Technical Writer

Tailscale Tailscale · Enterprise · Remote · Product

Technical Writer to create and deliver world-class product documentation, tutorials, and conceptual guides for networking and security professionals and software engineers using Tailscale's products. Requires strong technical writing experience, proficiency with networking/security concepts, and familiarity with docs-as-code workflows.

What you'd actually do

  1. You'll use your experience as a writer and technical practitioner to produce, test, and maintain quality, consistent, contextualized, and technically accurate documentation for our products that help customers and prospects understand how Tailscale solves their existing problems.
  2. You’ll develop how-to guides, conceptual topics, reference guides, tutorials, and other technical content, and you’ll understand when each content type is appropriate.
  3. You’ll write content for a diverse audience including software developers, infrastructure engineers, security practitioners, and decision-makers, adjusting your content and tone to fit your audience.
  4. You’ll update and refine existing content to reflect changes to the product and feedback from training sessions, surveys, and collected metrics.
  5. You’ll build strong relationships as you collaborate with subject-matter experts, product managers, and your team to plan, organize, write, edit, review, and evolve our documentation.

Skills

Required

  • Technical writing
  • Editing
  • Product documentation
  • Networking concepts
  • Security concepts
  • Git
  • GitHub
  • Markdown
  • Command-line interface
  • Docs-as-code publishing workflow
  • Collaboration
  • Communication

Nice to have

  • Software development experience
  • Open-source contributions

What the JD emphasized

  • at least 3 years of professional technical writing and editing experience
  • technically proficient
  • hands-on experience with networking or security products
  • comfortable in technical conversations
  • comfortable with Git, GitHub, Markdown, and the command-line interface
  • experience using a docs-as-code publishing workflow