What is a more techy Technical Writer job title that isn't cutesy or confusing? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing our contest results! Tags of the week! April 15-21, 2019: Planning & TranslationExplaining that experience is far greater than official job title impliesHow can one make technical issues more accessible to a non-technical audience?What help is there for a technical reseacher/writer that can't edit?What are the key skills for a new technical writer?Does a technical writer need a technical background?What Types of Jobs can a Writer find?Best practices for maintaining documented code examples?How can we make compiling release notes less chaotic?Looking for sites that describe minimalist writing for technical contentTechnical writer degree with an English BA?Technical review process when using FrameMaker

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What is a more techy Technical Writer job title that isn't cutesy or confusing?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)
Announcing our contest results!
Tags of the week! April 15-21, 2019: Planning & TranslationExplaining that experience is far greater than official job title impliesHow can one make technical issues more accessible to a non-technical audience?What help is there for a technical reseacher/writer that can't edit?What are the key skills for a new technical writer?Does a technical writer need a technical background?What Types of Jobs can a Writer find?Best practices for maintaining documented code examples?How can we make compiling release notes less chaotic?Looking for sites that describe minimalist writing for technical contentTechnical writer degree with an English BA?Technical review process when using FrameMaker










1















I have been hired as a Technical Writer at a firm who needed multiple types of writers: A few people were hired to write content for the average website reader interested in our product, such as a Product Manager, and user documentation, such as user guides. However, I was hired to dig down into the code and actually write sample code to explain how to use the company's SDK (software development kit). I interface with the development team on a daily basis and actually test their code, analyze it, and give them suggestions for improvement.



I would like to add another descriptive term in my job title on my email signature and resume to show that I have in-depth software engineering knowledge. For anyone who thinks this is to puff myself up or to downplay normal Technical Writers, you are wrong. The primary reason I want to do this is so my resume doesn't look like I switched careers. The secondary reason is so that people who receive my emails and read my resume can tell by my title that I have extensive software engineering experience inside software development.



I read this, but it didn't help. Of course, I searched the internet, too. I found articles about my current role, but nothing about job titles.



I thought perhaps:



  • Technical Writer (Sr. Software Engineer)

  • Technical Writer as Sr. Software Engineer

  • Technical Writer specializing in the full SDLC









share|improve this question









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  • 1





    Welcome to Writing.SE. We love questions about technical writing here and we hope you'll stick around (and pick a name of your choice so we can remember who you are). I'm not sure this question is on topic though. The one you link to is 7 years old and a lot of old posts here would be off topic now, as I think that one would be without question. I'm not voting to close because I'd like to hear from others here about whether or not your question is on topic. Either way, please do post other questions as desired and answer what you like.

    – Cyn
    3 hours ago















1















I have been hired as a Technical Writer at a firm who needed multiple types of writers: A few people were hired to write content for the average website reader interested in our product, such as a Product Manager, and user documentation, such as user guides. However, I was hired to dig down into the code and actually write sample code to explain how to use the company's SDK (software development kit). I interface with the development team on a daily basis and actually test their code, analyze it, and give them suggestions for improvement.



I would like to add another descriptive term in my job title on my email signature and resume to show that I have in-depth software engineering knowledge. For anyone who thinks this is to puff myself up or to downplay normal Technical Writers, you are wrong. The primary reason I want to do this is so my resume doesn't look like I switched careers. The secondary reason is so that people who receive my emails and read my resume can tell by my title that I have extensive software engineering experience inside software development.



I read this, but it didn't help. Of course, I searched the internet, too. I found articles about my current role, but nothing about job titles.



I thought perhaps:



  • Technical Writer (Sr. Software Engineer)

  • Technical Writer as Sr. Software Engineer

  • Technical Writer specializing in the full SDLC









share|improve this question









New contributor




user2263986 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    Welcome to Writing.SE. We love questions about technical writing here and we hope you'll stick around (and pick a name of your choice so we can remember who you are). I'm not sure this question is on topic though. The one you link to is 7 years old and a lot of old posts here would be off topic now, as I think that one would be without question. I'm not voting to close because I'd like to hear from others here about whether or not your question is on topic. Either way, please do post other questions as desired and answer what you like.

    – Cyn
    3 hours ago













1












1








1








I have been hired as a Technical Writer at a firm who needed multiple types of writers: A few people were hired to write content for the average website reader interested in our product, such as a Product Manager, and user documentation, such as user guides. However, I was hired to dig down into the code and actually write sample code to explain how to use the company's SDK (software development kit). I interface with the development team on a daily basis and actually test their code, analyze it, and give them suggestions for improvement.



I would like to add another descriptive term in my job title on my email signature and resume to show that I have in-depth software engineering knowledge. For anyone who thinks this is to puff myself up or to downplay normal Technical Writers, you are wrong. The primary reason I want to do this is so my resume doesn't look like I switched careers. The secondary reason is so that people who receive my emails and read my resume can tell by my title that I have extensive software engineering experience inside software development.



I read this, but it didn't help. Of course, I searched the internet, too. I found articles about my current role, but nothing about job titles.



I thought perhaps:



  • Technical Writer (Sr. Software Engineer)

  • Technical Writer as Sr. Software Engineer

  • Technical Writer specializing in the full SDLC









share|improve this question









New contributor




user2263986 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I have been hired as a Technical Writer at a firm who needed multiple types of writers: A few people were hired to write content for the average website reader interested in our product, such as a Product Manager, and user documentation, such as user guides. However, I was hired to dig down into the code and actually write sample code to explain how to use the company's SDK (software development kit). I interface with the development team on a daily basis and actually test their code, analyze it, and give them suggestions for improvement.



I would like to add another descriptive term in my job title on my email signature and resume to show that I have in-depth software engineering knowledge. For anyone who thinks this is to puff myself up or to downplay normal Technical Writers, you are wrong. The primary reason I want to do this is so my resume doesn't look like I switched careers. The secondary reason is so that people who receive my emails and read my resume can tell by my title that I have extensive software engineering experience inside software development.



I read this, but it didn't help. Of course, I searched the internet, too. I found articles about my current role, but nothing about job titles.



I thought perhaps:



  • Technical Writer (Sr. Software Engineer)

  • Technical Writer as Sr. Software Engineer

  • Technical Writer specializing in the full SDLC






technical-writing career






share|improve this question









New contributor




user2263986 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




user2263986 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago









Cyn

18.2k13985




18.2k13985






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asked 5 hours ago









user2263986user2263986

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New contributor





user2263986 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






user2263986 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 1





    Welcome to Writing.SE. We love questions about technical writing here and we hope you'll stick around (and pick a name of your choice so we can remember who you are). I'm not sure this question is on topic though. The one you link to is 7 years old and a lot of old posts here would be off topic now, as I think that one would be without question. I'm not voting to close because I'd like to hear from others here about whether or not your question is on topic. Either way, please do post other questions as desired and answer what you like.

    – Cyn
    3 hours ago












  • 1





    Welcome to Writing.SE. We love questions about technical writing here and we hope you'll stick around (and pick a name of your choice so we can remember who you are). I'm not sure this question is on topic though. The one you link to is 7 years old and a lot of old posts here would be off topic now, as I think that one would be without question. I'm not voting to close because I'd like to hear from others here about whether or not your question is on topic. Either way, please do post other questions as desired and answer what you like.

    – Cyn
    3 hours ago







1




1





Welcome to Writing.SE. We love questions about technical writing here and we hope you'll stick around (and pick a name of your choice so we can remember who you are). I'm not sure this question is on topic though. The one you link to is 7 years old and a lot of old posts here would be off topic now, as I think that one would be without question. I'm not voting to close because I'd like to hear from others here about whether or not your question is on topic. Either way, please do post other questions as desired and answer what you like.

– Cyn
3 hours ago





Welcome to Writing.SE. We love questions about technical writing here and we hope you'll stick around (and pick a name of your choice so we can remember who you are). I'm not sure this question is on topic though. The one you link to is 7 years old and a lot of old posts here would be off topic now, as I think that one would be without question. I'm not voting to close because I'd like to hear from others here about whether or not your question is on topic. Either way, please do post other questions as desired and answer what you like.

– Cyn
3 hours ago










1 Answer
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The conventional term is "programmer writer" or, sometimes, "programming writer". It is generally used to describe someone whose training and focus is programming rather than technical writing, but who is currently performing a technical communication function specifically aimed at documenting things for programmers. I did most of my tech writing for developers as well, but because my career focus was technical writing, I stuck to the term "technical writer". Same job, more or less. The difference in titles is more to cover differences in career track, which seems to be what you are concerned about.






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    1 Answer
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    active

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    2














    The conventional term is "programmer writer" or, sometimes, "programming writer". It is generally used to describe someone whose training and focus is programming rather than technical writing, but who is currently performing a technical communication function specifically aimed at documenting things for programmers. I did most of my tech writing for developers as well, but because my career focus was technical writing, I stuck to the term "technical writer". Same job, more or less. The difference in titles is more to cover differences in career track, which seems to be what you are concerned about.






    share|improve this answer



























      2














      The conventional term is "programmer writer" or, sometimes, "programming writer". It is generally used to describe someone whose training and focus is programming rather than technical writing, but who is currently performing a technical communication function specifically aimed at documenting things for programmers. I did most of my tech writing for developers as well, but because my career focus was technical writing, I stuck to the term "technical writer". Same job, more or less. The difference in titles is more to cover differences in career track, which seems to be what you are concerned about.






      share|improve this answer

























        2












        2








        2







        The conventional term is "programmer writer" or, sometimes, "programming writer". It is generally used to describe someone whose training and focus is programming rather than technical writing, but who is currently performing a technical communication function specifically aimed at documenting things for programmers. I did most of my tech writing for developers as well, but because my career focus was technical writing, I stuck to the term "technical writer". Same job, more or less. The difference in titles is more to cover differences in career track, which seems to be what you are concerned about.






        share|improve this answer













        The conventional term is "programmer writer" or, sometimes, "programming writer". It is generally used to describe someone whose training and focus is programming rather than technical writing, but who is currently performing a technical communication function specifically aimed at documenting things for programmers. I did most of my tech writing for developers as well, but because my career focus was technical writing, I stuck to the term "technical writer". Same job, more or less. The difference in titles is more to cover differences in career track, which seems to be what you are concerned about.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 1 hour ago









        Mark BakerMark Baker

        56.9k496206




        56.9k496206




















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