The Role of an Information Architect in a DITA Implementation
When you implement DITA, it’s important to identify at least one person – ideally, more than one – at the start of the project to lead the IA effort. The information architect is a permanent role whose contribution will continue as your content and business needs change.
What Makes Intelligent Content Indispensable? An Expert-led Roundtable Discussion
Intelligent content fuses technology with human capability and knowledge so that it is findable (via understanding human search intent), reusable, and machine readable (via structured components and metadata). This roundtable brought together different voices of experts in the intelligent content space who each have their own hand in building and/or using content that better suits the needs of a workplace.
Information Architecture Migration Readiness Assessment
Is your information architecture ready for a CCMS? Here are 23 things you need to do before your implementation.
Uncompromise your content: Maximize your CCMS investment with information architecture
If you want to fully leverage your CCMS features, it’s time to update your IA. Learn how to evaluate your map structures, topic structures, metadata, and content reuse strategies.
Sharing content across the enterprise
Amber Swope discusses using content collections to share content across the enterprise. Learn how to identify the requirements for the collection, determine the collection scope, and collaborate with other stakeholders to build and manage the collection.
Automate to Stay Up-to-Date: 5 Ways to Maintain Your Training Content
According to RSW's Training Content Trends Survey, most learning and training developers struggle to keep content up-to-date. In this webinar, Amber Swope discusses the issues driving obsolescence and provides strategies for keeping content current.
Four Best Practices for Sharing Content Across Departments using DITA
Darwin Information Typing Architecture (DITA) helps you avoid redundant work and improve content consistency by reusing XML Content. This article covers the four key considerations of content sharing.