TechWhirl (TECHWR-L) is a resource for technical writing and technical communications professionals of all experience levels and in all industries to share their experiences and acquire information.
For two decades, technical communicators have turned to TechWhirl to ask and answer questions about the always-changing world of technical communications, such as tools, skills, career paths, methodologies, and emerging industries. The TechWhirl Archives and magazine, created for, by and about technical writers, offer a wealth of knowledge to everyone with an interest in any aspect of technical communications.
Subject:Re: a job as editor From:Marc Santacroce <santa -at- TFS -dot- COM> Date:Wed, 14 Dec 1994 10:19:00 PST
Now ask what indexers make!
==========================
At 17:03 12/13/94 -0800, Jan Boomsliter wrote:
>Where, in the technical world, are editors paid more than writers? I'm
>on my way. I think the only place you can be promoted to editor is in
>the real publishing world.
>In the electronics industry, editors are not considered consequential.
>If the company even has such a job title, it usually means a clerk or
>coordinator, probably a writer wannabe. In the few companies that do
>hire editors, neither the writers nor the managers know much about what
>to do with them, and use them as proofreaders.
>Real editing means owning and managing the project; that includes
>estimating, scheduling, locating and hiring writers, artists, and
>production people, and editing and producing the book. An editor is,
>by definition, an experienced writer.
>I've had the fortune of working in a real editing job once or twice. More
>often I work as a writer, because that's where the jobs are, where the
>pay is, and any "editing" job offered is the writer-wannabe kind.
>Happy hunting.
>=============================
> Hello. In several recent salary surveys and other threads (from this
> list and others), I've picked up that some "writing/editing" jobs are
> treated as two distinct positions where the former is a lower level,
> lower paying job.
> I've been a technical communicator for 10 years (minus a few months) where
> I've worked for both a HUGE corp. and a tiny engineering house.
> I, along with my peers, have always done it ALL--no distinctions.
> Pay increases are tied to tenure since there's no distinction in
> levels. And special work gets compensated with bonuses.
> All of this leads me to a few questions:
> (1) What kinds of situations (or companies)
> hire/promote editors to edit writers? Does it differ by region?
> size of company? industry/business?
> (2) Are there any jobs an editor handles that someone like myself
> who does it all (research, write, edit, product management, production, etc.)
> doesn't handle?
> Someday I'd like to advance to an editor position (if that's really the
> way to get more prestige (read $$)
> if there are companies really hiring such a person. (NOTE: I'm NOT
> talking about being promoted to a person that manages other writers.
> I AM talking about someone being promoted to edit as a specialty.)
> Thanks, in advance, for replies.
> >>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<
> Sherri Hall, Product Manager-Documentation Email: shall -at- hilco -dot- com
> "And unto us a child is born . . . Merry Christmas!"
> >>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<>>><<<
Regards,
Marc
M_a_r_c_ A. _S_a_n_t_a_c_r_o_c_e_________________________
Technical Writer/Trainer
TRW Financial Systems, Inc.
300 Lakeside Dr.
Oakland, CA 94612-3540
santa -at- tfs -dot- com santacroce -at- aol -dot- com
"Better to be judged by twelve, than carried by six"