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by AskHNremote2021
1953 days ago
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For GitHub, I looked at projects that interested me, but not necessarily having the skills to contribute code. So I would pour through the docs and find errors, typos, mistakes. These kinds of things. Cleaning up. Sometimes added documentation that was missing. |
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https://www.indeed.com/q-Technical-Writer-Editor-jobs.html
https://www.flexjobs.com/jobs/technical-writing
https://www.upwork.com/freelance-jobs/technical-editing/
https://www.fiverr.com/search/gigs?query=writing%2Bproof%2Br...
You can also contact agencies like Toptal and Robert Half.
If you want a different type of job then you need to have evidence or a convincing story that you have literally done that job before, either as an intern or through training/education or as projects on your own. But the fact that you have literally done proofreading and documentation editing in a technical context and there is a record on Github seems to be concrete proof that should be possible to leverage into getting paid work doing the same thing.