By Pete Grigg on Writing docs from March 12, 2014
When I hear a customer say the above phrase or anything similar, I cringe a bit. Each time someone has to contact support after trying to find help on their own is a missed opportunity.
A knowledge base can really help to reduce those missed self serves. The realization that you need one, however, often comes with the realization that you have no idea how to build one. These questions may sound familiar:
Like most places, SurveyGizmo started out with very little documentation. When a customer ran into an issue, it was very hard if not impossible for them to find a solution on their own. A fairly large amount of our customer support volume were “How Do I” questions. While we always love showing off our stellar support team, our customer base was growing very quickly and our support team was having trouble keeping up.
We realized that in order to scale our support in a sustainable way we needed to make a change. We began to focus on what we call “proactive support”. The idea is to reduce support volume by preventing requests from being created in the first place.
Ok, so we had an idea of what we wanted to do but actually getting it up and running was by no means a cakewalk. Here were a few of the major problems we ran into:
After a rough start, we decided that in order to really make a difference we needed to put the resources into it. We hired two full time documentation authors, and molded our knowledge base tool, HelpGizmo, to give us the data that we needed to make the correct decisions.
How are you supposed to know if your knowledge base is making a difference? If you aren’t actively tracking the numbers, you can’t. Or at least I can’t. I guess I shouldn’t assume that you don’t have super powers. That was kinda rude of me, I apologize. For most of us though, data is king.
Here are some things that we track with our tool:
That is absolutely understandable. Software can give you some great additional data, but if you want to prepare before you decide I would suggest bucketing your help requests. It’s actually just a good idea in general even if you do decide on utilizing outside software.
As with anything, you need to find a system that will work for you but here are the buckets that we use:
It wasn’t an easy ride for us, but it was definitely worth it in the end. By tracking our support in a meaningful way and creating documentation based off of real data we have been able to get more and more people to self serve. We all want our software to be so easy to use that the thought of needing something like a knowledge base is just silly. But for the majority of us that aren’t quite there yet, providing relevant, easy to get to help articles can create happy, self serving customers.
What do you guys feel like are the biggest hurdles you have to getting started? Are they pretty similar to the ones I mentioned up top or are you facing something entirely different? I would love to hear your stories.
General posts useful to all documentarians about writing documentation, editing and publishing workflows, and more.
Your flight plan for how to get the most out of KnowledgeOwl features and integrate them into your workflows.
Major KnowledgeOwl company announcements.
Learn how others are using KnowledgeOwl & get pro tips on how to make the most of KO!
Find out more about who we are and what we value.
We believe good support is the foundation of good business. Learn about support tools and methodology.
Learn more about tools to solve various documentarian issues, within and beyond KnowledgeOwl.
Not sure what category you need? Browse all the posts on our blog.
Watch a 5-minute video and schedule time to speak with one of our owls.