
Shreveport Job Seekers: Tech Needs More Than Just Coders
A lot of people in Shreveport-Bossier hear the word tech and immediately think coding, engineering, and computer science degrees. That still matters, of course. Still, recent reporting suggests another skill is suddenly carrying real weight in the tech world: writing.
Not just filling up a page, but explaining ideas clearly, shaping a brand’s message, and helping real people understand why a product matters.
Why Writing Is Showing Up in Tech Hiring
As artificial intelligence keeps pumping out more content, companies are learning a hard lesson. More words do not automatically mean better communication. In fact, when everybody can generate copy in seconds, clear human thinking becomes more valuable.
That is why some companies are putting real money behind communication roles. Business Insider recently reported that Netflix posted a product and technology communications role with a salary that could reach $775,000.
The same report said Anthropic expanded its communications team in a big way, while companies like Adobe and Microsoft are also investing in storytelling and message strategy.
One firm even said founders need to “win the narrative battle online.” That line says a lot. In today’s tech economy, the companies that stand out are often the ones that can explain themselves best.
What That Means for Shreveport-Bossier Workers
This is the part that should get local job seekers paying attention.
Someone in Shreveport who has spent years in sales, education, ministry, media, healthcare, customer service, or public relations may have more crossover value than they realize. Tech companies still need developers.
They also need people who can write product updates, build customer trust, create training materials, lead internal communication, shape public messaging, and simplify complicated ideas.
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That kind of work fits a lot of people in North Louisiana better than the old stereotype of a coder sitting in a dark room all day.
A Better Way to Think About a Tech Career
This does not mean everybody should suddenly call themselves a writer and expect Silicon Valley money. It does mean the definition of a tech job is getting wider.
If you are looking for a job in tech from Shreveport-Bossier, it may be worth asking a different question. Instead of saying, “Can I code?” ask, “Can I communicate clearly, solve confusion, and help people understand something complicated?”

That may not sound flashy, but it is becoming valuable. In a digital world crowded with noise, strong writing and sharp communication are starting to look less like soft skills and more like career leverage.
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