|
Home Page
Reasons To Study
Admissions Process
Program Requirements
Faculty
M.A. - Ph.D. Option
Online Resources
Frequently Asked
Questions
Contact Information
|
 |
Reasons to Study Professional Writing and Communication
Our Certificate program combines an innovative curriculum with practical skills in writing, research, communication, and technologies that will enable you work in exciting new professional areas. The rewards and growth opportunities are numerous.
On-line courses offer flexibility
Studying at UWM in the Professional Writing and Communication Certificate can lead to many new opportunities. Our faculty is nationally known, publish award-winning research, and are dedicated to creating learning environments that work for students. The
on-line curriculum allows flexibility and independence, so that you can work from your home and other locations anytime, night or day.
Increased demand for writing and communication skills
In business, communication, and information technology, the demand for professionals with good writing and communication skills grows daily. The Society for Technical Communication (STC), the largest such professional association with over 22,000 members
, reports that:
Technical communication is now one of the fastest growing professions, with a variety of career options. Technical communicators are writers, editors, artists, managers, educators, and video specialists employed in every industry, from automob
iles to computers to finance. (Source: http://www.stc.org)
Good Salaries
According the STC 2002 salary survey, technical communicators averaged $59,700 in 2002, with supervisory positions earning considerably more. Entry-level salaries averaged $44,230. But job seekers with post-BA education generally start at a higher salary
level. Past surveys indicate technical communicators salaries have grown by a remarkable 33% in the last five years. With increasing demand for professionals in this field, salaries will continue to increase each year.
Good Job Security
Technical communicators have reported excellent job security, and their positions are rarely cut since the demand for what they do rarely diminishes. When a company discovers that it has hired a good writer and communicator, they hold onto that person, si
nce these skills are hard to replace and grow in value as the employee becomes familiar with the company's documentation, products, and communication systems. Job security for technical writers and communicators looks good well into the future.
Rewarding Work and Personal Growth Opportunities
Professional writers and communicators report rewarding experience at their jobs: they often see their manuals, Web pages, courses, brochures, and other work promoted and used by customers and employees. Working on project teams with technical specialists
, analysts, system developers, content experts, marketing managers, graphic designers, and many other professionals enables them to share valued ideas and expertise. They often have opportunities to learn new systems, train users, present new products to
clients, and conduct on-site usability studies, getting to see exactly how others use products and documentation in the field.
By learning new skills and in developing new areas of expertise, professional communicators increase their ability to change careers, move into management positions, and start their own free-lance writing and consulting businesses.
Companies Often Pay for Your Tuition
Since you will be learning new technologies and communication skills, companies will often pay for part or all of your tuition fees through their employee development programs.
Variety in job opportunities
Good writing, editing, and communication are needed in nearly every profession. Here are just a few job titles in professional writing and communication:
| Technical writer |
Training manager |
| Usability specialist |
Technical communicator |
| Documentation manager |
Technical illustrator |
| Technical editor |
Communication dept head |
| Information developer |
Web designer |
| Knowledge manager |
Technical translator |
| Documentation specialist |
Business analyst |
| Training specialist |
User Liaison |
| Teachers of technical communication |
Working in any one of these areas can open up growth opportunities in related areas, so that technical writers often become programmers, managers, trainers, business analysts, sales representatives, free-lance writers, or technical consultants.
|