
In a world full of shortcuts and surface advice, touch typing has become a forgotten skill. But for men looking to re-enter the corporate workforce, it’s worth revisiting. In fact, it’s one of the sharpest tools they can bring.
Let’s be honest: some colleagues just don’t get it. One in particular stands out. He shows up in shorts and a T-shirt, as if business casual means “beach-ready.” His official role is to retrieve files from the archive, but due to internal structure, he gets his own desk and computer. And because he has the equipment, he assumes he’s qualified to execute more complicated tasks.
So, we let him try.
What follows is painful: hunt-and-peck typing at glacial speed. A job that should take one minute drags on for over an hour.
This Is What’s Missing
But imagine one simple change. What if, instead of hunting and pecking, his fingers glided across the keyboard while his eyes remained fixed on the screen? He’d look like another person entirely.
He’d appear composed, competent, and in control. Not like a bumbling idiot.
With this one skill, who would doubt that he meets the basic standard every office role should require?
You Still Think Learning to Touch Type Is a Waste of Time?
Fair enough. You don’t “touch type,” but your hybrid system gets it done. Or maybe your two fingers do the job just as fast as any 10-finger rigmarole.
But in truth, touch typing isn’t just about speed. It’s about rhythm, focus, and efficiency. There’s no glancing down, no stopping to think about mechanics. It’s about presence; you occupy the task at hand. It’s seamless. That’s something no hybrid method—however fast—can replicate.
And it gets better.
You can’t list “fast two-finger typing” or “my own hybrid system” on your resume. But you can include touch typing. And it will get you noticed.
Why Touch Typing Gives You an Edge
Considering these huge advantages, isn’t it odd that formal education no longer teaches it?
When I was at school from the late 60s to the early 80s, it was encouraged only for girls. Then it was labeled obsolete and abandoned.
And this is why it will give you an edge.
If a man can touch type, it’s almost certain that he’s self-taught. And that tells employers a lot.
It shows discipline and drive. It says you didn’t have to be told—you took the initiative.
If you’re new to the corporate world or switching tracks after years away, it’s one of the clearest signals you can give: I’m not just here to get by; I’m here to do things properly. It also says that you’re ready for modern workflows. As far as general office duties are concerned, that can more than compensate for a lack of experience.

Getting a Foot in the Door
In other words, touch typing helps you get a foot in the door.
Take me as an example.
How I Learned to Touch Type
I went straight from school into an admin role. Back then we didn’t have computers, and our handwritten documents were given to the typing pool. Later, I moved abroad, which meant switching to the hospitality sector. I loathed it but had to stick it out for 25 years. Why? In spite of having done reasonably well at school and later attaining a university-level qualification, I couldn’t get back into office work.
There was no evidence that I could use a computer. Nor of how efficient I’d be in a modern corporate setting.
When I was well into middle age, I began to work full-time as a freelance writer. Thousands of words a day with my two middle fingers for a pittance while smoking more cigarettes than I could afford. Then, one Sunday afternoon, just for fun, I tried out a free online course.
An hour later I could touch type. It was a hundred times slower than my two-finger effort, but I could do it.
Know Your Keyboard Settings
Before you commit to practicing touch typing, make sure you’re using the keyboard layout you’ll actually work with. Most systems default to either:
- US Standard — the most common layout, especially in international workspaces
- US International — ideal for typing in multiple languages (accents, special characters)
- UK or other regional layouts — slightly different symbols and punctuation placements
Training on one and switching later? That’s like learning piano on a keyboard with the keys reshuffled. Choose your layout before you build muscle memory—and stick to it.
Learning by Repetition and Beating Plateaus
Here’s how it works.
Speed isn’t important while you learn. Consistency is.
Practice repetition exercises for at least half an hour a day—the more you do it, the quicker and more accurate you’ll become. You won’t even have to try. Eventually, you’ll be faster with 10 fingers than you ever were with two. That’s the first hurdle.
Once you’ve cracked it, 60 words per minute is well within reach; it usually takes about three to six months.
Speed tests can help monitor your progress, but they’re otherwise a bit of a red herring. They don’t simulate real-world conditions. Most of us write with context and intention, not under a ticking clock. Because this kind of artificial pressure causes you to focus on how you’re typing, you automatically lose speed and accuracy.
To gain speed and overcome plateaus, reduce your pace—even if it feels awkwardly slow. With less pressure, rhythm takes over. The flow returns. And suddenly, you’re faster than before.
Round Off Your Training
Once my speed and accuracy were solid, I took free online courses in Excel, Word, and PowerPoint—there’s usually a small fee for certification. Then I dared to apply for office jobs again. A week later, I was picked up by an employment agency and placed on a long-term assignment.
One thing led to another, and today I’m in a highly lucrative position in the finance sector.
That could be you.
Touch typing isn’t just a technical checkbox. It’s a quiet qualifier. It’s a signal to employers that you’re ready to work efficiently without supervision. That alone unlocks more opportunity than most people realize.
By the way, these self-betterment endeavors also led me to quit smoking.
What About the Number Pad?
It has fewer keys, but don’t be fooled; the number pad is deceptively hard to master. Many data entry roles rely heavily on it, and fluency here is a major differentiator.
- The challenge isn’t complexity—it’s precision at speed.
- Muscle memory is harder to build without context (no words, just sequences).
- Most errors occur because users glance down or hesitate between strokes.
- Practice matters: online 10-key drills can get you punching numbers fast and flawlessly.
Tip: Try training with your right hand only, as that’s the standard finger placement for number pad use—even if you’re left-handed.
Where to Use Your New Skill
Start with Temping Agencies
If you’re rebuilding, reentering, or reinventing, temping agencies are often your best friend. You show up, you test, you demonstrate readiness—and touch typing is instantly visible in those assessments. No explaining needed.
It sets you apart from others who still peck at the keyboard and shows you’re not afraid of tools, systems, or screens.
And while you’re in those temp roles? You’re gaining real-world experience that carries weight when you apply for permanent positions.
Security Companies
Another great opportunity for men is with security companies. This doesn’t have to be about standing around all day (or night) in public buildings or keeping hooligans under control at soccer matches.
In many modern workplaces, especially office environments, security guards double as front-facing administrative support.
This means:
- Operating a visitor log or sign-in system
- Managing appointment schedules or internal call lists
- Filing daily incident reports or shift handovers
- Communicating clearly with staff, tenants, or clients, often via email or shared platforms
All of these tasks assume a basic fluency with computers—and more specifically, with typing.
If a man on that desk uses the keyboard confidently and accurately, he looks like he belongs there. Not just holding the space, but handling the space. On the flip side, someone who fumbles through simple tasks or pecks out visitor names with two fingers sends a very different signal—especially when the suit and earpiece say “professional,” but the keyboard says “barely coping.”
Touch typing in these roles doesn’t just enhance performance; it enhances perception. It lifts the role from security guard to security professional. From body at the door to representative of the workplace.
That’s what employers want.
Why “Online Work” Often Isn’t the Answer
I’ve tried this with zero success.
The trouble is, many “make money online” paths are either:
- Overcrowded
- Race-to-the-bottom pricing
- Designed to serve platform owners more than freelancers
Reputable sites like Upwork can be profitable, but usually for those with:
- Years of experience
- A niche service
- Willingness to underprice themselves early on
Instead of wasting time, aim to build something solid. Touch typing brings you into physical offices, agencies, and legitimate workflows where being present, competent, and efficient matters more than a flashy profile pic or a five-star rating you’ll probably never get a chance to earn.

Get Started: Free Courses to Build Core Office Skills
Touch typing is just the beginning—but it’s a strong foundation. If you’re ready to build fluency that employers notice, these free resources will help you level up right away:
Touch Typing
- TypingClub — Interactive, gamified lessons with progress tracking
- Typing.com — Lessons for all levels, plus speed tests and certificates
- TypingTest.com Trainer — Step-by-step course with smart drills
Microsoft Word
- Alison – Word Courses — Beginner to advanced, free with optional certification
- Udemy – Word Tutorials — Taught by instructors, sorted by popularity
- Coursera – Word Projects — Short, guided learning paths with certificates
Microsoft Excel
- TrumpExcel — Over 12 hours of training, no login required
- Simplilearn – Excel Basics — 7-hour course with completion certificate
- Coursera – Excel Courses — From beginner to advanced
Microsoft PowerPoint
- Great Learning – PowerPoint — Beginner-friendly and practical
- Coursera – PowerPoint Projects — Build real-world presentations and learn design
- SkillScouter’s Roundup — A curated guide to top free and paid options
In a noisy world, few skills speak as clearly and quietly as touch typing. It’s not flashy. It’s not new. But it’s powerful. It signals readiness, confidence, and the willingness to do things properly. And that might just be the difference between staying stuck and stepping forward.
© 2025, J. Richardson. All rights reserved.
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