Jacob Moses

Jacob Moses

Jacob Moses is the founder and original host of The Not-Boring Tech Writer podcast, which he launched in 2016 to celebrate tech writers and push back against the stereotype that technical writing is boring. He studied technical communication at the University of North Texas, and his first gig out of college was as a tech writer at Rainmaker Digital (formerly Copyblogger Media). Since then, he's carried the skills and values he cultivated as a tech writer into community development and real estate. Today, Jacob is owner of Care Block Development, a real estate development company that acquires, rehabs, and manages historic buildings in Denton, Texas. Pairing historic preservation with thoughtful improvements, Care Block honors the culture of the neighborhoods in which it works to create lovable places for the people it serves. He's also the owner of Sardinha, a premium tinned seafood pop-up pushing premium tins in Denton. If you need a tinfish plug in Denton, Jacob is your guy.

Appears in 38 Episodes

A Fond Farewell (Yet Warm Welcome!)

After four exciting years hosting The Not-Boring Tech Writer—the podcast that gives listeners the skills to break the stereotype that technical writing is a boring car...

Skill #36: Creating Usability Tests for Your Organization

Technical writers must ensure their help resources, such as documentation and video tutorials, are useful for their users. Therefore, they study language, design, and ...

Skill #35: Understanding Basic Design Principles

Technical communicators wield the power of plain language to ensure their readers find and understand the information they need to complete a task—no matter how comple...

Skill #34: Crowdsourcing Technical Communication

Folk working in technical communication—whether they’re academics or practitioners—through their own unique skill sets, perspectives, and experiences, often discover b...

Skill #33: Getting Started with Open Data

For the civically-mind technical writer, there’s a growing movement in cities across the world where technical writers can use their skills to better their community. ...

Skill #32: Understanding Translation and Localization

As products and services reach markets outside of their geographic origins, organizations must consider how to translate and localize their existing documentation. It’...

Skill #31: Choosing the Right Knowledge Base Software for Your Organization

No matter your industry—tech, nonprofit, marketing—your organization likely needs a knowledge base software, a dedicated place to capture essential knowledge.However, ...

Skill #30: Landing a Tech Writing Internship

As prospective tech writers look for ways to get into the tech writing field, many pursue internships. And understandably so: internships give prospective tech writers...

Skill #29: Understanding Your Reader (as a Whole)

One of the most important skills tech writers can have is the ability to analyze their audience—researching who’s using the product their documentation, understanding ...

Skill #28: Researching as a Tech Writer

All of the help resources tech writers create, such software documentation, video tutorials, or blog posts, require research. Imagine creating a document to explain a ...

Skill #27: Contributing to GitHub

As tech writers consider how to stay relevant in the field, many look to GitHub—the git repository service where people host their open-source projects, allowing other...

Skill #26: Getting Started in API Documentation

As tech writers consider how to stay relevant in the field, many consider getting started in API documentation. And who can blame them—it’s one of the most trending an...

Skill #25: Nudging Users to Action Through Contextual Help

As technical writers, we help users learn processes or complete particular tasks. And we offer this help in several ways, including documentation, video tutorials, or ...

Skill #24: Finding Your Content DNA

John Espirian—technical copywriter and author of the soon-to-be-released book Content DNA—describes content DNA as the "shape" of your brand and then using the power o...

Skill #23: Transitioning into Tech Writing from Very-Much-Not Tech Writing

Think back to the early years of your career as you considered pursuing a career in technical writing. Unless you happened to pursue a formal education in technical wr...

Skill #22: Using Your Detective Skills as a Technical Writer

As technical writers, we often wear many different hats within an organization: we write documentation that teaches people how to use a product; we test new features t...

Skill #21: Mentoring Prospective Tech Writers

All technical writers can look back on their career and likely think of a specific person or two who helped them advance their career. It could be a former professor w...

Skill #20: Understanding Content Marketing

As technical writers, we excel at turning technical information into documentation that helps users understand complex concepts. We write software documentation that h...

Skill #19: Writing for Nonprofit Organizations

Throughout technical writers’ careers, they may find themselves working in several different industries: they could start their career writing end-user documentation f...

Skill #18: Embracing the Long Game of Technical Writing

Anyone who’s been in technical writing for a few years or has attended a technical writing conference has witnessed how quickly the field has evolved. Technical writer...

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