer.

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