Human engineering, customer research prior to design concept, GUI concept and 
progression testing, usability testing, quality control, user advocacy, basic 
GUI verification and operability (short of rigorous software design testing)... 
the list goes on. There are a lot of areas where TWs could ply their skills, 
provided a corporation values something other than blind typists who just write 
what they're paid to write. Perhaps those areas are things that TWs should 
pitch and demonstrate their skills toward.

Rene Stephenson

Bill Swallow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Agreed. I'm surprised this isn't a more 
common practice.

On 10/18/07, Chris Borokowski  wrote:
> What makes more sense in my mind is for technical writers to expand
> their role to the life-cycle of the product, from conception to
> maintenance, by investing in understanding interaction design/interface
> design, quality control and user advocacy positions.

-- 
Bill Swallow
HATT List Owner
WWP-Users List Owner
Senior Member STC, TechValley Chapter
STC Single-Sourcing SIG Manager
http://techcommdood.blogspot.com
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