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10 Quick Tips for Project Managers about Help Content

by Tom Johnson on Nov 11, 2010
categories: technical-writing

10 Tips for Help Content
10 tips for PMs about help content

As a follow-up to my last post, When Help Content Is Forgotten, my colleague pointed out that having a set of agreed-upon best practices for technical writers is one of the first steps in establishing traction with project managers. Otherwise, project managers can resist or dismiss a technical writer's recommendations as subjective opinion.

In an effort to be concise, here's my stab at the ten things project managers should know when working with technical writers. Imagine formatting these ten sentences in a neat little card that you periodically email to project managers, or that you give project managers when meeting them for the first time. I made them concise so that they'll be read. These are the 10 concepts that all project managers should know about help content.

10 Best Practices for Help Content

  1. Allocate budget for help content in your project plan.
  2. After your project is approved, contact a technical writer about deadlines for deliverables.
  3. Recognize that what seems intuitive to you may be unintuitive to users.
  4. Technical writers need access to test environments, prototypes, and dummy data.
  5. The user interface is driven by text, so involve a technical writer's language expertise with prototypes.
  6. Because help content is part of the user experience, technical writers work closely with interaction designers.
  7. Expect short guides and visual content rather than long manuals.
  8. If collaboration and distributed ownership are important, consider a wiki platform.
  9. Technical writers are your application's first users -- their feedback can improve usability.
  10. Documentation isn't finished with the application's release, but continues as users submit feedback.

About Tom Johnson

Tom Johnson

I'm an API technical writer based in the Seattle area. On this blog, I write about topics related to technical writing and communication — such as software documentation, API documentation, AI, information architecture, content strategy, writing processes, plain language, tech comm careers, and more. Check out my API documentation course if you're looking for more info about documenting APIs. Or see my posts on AI and AI course section for more on the latest in AI and tech comm.

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