The #1 Guide to Excellence in Technical Communication-Fully Updated for Embedded Assistance, Mobile, Search, Multimedia, and More

Direct from IBM's own content design experts, this guide shows you how to design product interfaces and technical information that always place users front and center. This edition has been fully revised to help you consistently deliver the right content at the right time.

You'll master today's best practices to apply nine essential characteristics of high-quality technical information: accuracy, clarity, completeness, concreteness, organization, retrievability, style, task orientation, and visual effectiveness.

Coverage Includes

  • Advocating for users throughout the entire product development process
  • Delivering information in an ordered manner by following progressive disclosure techniques
  • Optimizing content so that users can find it from anywhere
  • Streamlining information for mobile delivery
  • Helping users right where they are

Whether you're a writer, editor, information architect, user experience professional, or reviewer, this book shows you how to create great technical information, from the product design to the user interface, topics, and other media.

  • Thoroughly revised and updated
  • Extensive new coverage of self-documenting interfaces and embedded assistance
  • Updated practical guidelines and checklists
  • Hundreds of new examples



Autorentext

The authors are all long-standing and respected members of the information development community at IBM. Although the authors have served in various roles throughout their careers, information quality has always been and continues to be their primary focus.

Michelle Carey is an information architect and technical editor at IBM and has taught technical communication at University of California Santa Cruz Extension. Michelle is the co-author of the book DITA Best Practices: A Roadmap for Writing, Editing, and Architecting in DITA. She is an expert on topic-based information systems, software product error messages, grammar, embedded assistance for user interfaces, and writing for international audiences. She also writes computational linguistic rules for a grammar, style, and terminology management tool. Michelle enjoys teaching, grammar, herding cats, and riding and driving anything with a lot of horsepower.

Moira McFadden Lanyi is an information architect and technical editor at IBM. She has experience with topic-based writing, DITA, embedded assistance, user interface design, and visual design. She created 99% of the artwork in this book. She is a co-author of the book An Introduction to IMS. Moira enjoys visiting San Francisco with her family as often as possible, cooking fresh, healthy meals, and watching her courageous son ride his unicycle and surf.

Deirdre Longo is an information architect and strategist at IBM. She has been a pioneer for embedded assistance in IBM: defining the scope of that term, developing standards for embedded assistance, and modeling how to work effectively in cross-disciplinary teams. She has taught webinars for the Society of Technical Communication (STC) and published articles on information architecture topics in STC's Intercom. She is an avid yoga practitioner.

Eric Radzinski is a technical editor and information architect for industry-leading mainframe database software at IBM. He is a co-author of The IBM Style Guide: Conventions for Writers and Editors and is well versed in topic-based writing, embedded assistance, DITA, and writing for a global audience. Eric makes his home in San Jose, California, with his wife and their three children.

Shannon Rouiller is an information architect and technical editor at IBM. She has experience with quality metrics, topic-based information systems, DITA, videos, embedded assistance, and user interface design. She is a co-author of the book Designing Effective Wizards. Shannon dabbles in sports photography and likes to solve puzzles.

Elizabeth Wilde is an information quality strategist at IBM, developing strategies and education for developing high-quality content. She develops Acrolinx computational linguistic rules that enforce grammar, style, and DITA tagging rules. She teaches an extension course in technical writing at the University of California Santa Cruz. Her hobbies include growing cacti and succulents and collecting tattoos.



Inhalt

Preface xvii

Acknowledgments xix

About the authors xxiii

Part 1. Introduction 1

Chapter 1. Technical information continues to evolve 3

Embedded assistance 4

Progressive disclosure of information 9

The technical writer's role today 11

Redefining quality technical information 13

Chapter 2. Developing quality technical information 15

Preparing to write: understanding users, goals, and product tasks 16

Writing and rewriting 17

Reviewing, testing, and evaluating technical information 19

Part 2. Easy to use 21

Chapter 3. Task orientation 23

Write for the intended audience 25

Present information from the users' point of view 27

Focus on users' goals 32

Identify tasks that support users' goals 33

Write user-oriented task topics, not function-oriented task topics 35

Avoid an unnecessary focus on product features 41

Indicate a practical reason for information 46

Provide clear, step-by-step instructions 49

Make each step a clear action for users to take 51

Group steps for usability 53

Clearly identify steps that are optional or conditional 58

Task orientation checklist 64

Chapter 4. Accuracy 67

Research before you write 69

Verify information that you write 74

Maintain information currency 79

Keep up with technical changes 79

Avoid writing information that will become outdated 82

Maintain consistency in all information about a subject 86

Reuse information when possible 86

Avoid introducing inconsistencies 88

Use tools that automate checking for accuracy 93

Accuracy checklist 96

Chapter 5. Completeness 99

Make user interfaces self-documenting 101

Apply a pattern for disclosing information 107

Cover all subjects that support users' goals and only those subjects 115

Create an outline or topic model 115

Include only information based on user goals 118

Make sure concepts and reference topics support the goals 122

Cover each subject in only as much detail as users need 123

Provide appropriate detail for your users and their experience level 123

Include enough information 130

Include only necessary information 136

Repeat information only when users will benefit from it 141

Completeness checklist 148

Part 3. Easy to understand 151

Chapter 6. Clarity 153

Focus on the meaning 155

Eliminate wordiness 161

Write coherently 174

Avoid ambiguity 180

Use words as only one part of speech 180

Avoid empty words 183

Use words with a clear meaning 187

Write positively 189

Make the syntax of sentences clear 194

Use pronouns correctly 199

Place modifiers appropriately 201

Use technical terms consistently and appropriately 205

Decide whether to use a term 205

Use terms consistently 207

Define each term that is new to the intended audience 210

Clarity checklist 212<…

Titel
Developing Quality Technical Information
Untertitel
A Handbook for Writers and Editors
EAN
9780133119015
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Hersteller
Veröffentlichung
19.06.2014
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Dateigrösse
40.33 MB
Anzahl Seiten
624