By Catherine Heath on Writing docs from April 29, 2021
This Write the Docs Portland 2021 talk was given by Nicola Yap. Nicola has been in tech writing for over 20 years but joined Google in 2019. She’s co-lead of the Google Tech Writer Onboarding Team. This talk was about creating a successful onboarding process to help new technical writers in your organization to thrive.
In every company Nicola has joined, there’s not been a lot of guidance in her role and responsibilities as a writer. Without clear guidance, you can get pigeonholed into the misconception that all you do is write, and suddenly find that your'e a copy editor for everyone else.
Sometimes, the documentation lifecycle and where writers contribute is also unclear and undefined. Stakeholders are not highlighted and there’s not as much buy-in to support the writer in getting their work done.
If there isn’t a clearly defined writer role and path, then writers aren't being set up to succeed.
A few months into her job, some people approached Nicola with content created for new writers. Teams were creating onboarding materials for new writers to help them figure out their role as a writer at Google. While these were useful efforts, there was a lot of repetition of effort.
Nicola approached her manager to ask for more onboarding for new writers at Google, which began a more cohesive onboarding process. Having this education in place was really important for providing everyone with a consistent experience.
In 2021, their focus has shifted from onboarding to ongoing education to address gaps that were starting to appear later in people's experiences.
According to Nicola, onboarding serves several purposes:
For documentation onboarding specifically, the onboarding should:
Nicola stresses that onboarding should help writers understand what the overall expectations are of their contributions, such as working across teams that could include community outreach or mentoring. What are the opportunities for training and growth? How can you move laterally?
Nicola notes that it's okay if you don't have all these things established up front, since differently-sized organizations will have different needs.
If your organization has more established documentation practices, you’ll need to apply them to onboarding your new writers.
Nicola recommends you set goals for the onboarding.
For example, as a result of onboarding, a writer should be able to:
Once you have your onboarding goals, you can put your content together. The onboarding they developed at Google focused on the writer role and tool/process education. They offered 60-minute live virtual classes, two facilitators, slides with highlights, speaker notes with details, and anonymous surveys after classes.
Beyond onboarding, work to shape your organization to better foster documentation culture:
We enjoyed Nicola's talk because onboarding really can make or break any employee's experience. Putting some thought into shaping that experience--either through documentation or just explicitly for documentarians--can go a long way to getting your writers productive and feeling welcomed and comfortable.
Watch the full talk here.
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