STC Presentation this Thursday: “Quick Reference Guides: Short and Sweet Technical Documentation”
February 25th, 2009 | Posted in blog 7 Comments »
This Thursday, my colleague Ben Minson and I are presenting to the Intermountain STC chapter on “Quick Reference Guides: Short and Sweet Technical Documentation.”
Here’s a description of the presentation:
Users often want documentation in a format that will give them the basics and get them on their way as fast as possible. Not all technical communication situations will benefit from quick reference guides, but almost every user rejoices at the site of one-page documentation.
Despite the brevity of quick reference material, the thought process involved in creating, organizing, and laying out the content is time-consuming. This format requires you to right-size content and decide the most important information the user needs to know. Additionally, you must describe with extreme concision and clarity processes that usually require dozens of pages to explain.
Beyond strategies for quick reference material, we will also review several tools, such as Adobe InDesign, that can be used to create quick reference guides. We will present feedback we have received from users and project managers that highlight the benefits of the quick reference format.
Sound interesting? Delivering quick reference guides will win you more praise than almost anything else you can do as a technical writer. In our presentation, we’ll walk through ten sample quick reference guide templates, pointing out elements of design that make them work (or not work).
Here are the meeting details:
Location: Downtown Salt Lake City library, Utah
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Cost: Free
Food served: Light fruit and cheese, and maybe a brownie
For more details, such as driving directions and the library location, see this PDF flyer.
By the way, if you have a quick reference guide template that you’d like to share, send it to me at tomjohnson1492@gmail.com. My colleague and I are also presenting on quick reference guides at the Summit in Atlanta. I’d like to collect as many contrasting quick reference guide layouts as possible.
Additional Resources
I’ve previously written a couple of posts on quick reference guides:
- Quick Reference Guide Formats — Tips for Finding Attractive Layouts
- Quick Reference Guides: The Poetry of Technical Writing
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Tags: Ben Minson, quick reference, quick reference guides, stc-intermountain, Technical Writing
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If the presentation will be videotaped, I’d love to see it online. I think having Quick Reference Guides would be a great way to go for our software given customer comments.
Tom, I’d like to second that request for a video for those of us who cannot make it to see your presentation this evening. I know you’ve been working on these Quick Ref. Guides lately and I’m very interested in learning more. Either way, best of luck to you and Ben on the presentation.
I updated the location information. I’m not sure I’ll be able to record or videotape it, but I may make a separate podcast of it later that will include a visual screencast component.
I agree with Tammy and Jason, being able to see this presentation online would be really terrific. I currently struggle to create quick reference documents and tips for adjusting the layout would be a big help. I am limited to using Microsoft Word and a PDF converter but seeing your ideas would be most appreciated.
How about delivering a Live Meeting webcast on this information?
Tom, may I echo the request for something web-based? I am involved in these discussions RIGHT NOW! Just as the RSS hit my inbox, I was writing one of three such guides, and need all the help I can get!
You’re right about this — I really need to explore the online QRG format. When I upgrade from CS3 to CS4, I’ll experiment with the web/flash production capabilities that InDesign offers. In the meantime, here’s a great site that has some quick reference type material.