Engineer type Editorial Department Creates and Distributes a Writing Know-How Booklet Learned from Field "Scoldings": "Who Will Read That Text? 15 Scoldings in the First Year of the Editorial Department"
Career Design Center's web magazine 'Engineer type' has created a booklet summarizing editing know-how into 15 phrases. It aims to help engineers improve their writing skills and will be distributed for free at Tech Book Fest 20.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: April 11, 2026 at 00:20
- 🔍 Collected: April 11, 2026 at 00:21 (1 min after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 20, 2026 at 05:03 (220h 41m after Collected)
Career Design Center Co., Ltd. (Headquarters: Minato-ku, Tokyo; President and Chairman: Hiromi Tada), which operates the web magazine "Engineer type" (https://type.jp/et/feature/) focusing on the careers of engineers, has created an original booklet titled "Who will read that text? 15 scoldings in the first year of the editorial department." It will be distributed for free at the offline venue and online market of "Tech Book Fest 20".
This booklet is a collection of know-how that condenses the editorial teachings passed down through generations at "Engineer type," which plans and produces articles that support engineers' career formation and skill improvement, into 15 phrases.
■ Book Overview
"Who will read that text? 15 scoldings in the first year of the editorial department."
Author: Engineer type Editorial Department
Format/Pages: B6 size, 24 pages
First publication date: April 1, 2026
Recommended for:
- Engineers who want to disseminate information on tech blogs and SNS
- Those who want to improve output quality and write articles read by more people
- Those who feel hesitant or poor at "writing"
■ Why do engineers need an "editing perspective" now?
Recently, the importance of external information dissemination for engineers, such as writing tech blogs, speaking at conferences, and posting on SNS, is higher than ever. Continuous, high-quality output not only proves personal skills and broadens career options but also greatly contributes to the development of the tech community.
On the other hand, many engineers may feel a hurdle in writing, thinking, "I have technical knowledge to share, but I don't know how to write it to be read," or "I can't put it into words well, and my pen stops."
That's when the "editing perspective" used in the media field comes in handy. The ability to imagine what readers want, organize information, and deliver it turns engineers' outputs into something more attractive and communicative.
We hope that the "perspective for delivering value to readers" we have cultivated in the field will serve as a hint to encourage engineers challenging themselves to disseminate information.
This booklet is a collection of know-how that condenses the editorial teachings passed down through generations at "Engineer type," which plans and produces articles that support engineers' career formation and skill improvement, into 15 phrases.
■ Book Overview
"Who will read that text? 15 scoldings in the first year of the editorial department."
Author: Engineer type Editorial Department
Format/Pages: B6 size, 24 pages
First publication date: April 1, 2026
Recommended for:
- Engineers who want to disseminate information on tech blogs and SNS
- Those who want to improve output quality and write articles read by more people
- Those who feel hesitant or poor at "writing"
■ Why do engineers need an "editing perspective" now?
Recently, the importance of external information dissemination for engineers, such as writing tech blogs, speaking at conferences, and posting on SNS, is higher than ever. Continuous, high-quality output not only proves personal skills and broadens career options but also greatly contributes to the development of the tech community.
On the other hand, many engineers may feel a hurdle in writing, thinking, "I have technical knowledge to share, but I don't know how to write it to be read," or "I can't put it into words well, and my pen stops."
That's when the "editing perspective" used in the media field comes in handy. The ability to imagine what readers want, organize information, and deliver it turns engineers' outputs into something more attractive and communicative.
We hope that the "perspective for delivering value to readers" we have cultivated in the field will serve as a hint to encourage engineers challenging themselves to disseminate information.