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INSPIRING VIDEO OF WIRED MAGAZINE RUNNING ON AN iPAD

March 4, 2011 by RDesprez 1 Comment

When Apple unveiled the new iPad yes­ter­day, it remind­ed me of this very cool video—a demo of an elec­tron­ic ver­sion of Wired mag­a­zine that has been opti­mized for use on the device that every­one seems to want. Imag­ine if users could read­i­ly inter­act with elec­tron­ic user guides or help sys­tems this way? Inspiring.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=wwFbwHaP5tE

Filed Under: Help Authoring Tools, Online Reading, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology Tagged With: iPad, online help

HAVE YOU EVER HACKED A PROCESS?

February 19, 2011 by RDesprez 2 Comments

Have you ever worked at a com­pa­ny and had to con­tend with con­vo­lut­ed process­es just to get your job done?

I have. I worked at one firm where some­thing as rou­tine as updat­ing a time sheet was a mul­ti-step process that involved log­ging on two web sites. This may have made sense to the depart­ment that cre­at­ed the sites but it sure made life dif­fi­cult for hun­dreds of employ­ees who were expect­ed to use the time sheet every day.

It’s a com­mon occur­rence. The book Hack­ing Work: Break­ing Stu­pid Rules for Smart Results argues that most businesses’s “love of bureau­cra­cy, lin­ger­ing tech­nol­o­gy, and deeply ingrained process­es” is mak­ing life unbear­able for thou­sands of employ­ees around the world. The book was list­ed as the Har­vard Busi­ness Review’s ten break­through ideas for 2010. Here’s an excerpt:

“Today’s top per­form­ers are tak­ing mat­ters into their own hands. They’re bypass­ing sacred struc­tures and break­ing all sorts of rules just to get their work done…More and more of us are find­ing that our work tools and struc­tures are com­plete­ly out of synch with what we need to do our best. Most of our dai­ly needs, dreams, desires, and goals are far ahead of our employ­ers’ tech­no­log­i­cal, pro­ce­dur­al, and social adop­tion curves.”

Like most peo­ple, I used to think of a “hack” as an act meant to do harm. But authors Bill Jensen and Josh Klein sug­gest that a hack can often be some­thing benev­o­lent: “It’s about mak­ing the sys­tem work for you, so you can take con­trol of your work­load, increase your pro­duc­tiv­i­ty, and help your com­pa­ny succeed—in spite of itself.”

This book made me think about labo­ri­ous tasks that I’ve wres­tled with in the past. Two examples:

  • I worked for a high-tech com­pa­ny that was bought by a multi­na­tion­al orga­ni­za­tion. After the dust set­tled, the tech­ni­cal com­mu­ni­ca­tions group was faced with a huge rebrand­ing effort includ­ing chang­ing tem­plates and copy­right con­tent, and replac­ing all old com­pa­ny names with the new com­pa­ny name. On my prod­uct team, I need­ed to replace hun­dreds of old com­pa­ny and prod­uct names. And it wasn’t a quick search and replace effort. It required me to review every instance because of rules about the company’s name and its place­ment with­in a sen­tence. How I’d do things dif­fer­ent­ly today: For all prod­uct and com­pa­ny names, I’d use vari­ables so that if copy­right­ed names changed again, I could change them in min­utes, not days.
  • At anoth­er com­pa­ny some years ago, I dis­trib­uted con­tent to sub­ject mat­ter experts for a tech­ni­cal review, and received dozens of com­ments back on a large doc­u­ment. So what did I do? Review the PDF file and com­pare it to the orig­i­nal source file sen­tence by sen­tence. I found myself think­ing, “Sure­ly, there’s a bet­ter way to man­age these reviews so I don’t have to do this com­par­i­son page by page.” How I’d do things dif­fer­ent­ly today: If I’m using the lat­est ver­sion of FrameMak­er or Robo­Help, I’d ful­ly embrace the fea­ture that enables me to import PDF anno­ta­tions back into my source files. Hours of time saved!

These are not so much “hacks” but just dif­fer­ent approach­es I’d take if faced with the same work. As for those time sheets? Per­haps I’d just blunt the tedi­um of the task by try­ing to update the time sheets less frequently.

Filed Under: Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology Tagged With: hacking processes, work

COMPLACENCY AND TECHNICAL WRITERS

February 11, 2011 by RDesprez 4 Comments

I’ve seen it hap­pen many times. Col­leagues who chal­lenge them­selves in their careers and nab a desir­able job with a sought-after title. Maybe the job is a Tech­ni­cal Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Man­ag­er role. Per­haps it’s a Senior Tech­ni­cal Writer position.

After they set­tle into the new role and demon­strate suc­cess for some peri­od of time, they appear to stop learn­ing. It’s as if they’ve reached their goal and don’t want to push them­selves any­more. Here are two exam­ples I’ve witnessed:

  • The man­ag­er who just wants to write. They love writ­ing but they’re not that keen on tech­nol­o­gy and they avoid terms like DITA and XML, even though more and more jobs require these skills.
  • The tech­ni­cal writer who works for a large well-known com­pa­ny that is strug­gling finan­cial­ly. He knows the com­pa­ny is going through chal­leng­ing times but doesn’t both­er apply­ing for any jobs out­side of the firm. He feels secure and can’t be both­ered to be proac­tive. One day, senior man­age­ment decides to lay off almost every­one in the divi­sion, includ­ing the tech­ni­cal writer. He’s unem­ployed for six months because he is now com­pet­ing with all the oth­er writ­ers who were laid off. He almost exhausts his sav­ings in the process.

It’s not unique to tech­ni­cal writ­ers and man­agers. I know some­one who worked for years as a mar­ket­ing con­sul­tant. When social media became more and more preva­lent, he dis­missed it as a fad, when it actu­al­ly became a require­ment for a job. If you were an employ­er and you had to choose between an eager can­di­date who was well versed in RSS feeds, blogs, and viral mar­ket­ing and an expe­ri­enced but expen­sive mar­ket­ing per­son who was still mired in the 1990s, who would you choose?

In my opin­ion, all of these peo­ple became com­pla­cent. They stopped car­ing about learn­ing and improving.

Why do peo­ple do this? Do these exam­ples ring a bell? Why do you think that some peo­ple fall into this rut?

Filed Under: Career Development, Online Reading, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology Tagged With: career development, complacency, technical writers

MY PRESENTATION AT THE UPCOMING WRITERSUA CONFERENCE

February 3, 2011 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

I’m real­ly look­ing for­ward to attending—and presenting—at the upcom­ing Writ­er­sUA con­fer­ence in south­ern Los Ange­les on March 13–16th.

I’m deliv­er­ing a ses­sion called “Using Web Ana­lyt­ics for Improv­ing Con­tent” in which I’ll be talk­ing about why tech­ni­cal writ­ers should care about web ana­lyt­ics, key web site met­rics that writ­ers can mon­i­tor, and how to set up web ana­lyt­ics for a web site or an online help system.
I’m equal­ly excit­ed about some of the oth­er ses­sions that are sched­uled. Here are a few:

  • Com­par­ing the strengths and weak­ness­es of Help Author­ing Tools. This com­par­i­son includes Author-it, Doc-to-Help, Flare, Robo­Help, and Web­Works ePub­lish­er. Most of my career I’ve used Web­Works or Robo­Help so I’m def­i­nite­ly inter­est­ed in see­ing how the oth­er tools mea­sure up.
  • Lever­ag­ing user-gen­er­at­ed con­tent in tech­ni­cal doc­u­men­ta­tion. If you’ve been mon­i­tor­ing my blog over the last two months, I’ve writ­ten a cou­ple of entries about social media and tech­ni­cal documentation.
  • Tak­ing advan­tage of HTML5. Par­tic­u­lar­ly I’d like to know if there’s any­thing I can do to incor­po­rate this tech­nol­o­gy into tech­ni­cal com­mu­ni­ca­tion deliverables.
  • Writ­ing tech­ni­cal doc­u­men­ta­tion for mobile devices. This includes devices like the iPhone and iPad.

Of course, there are many oth­er top­ics, includ­ing a lot of ses­sions on writ­ing, DITA, and oth­er technologies.

Filed Under: Career Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Web 2.0 Tagged With: key metrics for technical writers, technical writers, technical writing, web analytics

HOW COULD CLOUD COMPUTING CHANGE OUR JOBS?

January 27, 2011 by RDesprez 9 Comments

Cloud com­put­ing is one of those terms you hear a lot about. Microsoft recent­ly launched a “To the cloud” adver­tis­ing cam­paign. Google offers Google Docs, a suite of cloud-based office soft­ware. I’m work­ing on con­tract for a com­pa­ny that makes gov­ern­ment soft­ware that runs on Sales­force, anoth­er cloud-based com­pa­ny. So it’s notable that there’s lit­tle dis­cus­sion about cloud-based author­ing soft­ware for tech­ni­cal writers.

Cloud com­put­ing basi­cal­ly means soft­ware than runs on the Inter­net ver­sus soft­ware installed on your com­put­er. Adobe FrameMak­er uses the tra­di­tion­al mod­el: you down­load it from Adobe’s site or insert a DVD into your com­put­er and the soft­ware is installed on your hard dri­ve. In con­trast, Google Docs is acces­si­ble via your web brows­er instead of installing it. Once you log on, it’s instan­ta­neous. No more wait­ing for the instal­la­tion. No more punch­ing in long, com­pli­cat­ed ser­i­al numbers.

Soft­ware like Google Docs is catch­ing on. While it’s cur­rent­ly viewed as a “lite” ver­sion of Microsoft Office, it’s improv­ing all the time. Google is also look­ing at cre­at­ing an offline mod­el in case you’re work­ing at a loca­tion that does not have Inter­net access.

For tech­ni­cal writ­ers, there’s not a lot of dis­cus­sion about writ­ing using cloud-based author­ing tools. Think about the benefits:

  • Your soft­ware would be avail­able imme­di­ate­ly. No more waits for a large and some­times slow down­load from a vendor’s web site. I recent­ly down­loaded Adobe’s Tech­ni­cal Com­mu­ni­ca­tion Suite and the process took more than two hours.
  • Your upfront costs are low­er. Cloud-based soft­ware is fre­quent­ly priced on a sub­scrip­tion mod­el. So instead of pay­ing $2,000 for Adobe Tech­ni­cal Com­mu­ni­ca­tion Suite, you would pay a month­ly fee to access Adobe’s soft­ware on the Inter­net. I’d read­i­ly agree to a month­ly fee of say $55 ver­sus $2,000 for a suite of software.
  • Your soft­ware sub­scrip­tion would ide­al­ly pro­vide you with the lat­est ver­sion of the soft­ware. Instead of pon­der­ing whether I should upgrade to FrameMak­er 10, which was just released, my sub­scrip­tion would imme­di­ate­ly give me access to the lat­est features.
  • Col­lab­o­ra­tion could be eas­i­er among writ­ers. As the soft­ware resides on a remote serv­er, you could prob­a­bly store your source files there too. If done secure­ly, this could make col­lab­o­ra­tion eas­i­er. Imag­ine if you need­ed to share your files with a team in India. No more e‑mailing large files.
  • Tech­ni­cal reviews could also be done via the cloud. So instead of crank­ing up Word or Acro­bat on a com­put­er, review­ers could read your mate­r­i­al by review­ing a doc­u­ment that is avail­able on a web site.

Of course the mod­el isn’t per­fect. Per­for­mance, for exam­ple, could be an issue. But if soft­ware ven­dors can ensure a secure envi­ron­ment and offer decent per­for­mance, I think the idea has a lot of merit.

Filed Under: Help Authoring Tools, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Web 2.0 Tagged With: cloud computing, Help Authoring Tools, online help

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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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Vancouver Technical Writer. Former Instructor at Simon Fraser University. Dog Lover. Coffee Drinker. Tennis and Piano Player.

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This productivity poison is exhausting you /via @globeandmail

This productivity poison is exhausting you

Constantly shifting your attention undermines what is your super power in most knowledge jobs. How you anticipate an...

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Google forcing some remote workers to come back 3 days a week or lose their jobs

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About Me

Robert Desprez I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at Kodak, Boeing, Teck Resources, and FortisBC. In addition, I have worked as a writing instructor at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.

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Robert Desprez Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Inc.
North Van­cou­ver, British Columbia
Canada
Phone: 604–836-4290

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