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WEB 2.0 and TECHNICAL COMMUNICATORS

December 9, 2010 by RDesprez 5 Comments

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Web 2.0 has rev­o­lu­tion­ized the way soci­ety uses the Inter­net. Whether it’s Wikipedia, YouTube, Twit­ter, or LinkedIn, we’ve moved from pas­sive read­ers to active contributors.

Giv­en this fun­da­men­tal change, why is it that most tech­ni­cal com­mu­ni­ca­tors are oper­at­ing as if Web 2.0 nev­er occurred? Based on what I’ve seen, most writ­ers haven’t embraced the col­lab­o­ra­tive mod­el that is com­mon­place with Web 2.0. Why? Here are a few guesses:

  • Some of the web sites are rel­a­tive­ly new. Twit­ter, for instance, has real­ly only tak­en off in the last 18 months. Most writ­ers haven’t fig­ured out whether to use sites like this and how to use them in their jobs.
  • Our tools haven’t ful­ly embraced Web 2.0. The tools that tech­ni­cal writ­ers use don’t ful­ly take advan­tage of Web 2.0. RoboHelp’s new­er Help for­mat, AIR Help, does per­mit users to com­ment on a giv­en top­ic but it doesn’t allow writ­ers to mod­er­ate those com­ments. To me, this is “Web 2.0 lite.”
  • Slow accep­tance of social media by tech­ni­cal com­mu­ni­ca­tion depart­ments. Mar­ket­ing peo­ple have ful­ly embraced sites like Face­book, LinkedIn, and Twit­ter. But from what I’ve seen, tech­ni­cal com­mu­ni­ca­tion depart­ments appear to be tak­ing a “wait and see” approach when it comes to lever­ag­ing these technologies.

Of course, there are orga­ni­za­tions that have tak­en full advan­tage of social media—more on this lat­er. But I believe these orga­ni­za­tions are the excep­tion rather than the norm.

Too bad. I believe that incor­po­rat­ing Web 2.0 tech­nolo­gies into tech­ni­cal doc­u­men­ta­tion could make our con­tent bet­ter, fos­ter more dia­log with our cus­tomers, and change—and improve—our careers.

Filed Under: Career Development, Online Reading, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Web 2.0 Tagged With: social media, technical writing, Web 2.0

Comments

  1. Julia Pond says

    March 21, 2012 at 7:02 pm

    That’s because we’re so busy try­ing to embrace min­i­mal­ism, get bud­get to put mod­ern tool chains in place, reuse con­tent, cus­tomize DITA out­put, and on and on. Still dream­ing about that “uni­ver­sal seman­tic ecosystem”.

    The devel­op­ers of an SDK I’m doc­u­ment­ing real­ly want user com­ments on topics–I’m look­ing into ways to imple­ment that with DITA source. (AIR DITA-OT plug-in?) There’s real­ly a lot of val­ue in a “com­mu­ni­ty” aspect to devel­op­er docs. Links to the docs from a col­lab­o­ra­tion tool does­n’t make it. 😉

    Reply
  2. Ray Gallon says

    March 21, 2012 at 7:02 pm

    I think Juli­a’s right about the time prob­lems. In my shop, we deal with it by try­ing to have good liai­son. I inter­face with our web team reg­u­lar­ly, and we are work­ing on plans to make our CMS inter­act with the web CMS so we can push con­tent out when it’s appropriate.

    Some of that process will involve the inter­ac­tiv­i­ty of Web 2.0, some won’t. Depends on whether it’s use­ful or not.

    Also, for tech­ni­cal infor­ma­tion, I think Web 3.0 is much more inter­est­ing than Web 2.0. 2.0 is basi­cal­ly a mar­ket­ing con­cept, while 3.0 brings real tech­no­log­i­cal advan­tages that help us to orga­nize and access infor­ma­tion in new ways (like ontolo­gies). While the jury is still out on how “seman­tic” Web 3.0 is real­ly going to be, I’m look­ing for­ward to it in the hopes that evo­lu­tions in DITA will keep pace and help us move into new spheres.

    Reply
  3. Robert Desprez says

    March 21, 2012 at 7:03 pm

    Thanks for your feed­back. In response to Juli­a’s first com­ment, I also worked at a com­pa­ny that con­vert­ed all of its Robo­Help and FrameMak­er files to DITA and it took months and months to suc­cess­ful­ly com­plete the job. So I under­stand that writ­ing depart­ments can only tack­le so many ini­tia­tives. On the flip side, I often hear writ­ers say (com­plain?) that they haven’t met their users. Web 2.0 could at least help with improv­ing this dia­log with users.

    Reply
  4. Julia Pond says

    March 21, 2012 at 7:03 pm

    Robert, you’re right. Social doc­u­men­ta­tion is a great solu­tion to that problem.

    Reply
  5. Alex O'Neal says

    March 21, 2012 at 7:04 pm

    So much depends on the cul­ture a tech­ni­cal writer inhab­its. I was­n’t a tech­ni­cal writer at Texas Instru­ments, but knew sev­er­al and worked with the sev­er­al teams man­ag­ing infor­ma­tion design. That engi­neer­ing-dri­ven cul­ture was all about dynam­ic, seman­tic struc­ture of infor­ma­tion, files, pages, every­thing! They went a step fur­ther than most com­pa­nies, and con­sid­ered their infor­ma­tion to live not only on their site, but off-site as well, with the result that they designed to meet those needs. 

    As a web con­tent man­ag­er, I helped make sure the prod­ucts I was respon­si­ble for rep­re­sent­ing were opti­mized for seman­tic com­pre­hen­sion, and well-inte­grat­ed into sev­er­al in-house infor­ma­tion man­age­ment tools (para­met­ric search, lit­er­a­ture man­age­ment, con­tent tax­on­o­my, etc.). For some­one with her online roots in IA and cat­a­loging, it was a heady experience!

    On the oth­er hand, I’ve worked in oth­er cul­tures where seman­tic design and search were the last con­sid­er­a­tions in any content/feature dis­cus­sion. For exam­ple, I once con­sult­ed with a tele­com firm that seemed to fol­low a “if we build it, they will come” approach, and felt that their busi­ness-cen­tric tax­on­o­my should and would be absorbed by those users who “real­ly want­ed to learn some­thing” from the site. Pret­ty bad user expe­ri­ence. A sr. tech­ni­cal writer, well ahead of her time back then, fought in vain against this attitude.

    I guess my point is that tech­ni­cal writ­ers may know what they need to do, but be unable to imple­ment it. I sus­pect there are many voic­es cry­ing in the wilder­ness for seman­tic, eas­i­ly engi­neered data for their sites and apps.

    Reply

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About Robert Desprez

I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at some of British Columbia's largest high-tech firms. I have served in leadership positions for the Society for Technical Communication and have worked as a writing instructor at Vancouver's Simon Fraser University.

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