Archive for the ‘wiki’ Category

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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Warbling About Wikis

Posted on: August 19th, 2009

“You know you should really do that using a wiki,” seems to becoming a regular part of my daily conversations. In recent weeks I know I’ve used it at:

– a social event related to my wife’s work when someone was describing a public outreach program they had recently put on;
– a friend’s book-signing where I fell into conversation about the usefulness of social networks and community collaboration;
– a science fiction convention during a conversation with a fellow writer about a research project he is part way through.
– a conversation with the CEO of a niche publishing company about using a wiki to connect his existing community of loyal readers.
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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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How to get people to use a wiki? – Invite them to a party.

Posted on: January 9th, 2009

Yesterday evening I was putting the finishing touches to my upcoming white paper on the use of wikis as an online publishing format, and was thinking back about the techniques we used here at WebWorks to make the use of our internal wiki such a success.

Here’s what I wrote in the white paper:

While the main focus of the wiki may be technical, you can speed acceptance by seeding the wiki with other topics that may have a broader appeal. For instance one of the things we use the wiki for at WebWorks is organizing the company Christmas Party!

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That Was Quite A Year…

Posted on: December 29th, 2008

Earlier today I sat down to write the latest issue of our Channel Partner Newsletter and thought it would be fun to look back at all we’ve acheived in 2008.

Turns out that it was a lot….

And somehow in the middle of all this we also managed to find time to reconfigure and redecorate our entire office space!

If 2008 was full, we anticipate that 2009 will be even more exciting (although without the office makeover), with new initiatives being planned, more industry participation, increasing communications, and a growing sense of community with both our partners and our customers.

Thanks to everyone who made 2008 such a great year for the WebWorks team. We all look forward to working with you in 2009 – and beyond.

Riding the Wiki Bus

Posted on: December 4th, 2008

If anyone’s heard me do a presentation over the last twelve months, you know I can’t get through one without using the word “WIKI.”

I’ll admit I’ve become a big proponent of wikis, and the possibilities they offer for a more intelligent and targeted delivery of information in a way that doesn’t just project information to the end-user; but actually engages them in a bi-directional exchange of knowledge.

I’m currently doing a fair amount of background reading on various aspects of wiki technology and the use of wikis for an upcoming white paper on Wiki Publishing.

What I hadn’t thought about until I started the research is why this open editing web based publishing environment is actually called a wiki. I had heard that it was an acronym for “What I Know Is.” But it turns out that this is more accurately a backronym.

Wiki doesn’t stand for anything.

“Wiki” is the Hawaiian word for “fast.”

The story goes that Ward Cunnigham, the creator of the first wiki site , installed in 1995, was looking for a name that reflected how quick it was to set up a his new style of website and remembered a counter clerk at Honolulu International Airport telling him to use the “wiki-wiki” shuttle bus.

Wiki Wiki Shuttle Bus at Honolulu Airport

Wiki Wiki Shuttle Bus at Honolulu Airport

Well this is one bus ride I, and the rest of the WebWorks team, is committed to. Hop on board and join us – they’ll be some interesting stops over the coming months.

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.

Why Publishing Is No Longer The Last Step In The Process

Posted on: June 27th, 2008

At the recent STC Summit in Philadelphia I hosted a Vendor Showcase presentation under the grand sounding title of “Why Publishing Is No Longer The Last Step In The Process.”

What did I mean by that?

The short answer is that thanks to Web2.0, wikis and the concept of user-driven content that customer feedback is the new paradigm for Enterprise Publishing.

But is it that new? My presentation argued that customer feedback has always been with us. Even Shakespeare used to incorporate customer feedback into his plays. No two night’s performances were identical. The idea of a fixed version of his works in print only occurred well after his death.

More recently during my own twenty plus years in corporate and enterprise publishing I have always had to work with how do we incorporate feedback. The difference is that now the feedback comes at us fast, and in public.

The session proved so popular that not only were all the seats full, but we ran out of standing room too. Some people were hanging around outside the presentation area just listening in, unable to see the slides.

So as promised to the people who stopped by the booth wanting to access the slides, here they are.

Unconferencing in Vancouver

Posted on: April 24th, 2008

Blogger and wiki aficionado Anne Gentle just invited me to participate in an “unconference” to be held in conjunction with the upcoming DocTrain West conference in Vancouver.

Of course I was delighted to be asked, but had no idea what an “unconference” was. The first place that a google search pointed me was the flagship of all wikis, Wikepedia. Annoyingly the Wikipedia page while citing numerous examples didn’t actually include a definition.

But it did link me to the “Unconference Blog” and according to them an “unconference” is a facilitated participant-driven face-to-face conference around a theme or purpose.

I like the sound of that. What also made participating in Anne’s suggested unconference even more attractive was that the proposed schedule said it would run to about “beer-thirty,” which sounds like my sort of time.

Naturally Ann has set up a wiki about the event and you can find out more, or sign up to attend, there.

I’ll be contributing a session titled Publishing is no longer the last step.. If you are attending DocTrain I’d love to see you there.

At the main conference I’ll also be presenting a session on Wikis Are Wonderful, or Are They? A Real World Story of Using Wikis For User Information.

Oh and that wikipedia page – it now has the basic definition added – guess who did that?