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Technical Writing Course - Tech Writing In The Life Sciences - Get It Right

DUBLIN, May 30, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Technical Writing Course - Tech Writing in the Life Sciences - Get it Right" training has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.Com's offering.

Research and Markets Logo

This virtual seminar will begin with a general discussion of technical writing and its role within the life sciences. Technical writers produce a variety of technical documents that are required to manage and direct regulated operations and to meet regulatory requirements. We will spend some time in this webinar discussing those document types, their importance, and the consequences of the messages are unclear or misunderstood.

After setting the stage for this content, we delve into the writing process beginning with the audience and how the audience must be analyzed to determine the level of writing that must be employed to complete the document.

Gathering the information to be included in the technical document requires collaboration between the writer and the various subject matter experts that possess the knowledge to be harvested. How that information is gathered can be an effective efficient process or an ineffective time-consuming endeavor all dependent upon the techniques employed to execute the activity. We will address the most effective techniques for extracting information from SMEs as well as those techniques that work best when observing procedures and activities to be documented.

We will end this webinar with the mechanics of technical writing ranging from planning and organizing the content through grammar, spelling and punctuation ending with writing simplification.

Why Should You Attend

Even with the advent of technology, we still communicate with the written word. Technical writing is about conveying information quickly, accurately, clearly, and succinctly. How we communicate, how we are understood, and how the message is received directly depends upon our skills as technical writers. In the life sciences, this skill is exceedingly important.

Story continues

In the life sciences, the stakes are high in terms of the writing's ability to enable 100% accurate understanding of the content and where the applicable, performance of the task or procedure documented. In the life sciences, that could mean the difference between life or death, safety or injury, loss or recovery, contamination or purity, success or failure.

Unfortunately, technical writing is not a skill that is given much emphasis in college curriculums if any. Technical writing is a skill life sciences workers are assumed to have and are expected to demonstrate at a level of skill usually beyond the capability of most. Unfortunately, most readers of technical writing are in the "same boat." They "don't know a good one when they see one." At the end of the day, in most cases, you have mediocre writing at best that may or may not convey the message intended.

This virtual seminar will walk you through the technical writing process from start to finish. Each critical aspect of writing technical documents for the life sciences will be addressed with the goal of helping you become a better technical writer. The tips and skills presented can be applied immediately and will be evident in the very first document that you write after this virtual seminar.

Background

Technical writing is defined as simplifying the complex. Implied in this deceptively simple definition is an entire range of skills and characteristics that touch upon a broad range of human performance characteristics and needs.

What do technical writers in the life sciences write? They write standard operating procedures, work instructions, job aids, batch records, reports, journal papers, manuals, user directions, label information, etc. It is not the role of technical writing to entertain or to showcase the educational level and importance of the writer. In the technical writing realm, writing simply for anyone to understand is the demonstration of excellence and superior writing skill.

An effective technical writer must consider many aspects of the craft to be truly effective. Writers, must adopt and apply the form and style of the industry in which they work as there are differences for example, between the documents written for a pharmaceutical production operation versus the creation of scientific journal articles. Writers must understand their audience in terms of their needs and abilities and the level of explanation that they require as well as their command of the language in which the material is written. They must have a complete and unwavering dedication to accuracy and consistency. Technical writers must understand and be skilled at collaboration as that is how accuracy is achieved - by harvesting information from subject matter experts.

Who Should Attend:

Anyone in the life sciences that is tasked with writing technical material to include standard operating procedures and work instructions.

Key Topics Covered:

This Seminar will address the following:

  • What is technical writing, and what role does technical writing play in the life sciences?

  • Technical writers in the life sciences - what do they write - types of medium

  • Analyzing the audience

  • Analyzing the information - working with Subject Matter Experts

  • Planning the content

  • Formats, consistency and styles

  • Non-native audience considerations

  • Grammar, spelling, punctuation, numbers and symbols

  • Simplify your writing

  • Ensuring accuracy

  • Speakers:

    Charles H. PaulPresidentC. H. Paul Consulting, Inc.

    Charles H. Paul is the President of C. H. Paul Consulting, Inc. - a regulatory, manufacturing, training, and technical documentation consulting firm - celebrating its twentieth year in business in 2017. He has been a regulatory and management consultant and an Instructional Technologist for 30 years and has published numerous white papers on various regulatory and training subjects. The firm works with both domestic and international clients designing solutions for complex training and documentation issues.

    He has held senior positions in consulting and in corporate training development prior to forming C. H. Paul Consulting, Inc.. He also worked for several years in government contracting managing the development of significant Army-wide training development contracts impacting virtually all of the active Army and changing the training paradigm throughout the military.

    He has dedicated his entire professional career explaining the benefits of performance-based training

    For more information about this training visit https://www.Researchandmarkets.Com/r/opagum

    About ResearchAndMarkets.ComResearchAndMarkets.Com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

    Media Contact:

    Research and MarketsLaura Wood, Senior Managerpress@researchandmarkets.Com

    For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

    U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716

    Logo: https://mma.Prnewswire.Com/media/539438/Research_and_Markets_Logo.Jpg

    Cision

    View original content:https://www.Prnewswire.Com/news-releases/technical-writing-course---tech-writing-in-the-life-sciences---get-it-right-301837141.Html

    SOURCE Research and Markets


    Effective Technical Writing In The Life Sciences Training Course- Bullet-Proof Your Technical Documentation

    DUBLIN, May 30, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Effective Technical Writing in the Life Sciences - Bullet-proof your Technical Documentation" training has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.Com's offering.

    Research and Markets Logo

    Technical writing is defined as simplifying the complex. Implied in this deceptively simple definition is an entire range of skills and characteristics that touch upon a broad range of human performance characteristics and needs.

    An effective technical writer must consider many aspects of the craft to be truly effective. Writers must adopt and apply the form and style of the industry in which they work as there are differences, for example, between the documents written for a pharmaceutical production operation versus the creation of scientific journal articles.

    Writers must understand their audience in terms of their needs and abilities and the level of explanation that they require as well as their command of the language in which the material is written. They must have a complete and unwavering dedication to accuracy and consistency. Technical writers must understand and be skilled at collaboration as that is how accuracy is achieved - by harvesting information from subject matter experts.

    This virtual seminar will begin with a general discussion of technical writing and its role within the life sciences. Technical writers produce a variety of technical documents that are required to manage and direct regulated operations and meet regulatory requirements. We will spend some time in this webinar discussing those document types, their importance, and the consequences of the messages are unclear or misunderstood.

    After setting the stage for this content, we delve into the writing process beginning with the audience and how the audience must be analyzed to determine the level of writing that must be employed to complete the document.

    We will also address the most effective techniques for extracting information from SMEs as well as those techniques that work best when observing procedures and activities to be documented.

    Story continues

    We will end this webinar with the mechanics of technical writing ranging from planning and organizing the content through grammar, spelling and punctuation ending with writing simplification.

    Why Should You Attend

    Even with the advent of technology, we still communicate with the written word.

    Unfortunately, technical writing is not a skill that is given much emphasis in college curriculums if any. Technical writing is a skill life sciences workers are assumed to have and are expected to demonstrate at a level of skill usually beyond the capability of most. Unfortunately, most readers of technical writing are in the "same boat." They "don't know a good one when they see one." At the end of the day, in most cases, you have mediocre writing at best that may or may not convey the message intended.

    This virtual seminar will walk you through the technical writing process from start to finish. Each critical aspect of writing technical documents for the life sciences will be addressed with the goal of helping you become better technical writers. The tips and skills presented can be applied immediately and will be evident in the very first document that you write after this virtual seminar.

    Who Should Attend:

    Anyone in the life sciences that is tasked with writing technical material to include standard operating procedures and work instructions

    Key Topics Covered:

    This seminar will address the following:

  • What is technical writing, and what role does technical writing play in the life sciences?

  • Technical writers in the life sciences - what do they write - types of medium

  • Analyzing the audience

  • Analyzing the information - working with Subject Matter Experts

  • Planning the content

  • Formats, consistency and styles

  • Non-native audience considerations

  • Grammar, spelling, punctuation, numbers and symbols

  • Simplify your writing

  • Ensuring accuracy

  • Speakers:

    Charles H. PaulPresidentC. H. Paul Consulting, Inc.

    Charles H. Paul is the President of C. H. Paul Consulting, Inc. - a regulatory, manufacturing, training, and technical documentation consulting firm - celebrating its twentieth year in business in 2017. He has been a regulatory and management consultant and an Instructional Technologist for 30 years and has published numerous white papers on various regulatory and training subjects. The firm works with both domestic and international clients designing solutions for complex training and documentation issues.

    He has held senior positions in consulting and in corporate training development prior to forming C. H. Paul Consulting, Inc.. He also worked for several years in government contracting managing the development of significant Army-wide training development contracts impacting virtually all of the active Army and changing the training paradigm throughout the military.

    He has dedicated his entire professional career explaining the benefits of performance-based training

    For more information about this training visit https://www.Researchandmarkets.Com/r/65c9er

    About ResearchAndMarkets.ComResearchAndMarkets.Com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

    Media Contact:

    Research and MarketsLaura Wood, Senior Managerpress@researchandmarkets.Com

    For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

    U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716

    Logo: https://mma.Prnewswire.Com/media/539438/Research_and_Markets_Logo.Jpg

    Cision

    View original content:https://www.Prnewswire.Com/news-releases/effective-technical-writing-in-the-life-sciences-training-course--bullet-proof-your-technical-documentation-301837143.Html

    SOURCE Research and Markets


    Remembering GitHub's Office, A Monument To Tech Culture

    It was the spring of 2016, and I was in the Oval Office, waiting to interview for a job. Only I wasn't in Washington, DC. I was at the headquarters of GitHub, a code hosting platform, in San Francisco, sitting inside a perfect, full-size replica of the office of the president of the United States.

    A woman arrived to retrieve me. Shaking my hand, she explained that the Oval Office was being dismantled and replaced with a café for employees. We're trying to make things a little more practical, she said, with a shrug and a barely detectable roll of her eyes.

    "But but but—" I sputtered silently in my head, eyes careening left and right. "It's the Oval Office!" Who cares about practicality! It was like I'd been told they were razing Disney World to make room for more condominiums.

    I got the job, and unbeknownst to me, stepped into a weird world that became one of my most formative experiences in tech, working at a company that pushed the boundaries of what corporate culture could be.

    GitHub—which was acquired by Microsoft in 2018—announced this past February that, in addition to laying off 10 percent of its employees, it would permanently shutter all offices once their leases expired, including its beloved San Francisco headquarters. While this announcement may have looked like just another in a string of tech company office shutdowns, GitHub's headquarters was notable both as a living testament to tech culture and as one of its first disputed territories, whose conflicts presaged the next decade of the tech backlash.

    GitHub's San Francisco office—spanning 55,000 square feet and christened with a ribbon-cutting ceremony attended by then mayor Ed Lee—caused a stir when it opened in the fall of 2013, even at a time when lavish startup offices were commonplace. The first floor was designed as an event space, complete with Hogwarts-style wooden banquet tables, a museum, a sweeping bar, and the Thinktocat, a giant bronze sculpture of GitHub's mascot, the Octocat—a humanoid cat with octopus legs—in the pose of Rodin's most famous work. Upstairs, there was a speakeasy, an indoor park, and a secret lounge, lined in wood and stocked with expensive whiskey, accessible through either a false bookshelf or the Situation Room, a conference room designed to look like the one in the White House.

    Despite its opulence, the office was designed not to alienate but to make everyone feel like a "first-class citizen," as early employee Tim Clem told InfoWorld at the time. GitHub cofounder Scott Chacon, who led the internal design process, explained to me that to lure local and remote employees in, instead of making mandatory in-office days, GitHub's executives challenged themselves to design an office that was better than working from home. (It certainly worked on me. I generally prefer to work from home, but I came into the GitHub office almost every day.)

    The Oval Office, for example, came about because Chacon and his colleagues realized that the lobby would be a place where visitors would be forced to sit and wait for five to 10 minutes— normally a boring or unpleasant experience. How could they create "the most interesting room" to wait in, which would help pass the time? As Chacon explains, "Most people don't get a chance to sit in the Oval Office, but as an employee of GitHub, you could go there anytime you wanted."

    The office was a fun house that distorted the mind, not just with its flashy looks, but by playfully blurring the lines of hierarchy and power. Chacon's comments reflect an organizational culture from GitHub's early days, when there were no managers or titles. At the previous headquarters ("Office 2.0"), they flipped the rules of a private office that had belonged to the former tenant's CEO, outfitting it with swanky leather chairs and declaring that anyone except executives could go in there. At Office 3.0, they connected the lighting and calendar systems, so that the lights would blink as the meeting approached its allotted time limit, then turn off completely—no matter who you were or how important your meeting was.






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