Archive for the ‘Best Practices’ Category

TIPS & TRICKS ARCHIVE #4 – ePublisher & 508 Compliance

Posted on: October 7th, 2010

In 1998 The US Government approved a new law that stated that all government agencies must give disabled employees and members of the public access to information that is comparable to the access available to others. This directive is known as the Section 508 Law, and in the intervening years has been adopted not only by government, but by many industries as well.

Delivering Section 508 compliant information is becoming an essential part of doing business online.

You can use ePublisher to help you make sure that you produce online content that conforms to Section 508, as well as the W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (WCAG), and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

To generate accessible content, typically you provide the following items in your online deliverables:

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TIPS & TRICKS ARCHIVE #3 – ePublisher Language Support

Posted on: October 6th, 2010

Did you know that ePublisher had some of the most flexible and customizable language handling capabilities of any publishing platform?

As well as ePublishers own extensible language support, the fact that the product is based on Microsoft’s .NET runtime means that we can also support localized sorting for any of the languages it supports.

Out of the box ePublisher supports the following languages:

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TIPS & TRICKS ARCHIVE #2 – ePublisher Reports

Posted on: September 27th, 2010

ePublisher is not just about converting your content from one format to another. While automating the publishing process by separating it from the authoring process is one of our key objectives, another is helping you develop the most efficient high quality output possible. To do this we generate reports on what ePublisher is doing and the status of your documentation at every stage of the production pipeline.

Using these reports you can easily find, and correct errors, as well as continue to fine tune your process to ensure that you deliver the best content in the most efficient manner possible.

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TIPS & TRICKS ARCHIVE #1 – Migrating Content From RoboHelp to a Wiki via ePublisher.

Posted on: September 24th, 2010

Recently we have being hearing from a lot of customers and prospects asking about how they can use WebWorks ePublisher to migrate content they have authored in Adobe RoboHelp and publish it to a wiki, and specifically the Confluence Wiki.

Here are a couple of different approaches that we have investigated and recommended to date:

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Which Version Am I Using?

Posted on: April 20th, 2010

With the recent release of  2010.1 we now have 8 supported versions of  ePublisher in the market, plus there are still a few customers who have yet to upgrade from unsupported versions.

When you log a support call, or are chatting with either Customer Service or your Account Manager, it helps us help you if we know what version of ePublisher you are running.

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Good security is not about patching holes..

Posted on: February 24th, 2010

Back in January, I posted a piece on this blog asking the question “Is Your Online Help A Security Risk?” The post was the result of our own recent experiences that lead to us issuing a security advisory for WebWorks Help 5.

During the course of our investigations we came to believe that this was an issue that should be discussed more openly. In particular we felt an obligation to help raise awareness of how and why you need to look at your Online Help as a potential security risk. (more…)

WIKI Publishing White Paper – now available in eBook format.

Posted on: March 2nd, 2009

Last week we officially announced the publication of our newest white paper “WHY USE A WIKI? – An Introduction to the Latest Online Publishing Format.”

For the first week we only offered the paper to people who requested a copy directly after seeing the announcements on various sites such as Twitter, FaceBook, LinkedIn etc., as well as through the wwp-users group.

From various conversations over the last twelve months or so, I knew that interest in using wikis for delivering online content was high, but I never expected the response that the announcement of the paper generated. I spent a significant amount of my time last week just sending out PDF copies of the wiki white paper.

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WebWorks and the Movies

Posted on: February 6th, 2009

One of the great things about working at WebWorks is that nearly everyone on the team is a movie fan. We love movies and conversations around the office are often peppered with movie quotes, and even the occasional bad Arnold Schwarzenegger impersonation.

Movies have become so much part of the WebWorks culture that we have even incorporated them into our regular quarterly company meetings. Each quarter we have an all-hands company meeting to review the previous quarter and to discuss plans for the new quarter. A couple of years ago we started a tradition of including a movie clip as part of that meeting.

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Is there a case for "Just Enough" documentation?

Posted on: November 20th, 2008

A couple of what at first glance appear to be disparate unconnected posts picked up by my Twitter feed over the last few days got me thinking about just what we should include when we produce product documentation.

On her Twitter feed consultant Sarah O’Keefe posted the following quick observation: ‘Inbox Zero once again. Today’s lesson: When you ignore stuff, much of it becomes irrelevant.” This is a productivity, time management technique that I have used for years. One of the first things I was taught at management college was that never keep anything on the “to-do” list longer than 30 days. If you haven’t got around to it in 30 days and no-one’s complained it probably wasn’t that important. Delete it, and if it is important someone will remind you. Like Sarah I also apply a similar philosophy (but not time scale) to the contents of my Inbox.

Then today, Alyssa Fox from NetIQ posted a quick note on her Twitter feed that “SE just found a bug in our doc that’s been in there 5+ years. Obviously no one ever reads that section,” to which I responded “If no-one’s read that doc in 5 years – is it really necessary to have it there at all? Why write and maintain something no-one uses?”

Over lunch I began to realize that the two thoughts had a definite connection. Traditionally we tend to document every feature and function of a product. We expend many hours describing how something works. Yet how much of what we produce is ever read or used?

Most users are only interested in learning how to set something up and start using it in the shortest possible time. Secondly they want to get answers to very basic “how do I” type questions. With this in mind I’ve recently been conducting an ad-hoc, and very un-scientific, straw poll about which documents (print, on-line help etc.) that people are most likely to use. The result is very clear that the thicker and more voluminous the documentation appears, the less likely people are to use it.

So going back to the “ignore it and it becomes irrelevant” thought. If sections of documentation are never read, accessed or used, are they irrelevant? While the engineers and designers may not think so, it seems clear that the users do.

Is there a case for “Just Enough” documentation.

At WebWorks.com we recently went through a process of rewriting our complete documentation set. At least that was the original goal. Yet when we compared the old documentation set against the project time frame we realized that we would have to make a decision about what was necessary and what was just “nice to have.” The project was lead by one of our MVP users who could give us the user perspective on what was needed and what could be left out.

But how will we know if we’ve made the right choices?

We posted the new documentation set online as a wiki. We have enabled comments so users can directly tell us if there’s something we missed. If we need to, we can create a new piece of documentation and publish it quickly. But perhaps best of all we can now track which document pages are visited and more importantly which aren’t.

It may take a few iterations but we will be able to fine tune the documentation to provide just the information that our users need and use; allowing us to focus effort away from maintaining “irrelevant” dead pages to making sure that he have “just enough” documentation to make our users successful.