By Swapnil Ogale on Writing docs, Tools from May 26, 2020
Around February 2012, I was headed into a final interview for a technical writing role at an energy company. I had no prior experience of working in the energy industry, so I figured that would be mentioned at some point in the interview.
Surprisingly, the interview went pretty well and towards the end of the interview, when the interviewers asked to see samples of my previous work, I handed them a CD where I had meticulously curated some of my previous work samples, with redacted portions to protect client sensitive information. The samples covered 2-3 of my previous projects, just to give enough understanding of the range of work that I had done outside the energy industry.
24 hours later, I got a call that I had got the role, and a large portion of that decision came down to the work samples presented on the CD. The feedback was that they were impressed with the quality of work presented and the idea of the CD itself!
Point is, it only added credence to the fact that a tech writing portfolio is worth its weight in gold. A good portfolio adds a final flourish to your technical writing experience.
This blog post covers some ideas on building a tech writing portfolio, along with my recent personal experience of building a portfolio using a combination of Markdown, Git, and a Static Site Generator.
There are a few ways to approach building a portfolio.
There are quite a few resources already on the internet that covers this in great detail:
As a technical writer, I would be keen on putting on best foot forward, so these things would definitely be top of my list to include:
Sometime last year, I started working on updating my portfolio from a shareable document with a list of links to a dedicated website. The purpose of this was two-fold:
As I started building my portfolio, I also realised that this was an excellent opportunity to use some content strategy concepts such as information architecture, navigation, substance and structure to demonstrate my skills.
Using Hugo, Git and Github
I had previous experience working with Markdown across some of my earlier projects, but I was keen on trying out a static site generator for this exercise. I settled on Hugo as my choice. Following Hugo’s documentation, I chose the Hugo Resume theme and played around with it.
Some of the initial hurdles revolved around:
I also created separate repositories on GitHub; one to store my code and docs, and the other to store the output files.
Once the environment was set up, I drew up a plan of content I wanted to be included and gathered the relevant resources (images, links etc) for the site.
Working through Hugo’s documentation, I managed to create a draft of the portfolio I was relatively happy with. The next step was to push these changes to the GitHub repositories and host it on GitHub pages.
(To be honest, I had initially planned to host this on Netlify, but I felt safe in the GitHub environment, so decided to go with this).
I pushed a draft to GitHub pages and the portfolio was effectively ready.
No piece of technical documentation is ever ready without a review. Going with this adage, I decided to test out this portfolio by getting a few fellow technical writers from my network to review this. I deliberately chose to ask a cross section of tech writers, including technical writing managers to review this from different perspectives.
Once they had reviewed this and provided some really constructive feedback, I was able to fine tune the portfolio content and share it confidently with a larger audience.
Reviews, often the useful ones, are often so overlooked in the technical documentation space. Having another set of eyes look at the portfolio via different lenses has made the portfolio more consistent and less error prone.
Like a lot of technical documentation out there, a portfolio is never 100% complete. There will be numerous instances when you will be adding to or updating this site. Ongoing maintenance should also figure in your plans if you wish to keep maintaining an online version of your portfolio.
Working on the portfolio was a great experience, especially trying to learn the inner mechanisms of doc tooling and setting up a doc workflow that works.
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