Tips for moving from unstructured to structured content with Dipo Ajose-Coker
Update: 2024-01-08
Description
In episode 159 of The Content Strategy Experts Podcast, Bill Swallow and special guest Dipo Ajose-Coker share tips for moving from unstructured to structured content.
“I mentioned it before: invest in training. It’s very important that your team knows first of all not just the tool, but also the concepts behind the tool. The concept of structured content creation, leaving ownership behind, and all of those things that we’ve referred to earlier on. You’ve got to invest in that kind of training. It’s not just a one-off, you want to keep it going. Let them attend conferences or webinars, and things like that, because those are all instructive, and those are all things that will give good practice.”
— Dipo Ajose-Coker
Related links:
* Challenges of moving from unstructured to structured content with Dipo Ajose-Coker (podcast, part 1)
* MadCap IXIA CCMS
Webinar: Everything is Awesome! A DITA Story: A webinar on Dipo’s experience migrating from unstructured FrameMaker to DITA XML
Structured content: the foundation for digital transformation (podcast)
LinkedIn:
* Dipo Ajose-Coker
* Bill Swallow
Transcript:
Disclaimer: This is a machine-generated transcript with edits.
Bill Swallow: Welcome to The Content Strategy Experts Podcast, brought to you by Scriptorium. Since 1997, Scriptorium has helped companies manage, structure, organize, and distribute content in an efficient way.
This is part two of a two-part podcast. I’m Bill Swallow. In this episode, Dipo Ajose-Coker and I continue our discussion about the top challenges of moving from unstructured to structured content.
So we talked about a lot of different challenges, and I don’t want this to be some kind of a scary episode for people. Let’s talk about some tips you might have for people, as they do approach this move from unstructured content to structured content.
Dipo Ajose-Coker: Yeah. Now, I would always say the first thing is start small and then scale up. You need to take one example of each type of manual. I used to work with we had user manual, pre-installation manual, service manuals, maintenance manuals, and so on. Some of them are similar in that they’ve got similar type of content, we’re just removing parts of it. But some of them are really radically different. So we took one user manual, and one service manual, and one pre-installation manual, three major types of content. And then you convert that, test it to breaking point. And then, by the back-and-forth that you’re doing in making that the conversion matrix, so fine-tuning that conversion matrix, you’re more confident that, when you then throw the rest of the manuals in there, you’ll have a lot less cleanup. I’m never going to say that you’re going to have zero cleanup, you will always have cleanup. But you will have a lot less to do in cleanup,
“I mentioned it before: invest in training. It’s very important that your team knows first of all not just the tool, but also the concepts behind the tool. The concept of structured content creation, leaving ownership behind, and all of those things that we’ve referred to earlier on. You’ve got to invest in that kind of training. It’s not just a one-off, you want to keep it going. Let them attend conferences or webinars, and things like that, because those are all instructive, and those are all things that will give good practice.”
— Dipo Ajose-Coker
Related links:
* Challenges of moving from unstructured to structured content with Dipo Ajose-Coker (podcast, part 1)
* MadCap IXIA CCMS
Webinar: Everything is Awesome! A DITA Story: A webinar on Dipo’s experience migrating from unstructured FrameMaker to DITA XML
Structured content: the foundation for digital transformation (podcast)
LinkedIn:
* Dipo Ajose-Coker
* Bill Swallow
Transcript:
Disclaimer: This is a machine-generated transcript with edits.
Bill Swallow: Welcome to The Content Strategy Experts Podcast, brought to you by Scriptorium. Since 1997, Scriptorium has helped companies manage, structure, organize, and distribute content in an efficient way.
This is part two of a two-part podcast. I’m Bill Swallow. In this episode, Dipo Ajose-Coker and I continue our discussion about the top challenges of moving from unstructured to structured content.
So we talked about a lot of different challenges, and I don’t want this to be some kind of a scary episode for people. Let’s talk about some tips you might have for people, as they do approach this move from unstructured content to structured content.
Dipo Ajose-Coker: Yeah. Now, I would always say the first thing is start small and then scale up. You need to take one example of each type of manual. I used to work with we had user manual, pre-installation manual, service manuals, maintenance manuals, and so on. Some of them are similar in that they’ve got similar type of content, we’re just removing parts of it. But some of them are really radically different. So we took one user manual, and one service manual, and one pre-installation manual, three major types of content. And then you convert that, test it to breaking point. And then, by the back-and-forth that you’re doing in making that the conversion matrix, so fine-tuning that conversion matrix, you’re more confident that, when you then throw the rest of the manuals in there, you’ll have a lot less cleanup. I’m never going to say that you’re going to have zero cleanup, you will always have cleanup. But you will have a lot less to do in cleanup,
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