I had the pleasure of visiting three STC chapters in Florida during October. We talked about the technical communication opportunities in the area and where we see future opportunities. We also discussed how the Society for Technical Communication (STC) can work with the chapters.
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Management Workshop with STC Carolina
On August 18, 2012, I had the opportunity to lead a 4-hour Building and Managing Successful Teams workshop. I was impressed by the large number of attendees on a Saturday morning. The discussion was lively as we shared our leadership ideas and approaches. Through this discussion, we were able to learn from each other and identify new ways to help our teams work more effectively.
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Ninja Talk at STC Summit 2012
I had the opportunity to explore giving the first ninja talk at the STC Summit in Chicago. This creative adventure was a great way to wrap up the lightning talks on Wednesday and show how well prepared the other presenters were. The rules for the ninja talk were the same as the lightning talks (20 slides, each automatically advancing every 15 seconds), but the one big difference was that I had never seen the slides.
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Technical Communication: Design or Content?
How is the role of technical communicators changing? What skills should we be focused on for future success?
With content coming from many sources and contributors throughout the community, technical communicators can feel threatened. For many years, we were the sole developers of content, carefully crafting each phrase to deliver information clearly and concisely. As social media expands, our skills for crafting the message may become less important and less valued.
Building a Valuable Conference
I am currently part of the program team for the 2010 STC Summit in Dallas, Texas. We are working together to make sure we create a quality conference program for all attendees. The real question is…what makes a great conference?
I have attended many conferences over the years, and I have helped to organize the programs for several in the past. I hear many comments about whether a conference was good or bad, but often those comments include few details. Many aspects of a conference, such as networking times, social events, and vendor opportunities, affect the overall experience. However, I’m interested in the part the program sessions play in the overall experience and conference rating.
Learn How Much You Don’t Know
If you have seen The Matrix, you may remember the scene where Neo awakens in his “power cell” cocoon, looks out at all the other cocoons, and realizes how much he never knew was happening around him. This scene raises the point for me that…the more you know, the more you know you don’t know.
Technical Communication Trends and Ideas
Technical Communication continues to change as we find new ways to meet the needs of our audiences. I have attended several conferences recently and discussed several of the latest trends with other technical communicators. This article provides a quick list of several of these trends and ideas:
Attend a Conference without Attending
Both the WriterUA conference and the STC Summit in 2009 have proved that you can attend a conference without being there. Don’t get me wrong…there is a lot of value from being involved in the discussions within the program sessions. However, Twitter and ScribbleLive provide several important ways for us to share ideas within our community, which includes members who cannot attend every event.
For example, while at WritersUA in Seattle, I presented a session about using wikis to deliver product documentation. During the discussion, I made the statement, “our job is to help our audience solve their business problems, not just to use our product.” Before I was finished the session, that statement had been tweeted and retweeted as far away as Europe and Austrailia. The world has definitely become a smaller place, and we now have many ways to share ideas and information in real-time.
How Embedded User Assistance Impacts Documentation
Why don’t users read the documentation? In many cases, they need to stop what they are doing, go into the documentation, and find the information they are looking for. Then, they need to return to the user interface, remember what they were doing, and start again where they stopped.
Embedded user assistance relieves this pain point by delivering the information users need when and where they need it. Users no longer need to search for the information they need, and they often don’t even realize they are reading help. For example, a wizard in a product provides a lot of embedded assistance that guides the users through the task.
HTML No Longer Needed
With blog and wiki tools and technologies, are HTML, XHTML, and XML no longer needed? Blogs and wikis allow you to type text entries and these technologies figure out how to display it, often with little or no tagging markup. Their WYSIWYG interfaces continue to improve and expand. As the technology advances, these tools may add processing that can identify list items, tables, and other types of content, and then automatically format them.