HCi Journal of Information Development

Don't lose control of your product documentation

By Ron Byrne

This is a cautionary tale about how not to manage your product manuals.

Company X is a medium size company manufacturing a large range of products for both commercial and domestic use both in Australia and an expanding number of other countries.  They carry a large inventory of product manuals that are distributed in the boxes with their products and direct to sales and service agents. 

In recent years they gave their support documentation production needs to an outside agency for design and production. A Company X staff member was responsible for liaison and ordering.  This arrangement worked well, until the staff member left the company leaving no written or verbal instructions about production of the documentation. 

Shortly afterwards, there arose the need to update documents for a range of products because of design changes. Another staff member contacted the agency only to discover that there had been changes of staff there too, with the result that the documents in question could not be found. Without the company’s knowledge, the agency had given yet another independent person the task of producing some of the content and that person had moved on and no longer had any interest in the matter.

After much searching, no complete set of files for the documents could be found either within Company X, or within the agency. Many fragments were found - but not the right ones. Some of the fragments found were created by the independent person using an application that no-one else had knowledge of or access to. As if this wasn’t enough, it turned out that the requirement was for updates to, and production of, no less than 29 discrete manuals covering:

Faced with this chaotic situation, the company approached HCi. We peeled back the layers of history to reveal a litany of inadequacies in the documents themselves as well as in the document production process.  These included.

After this investigation, HCi rewrote the documentation for the company’s flagship product range as a sample of what the documents should have been like.

The re-write brought about the following improvements:

HCI has helped Company X learn the following lessons:

The documentation that a company issues with its product is part of the product and is a vital ingredient in establishing an image for the company and the product in the marketplace. It makes good sense to learn the lessons of this case study and to ensure that your product documentation is properly targeted, properly controlled, and properly reproduced.

First published August 2003

This article may be reproduced only with the permission of HCi. Copyright HCi Consulting, 2001-3.

HCi information development - www.hci.com.au
(technical writing, quality management, knowledge management)