I got a number of calls yesterday from potential new customers. Within 20 minutes of one of these calls, I was able to send the potential customer CVs, samples and references. How? Because I have a writing staff and I am not a “job shop”. Within an hour, they chose the writer and we arranged an interview for this morning. If they like my writer, they plan to have him start on Sunday. One of the other callers was looking for a technical writer with a particular skill set for an urgent job. I probably don't need to tell you that HONESTY is the best policy. I think that if you don’t have anyone available at that exact moment with those exact skills, then tell the HR manager or the PM that you don’t have the person.
I was shocked that within half an hour, two other technical writing companies were culling CVs from random applicants for the same job I had turned down. It didn’t occur to me to advertise on every job and technical writing list in Israel because – given the short time frame – it would mean I wouldn’t have time to properly vet any of the applicants. When Tech-Tav recommends or offers a writer for a project, we take more into account than just the CV. Finding suitable candidates means a whole lot more than finding out whether the writer has mastered a certain tool or has a particular number of years of technical writing experience.
I’m not going to share all my secrets on how I successfully recruit and place candidates, but I will tell you this: before you choose a technical writing outsourcer or recruiter, I think you should always ask them the following questions:


