Archive for May, 2009

June SFBay Arbortext PTC/User meeting announced

The SF Bay Arbortext PTC/User group (http://www.sfbayptcuser.org) has announced their first meeting. It will be an online meeting via LiveMeeting. Long-time Arbortext customer, Wolters-Kluwer, has generously offered their LiveMeeting and conference bridge facilities to the group for meeting purposes. We are all grateful to them for their support.

To accommodate users all over the globe, meetings are set for the 4th Saturday of the month at 9 AM, Pacific/US.

The first meeting is a preview of the Arbortext Advanced Print Publisher (APP, formerly known as 3B2). Lawrie Stevens of GPSL, and founding member of Advent, will be showing the product as you’ve never seen it before.

Because this is a LiveMeeting, users must register for the event in advance.

The meeting announcement is here:
http://www.sfbayptcuser.org/blog/2009/05/june-2009-meeting-announcement/

The registration URL is here:  https://www.123signup.com/event?id=jgzbd

Please join us all for this first meeting and participate in the user group. They’re looking for volunteers to help guide the group and it’s activities. They are also soliciting suggestions for speakers and topics for future meetings. If you have suggestions, send it to them or post in the comments. I’ve volunteered to be the Secretary for now and I’ll make sure we find speakers the community wants to see.

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Growing Arbortext craftsmen

Arbortext knowledge has traditionally been very tribal in nature. Like Oracle DBAs, what is not learned through trial by fire, is passed down user to user, developer to developer.

We’ve been thinking about how to change that. We’re helping found a formal user group — working through the PTC/User organization — that’s focused strictly on Arbortext. We’re thinking about how best to achieve that goal with members spread out all over the world.

We’ve been thinking about this for more than a year it took us about that long to figure out what we wanted to tell the world about what we do and how to provide real value and relevance to the Arbortext community.

We’ve had a lot of members looking for a way to share knowledge and benefit from what others are learning. For example, when Oracle merged with PeopleSoft, there were Arbortext implementation teams on both sides. When they got together, they found they’d fought the same battles and could have shortened their implementation time, could have made the lives of the Arbortext users in their own communities stronger, if they’d had a forum where they could share.

In addition to this blog, we’re about to start podcasting. The podcasts are our attempt to bring tribal knowledge to light. We’ll be talking with PTC customers — real users from the Arbortext community — because, at Single-Sourcing Solutions, we all started as customers. And we all learned from other people: other customers, other users, and internal PTC/Arbortext resources.

We have found that people who learn Arbortext are premium resources to their companies. Nearly no Arbortext specialists are out in the wild. Every new customer has to grow a specialist from scratch. And it’s not easy to do. The learning curve is high. You need to learn a new product and to learn how to implement it well. That takes time and resources.

Consultants play a part similar to that of the journeymen of the guild systems: they often travel a lot, work at many different companies and spread new practices and knowledge between companies and corporations.

To become a journeyman, an apprentice must first become a craftsman.

Our goal here is to is to expand the resources available to everyone in the community. If you’re working with the product — or just want to learn about it — please join us!

We’ll respond to feedback from our audience so we can all achieve what we all want to do: to be masters of our craft.

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Podcast of Content Management Strategies Presentation

Thursday, 18 September 2008, I was at the Intermountain Chapter of the STC. I spoke about “Repurposing Content for Multichannel Publishing”, the presentation I gave at the Content Management Strategies conference earlier this year. Tom Johnson, one of the members, kindly taped and posted a podcast of the presentation. Accompanying slides can be found here.

My thanks to the Intermountain STC Chapter for allowing me to come speak to them. Extra thanks to Tom for taping, editing, and preparing the podcast. We had a good discussion following the presentation. Everyone asked really strong questions and provided a lot of insight into what they were doing and the issues they were facing.

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Going enterprise vs going toolbox

Recently I’ve had the opportunity to think about my first single-sourcing project, specifically the way we went about it.

Silicon Valley is notorious for being a difficult place to sell software into: You can’t throw a rock on the street without hitting 10 software engineers (today, 3 of them are looking for work). And, as a result, there’s culture of do-it-yourself that is magnified because implementation and customization work is work that software engineers do.  Although this situation is magnified in the valley, it’s not unique to it. In this economic climate, the pressure to leverage existing resources is tremendous everywhere.

So I took the time to sit back, think about what our true costs were to do things the way we did. It’s the classic discussion: build vs buy. And, until the last several years, I’d thought we’d done it right.

Now, I’m convinced we didn’t.

As a full-time employee, hired to make the project come together, I saw the cost of the tools as the only cost. I saw the resources at my disposal — me, IT, people I knew in engineering, the skills and technical bent of the writers in the group — and I saw the cost of tools vs the cost of the enterprise system. We had done a deep dive into the organizational requirements we’d need to get it done. We knew how content was created and delivered in every part of our organization.  However, because I didn’t socialize it properly–because I let myself and my management be distracted by the technology–it took far longer to complete and cost far more than it should have.

While I can say I learned a lot through trial by fire, the full cost of implementing the system the way we did was a lot higher than the cost of purchase would have been.

Most Techpubs departments don’t get the luxury of having a software engineer dedicated to their needs. Writers are typically tasked to add tool admin and implementation to their ever growing list of responsibilities. Many writers stop being writers entirely. The don’t get to generate, architect, and design the company’s information strategy, they end up tied to implementing and maintaining the toolset.

This gets more and more difficult the more content you have. As the need for a real information architect grows — as it always does — the ability for that tools-focused writer to have any part of the content side of things falls away to nothing.

It took 4 years from concept to stable, production environment. The costs included my salary over those years. The time from several IT staff members at the beginning and over time sustaining and making process changes. The time from engineering staff who were co-opted here and there along the way. The time from engineering staff was an invisible cost — it didn’t show but it diverted their much more valuable time from product development to tool implementation and maintenance.  This is one cost that is extremely expensive to the company that we’re all quick to ignore when we’re not thinking of the larger business needs.

If we had gone the enterprise route, bought a ‘system’ that we could leverage out of the box, we’d have seen ROI in 2.

4 vs. 2: That’s an expensive lesson.

In this economic climate, it’s very easy to ignore the hidden costs of toolbox solutions. Enterprise solutions are more expensive than toolbox solutions, but they have a different goal — for a reason. And worse still, it’s easy to be distracted by the technology and miss the organizational needs that drive the need for a single sourcing system.

They’re value is in are things like these:

  • Eliminating manual effort
  • Simplifying product version– or configuration-specific deliverables
  • Tracking when product changes requires documentation updates
  • Automatically identifying all affected documents when changes occur
  • Integrating all of the components up front and building solutions that work together out of the box.

Every situation is different. If you’ve got a software engineer, or a writer that wants to be one, then your choices are different from the group that doesn’t have the funding to get support from IT. Doing more with less applies to products as much as to staff members. Less hassle, less implementation work, less sustaining costs year after year all mean that you are doing more with less.

In an enterprise solution like Arbortext, everything is tested together, deployed together, and upgraded together. In other words, enterprise software vendors have done the work of building the system so that you don’t have to.

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