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Wednesday, September 24, 2008
By Scott Abel, The Content Wrangler and The Content Wrangler Community
Moving to structured XML authoring is a challenge for many organizations, especially those with lots of legacy content locked away in unstructured, proprietary Microsoft Word files, a new survey of 500 content professionals uncovered. The survey, conducted by The Content Wrangler, discovered widespread interest in self-service, web-based legacy content analysis tools, software that can analyze content and provide metrics-rich reports designed to help users make the business case for adopting XML authoring and component content management, for example. It also uncovered the importance of security, the attractiveness of variable pricing, and the need for a free demonstration version of legacy content analysis software, according to feedback provided by the respondents.
The survey was sponsored by a software vendor and was designed to determine the level of interest among content professionals (especially technical communicators) in a product designed to analyze large sets of unstructured legacy content and uncover patterns in the content that humans alone cannot easily detect. According to the software vendor, the tool would also provide users with reports loaded with useful metrics designed to help make the business case for new ways of creating, managing and delivering content. Such a tool is needed, content management analysts say, because most organizations don’t know what it costs them to develop their content. Unless a strong business case can be made for change, analysts say, it’s unlikely an organization will receive funding to move to XML.
“Anything that suggests—even roughly—the amount of time, some metrics, or the number/type of resources necessary to get to some level of XML would be helpful,” volunteered one survey respondent. “The hardest thing to sell to management is the time and cost necessary to get to XML.”
“As a manager, I often find I’m making the business case to spend money to make my ‘real’ business case,” offered another respondent.
The survey questions and responses (by percentage and number of respondents) are listed below.
Question One: How interested would you be in a web-based tool that could analyze legacy unstructured documents (Microsoft Word files) and provide you with meaningful metrics designed to help you make the business case for change?
Results
More than 80% of survey respondents (414) said they would be either “very interested” (199) or “interested” (215) in a web-based tool that could analyze legacy unstructured documents (Microsoft Word files), however, a large number indicated that they would also like the tool to analyze unstructured Adobe FrameMaker files. FrameMaker is a popular long document creation and publishing tool that has been in widespread use in the technical communication industry for more than a decade. A small percentage of respondents also mentioned the need for the tool to analyze other unstructured content file types (PDF, EPS, Adobe InDesign, RTF, OpenDocument, HTML, FrontPage, SGML, Adobe RoboHelp). Two respondents said they need a tool that can also analyze wiki content.
“There aren’t strong enough words available to suitably emphasize how interested I’d be in a tool like this that really delivered on its promises,” said one respondent.
Question Two: Which of the following features (below) of the proposed new product is most important to you? Which is the least important? Please rank from 1 (least important) to 5 (most important).
Features:
Results
Of the five features survey respondents were asked to rank, a “secure site” tied with “self-service” as the most important features, but not by much. In fact, many respondents said that it was difficult to rank these five proposed features because they are all of nearly equal importance, which the survey results support. Comments provided by the respondents point out the importance of “a free demonstration version” in making the business case to management and establishing confidence that the product actually does what the marketing and sales folks claim it does.
“I feel a trial version is really a standard part of the sales process,” said one respondent. “A demo version is a big deal when showing off a product to management,” another wrote.
Other suggestions for features:
Question Three: Would the following attributes make you more or less interested in purchasing such a product?
Features:
Results
The results of this question are no surprise to technical communication consultants and structured content professionals. While making the business case is always a challenge, survey respondents also admit needing help creating information models to support structured XML authoring and if a content analysis tool can provide it, they’ll take the help.
Help is needed, some analysts say, because far too many organizations have tackled moving to structured XML authoring without understanding the changes the new paradigm introduces. Ultimately, they say, these projects fail.
“XML is not a good word where I work,” wrote one survey respondent. “The group that uses XML single-source authoring is a mess. As a result, XML will not be a selling point to management.”
“Help is the keyword here,” one respondent shared. “The more help tools can offer in this process (creation of information models) the better.”
Independent consultants, presumably with more experience creating information models shared markedly different comments.
“As a consultant,” one respondent said, “creating good information models for my clients is my job, but I guess I wouldn’t mind having this feature
Question Four: How likely are you to buy this product?
Results
More than half of the respondents said they would be “very likely” (9.6%) or “somewhat likely” (46.4%) to purchase a self-service, web-based legacy content analysis tool. Of course, “price”—followed closely by the ability to “make the business case to management”—were the key deciding factors, survey respondents said.
“Depends on price. It may do everything I want, but if it costs a million bucks, I’m not going to buy it,” shared one respondent.
“Even if a tool is helpful, it can still be difficult to convince the company to purchase. Sadly, I have to make the business case in order to get the money to make the business case” said one respondent. “It’s difficult to get management to spend money on a tool to analyze (unstructured content) when they don’t understand the need to move to structured authoring in the first place,” wrote another.
Even in organizations that claim they have already made the business case, funding can be a challenge.
“Even though we have already made the business case, we still don’t have the level of funding I think we’ll need,” one respondent said. “Just because a tool exists does not mean the budget does.”
Question Five: Are there additional attributes that you would want incorporated into this product?
Results
There were a wide range of suggestions for additional features provided by more than 150 of the 500+ survey respondents. We provide a small sampling for your review here:
Additional resources
If you are interested in learning more about structured XML authoring and related topics, consider joining the Writing for Reuse group on The Content Wrangler Community.
Drawing winners
The survey offered respondents a chance to win one of ten free tickets [see the winners list] to the Documentation and Training 2008 East conference, held October 29-November 1, 2008 in Burlington, MA.
Related article: Paradigm Shifts are Never Pretty: Advice on Making the Move to XML Authoring
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