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Large, Medium, or Small: What’s Your Best Working Environment?

One of the first things that will draw you to a particular job is the content that you will be writing. However, another important consideration when looking at a new job is the size of the company doing the hiring. Admittedly, a lot of these comments are simple generalizations because Your Humble Narrator has not worked at every company or nonprofit in America.

First, some definitions are in order. “Small” businesses can vary in size depending on whom you’re talking to or what industry they’re in. So, for grins, I checked out the U.S. Government’s Small Business Administration (SBA) site.

“Examples of SBA general size standards include the following:

It only gets murkier the further you go up the size scale. For instance, a financial website in the UK sets the threshold for a “medium-sized businesses” are

“organizations that are in the startup or growth phase of development and have fewer than 250 employees. This definition of small and medium-sized enterprises is the one adopted by the United Kingdom’s Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform for statistical purposes.”

That same site describes a large business as:

“an organization that has grown beyond the limits of a medium-sized business and has 250 or more employees. This definition of a large-sized enterprise is the one adopted by the United Kingdom’s Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform for statistical purposes. It is usually from the ranks of large-sized businesses that multinational businesses arise.”

So how do you know if you, as a technical writer, are going into a small, medium, or large business? Well, you can do the research online, or it might even say in the job posting. Or, given this murkiness across industries and countries, you could try to define your business “size” by the size of the operation in which you, personally, must operate. For example, a Fortune 500 company might have thousands of employees across the country or around the world, but the shop you would work in consists of you, your manager, and maybe a graphic designer. The difference between that operation and an actual small business is that you can probably call on employees in other divisions to help you out if you’re buried—in a medium or small business, you might be “it” when it comes to technical communication.

Perhaps, for the technical writer, the best way to understand the “size” of your employer is simply to understand the scope of resources you can access if you need help. Large business: lots of resources; medium business: a couple; small business: there isn’t anyone, bub—you’re it. Okay, so hard definitions are hard to come by; that said, I’ve had experience in a wide range of organizations, for-profit and nonprofit, and several patterns become evident after awhile.

Small

Medium

Large

These are some general thoughts for your consideration. And yes, I realize that they are stereotypes. Newer large companies like Google have made serious efforts to give people a “small-company feel” in a large organization. This can include a looser corporate culture—no neckties, more time for creative outlets, more whimsical corporate décor, or more opportunities for working at home or achieving “work-life balance.” Regardless of what floats your particular boat, odds are you’re going to spend more time there than anywhere else, so in addition to doing up-front research, it is not out of line to ask “cultural questions” during your interview.

The Boomers and Generation X have gone a long way toward changing the corporate culture in this country, some of it to the good (not all of it—don’t even get me started on that today). Perhaps the most important contribution might be recognizing that, with 30-year job security now the exception rather than the norm, companies and other organizations need to provide other incentives and opportunities to hire motivated employees. Where you work matters, and how you work matters that much more.

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