STC Lone Writer SIGSTC

Solitary Scrivener

Contemplating Help

Ken Schatzke (Webmaster)
20 August 2009
Categories: Tools of the TradeTrendsWriting
Comments: 0

I’ve been working on a fairly major help project over the past few weeks. In the process, I’ve been thinking a lot about how we, as tech writers, write help and what users need from help.

I was first introduced to help authoring 12 years ago while completing my degree in technical writing. Like most tech writers, I learned about books, topics, indexes, keywords, and the other components of help files. I also learned the best practices of help authoring, including breaking information into small, self-contained chunks, keeping information types separate, and focusing on user tasks rather than software features. Although HTML-based authoring tools and outputs were available at the time, publishing help on the web was still a novel idea.

After graduating, I began creating help systems in the real world. Often, this meant porting the content from a product’s printed user guide to an online platform (HTML Help, HTML, PDF, etc.) with few, if any, structural changes. This was my primary work flow for many years. And I suspect it was the primary work flow of other tech writers as well.

While we worked on user guides and help, our users’ world changed dramatically. Internet access became nearly ubiquitous in the developed world. Google made searching the web faster and easier. Blogs, wikis, and YouTube made user-generated content a reality.

What does this all mean for help? Is it even relevant in a world where users can simply search the web for thousands of free resources when they have a question or encounter a problem with their software products? I think help can still be relevant. In fact, it needs to be relevant to engage our users and allow them to fully realize the value of their tools and technology. But this requires us, as tech writers, to move beyond the basic lessons that I learned in college over a decade ago:

Many of you are already following these practices. Please share your experiences with us.

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