Clients need style manuals more than templates (or at least the templates should be in the style manual appendix).
A previous client had an anal senior manager who edited every document put in front of him. If they'd had a style manual following his idea of written English (correct but old-fashioned) then people would not have wasted time correcting how many spaces to put after full stops or whether to use semicolons when using lists.
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Previously on "What would we do without document templates?"
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Originally posted by vetran View PostI have started on this:
Current WIP:
QS0001 - Are you cut out to be a contractor?
QS0002 - Have you bled the radiators?
QS0003 - Its the Wail
QS0004 - Would Mitch?
Its a sort of FAQ with options to extend.
any other suggestions?
Once you've corrected that, gladiators and chutney spoons might keep you busy for a while.
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Originally posted by vetran View PostThe benefit is a template forces you to put the information in a specific order and style.
We have DR & support templates for thousands of sites and you can find the right bit of information in each one in seconds. One day it will be automated!
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I have started on this:
Current WIP:
QS0001 - Are you cut out to be a contractor?
QS0002 - Have you bled the radiators?
QS0003 - Its the Wail
QS0004 - Would Mitch?
Its a sort of FAQ with options to extend.
any other suggestions?
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostA short checklist/cheatsheet could do that.
We have DR & support templates for thousands of sites and you can find the right bit of information in each one in seconds. One day it will be automated!
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Originally posted by Halo Jones View PostTemplates also act as reminders to included specific items – this I would say is the primary function of a template as opposed to uniform appearance.
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostIndeed, but these problems are surely rooted in employing the wrong people; is it really such a good idea to inhibit the creativity of, and waste the time of good people?
Templates also act as reminders to included specific items – this I would say is the primary function of a template as opposed to uniform appearance.
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templates for structured and complex documents - Yes, this is a sensible way to stick to agreed standards or just to produce consistent quality documents. If you're really good with them you can make the top level heading numbers and titles consistent between similar documents so its easier for the reader to find stuff quickly.
templates for e-mails - sounds like somebody has run out of work to do and is trying to avoid early termination of contract
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Originally posted by Halo Jones View PostTemplates have their place, I use many of them – admittedly these tend to be contractual & actual contracts, but for emails & the like I want to say over kill & decry the nanny state but having seen some of the emails sent from site I can see a need, as ever its working to the lowest common denominator
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Originally posted by vetran View PostYou would be surprised. I think many people turn their brain off at the door.Originally posted by Halo Jones View PostTemplates have their place, I use many of them – admittedly these tend to be contractual & actual contracts, but for emails & the like I want to say over kill & decry the nanny state but having seen some of the emails sent from site I can see a need, as ever its working to the lowest common denominator
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If the client follows a methodology, then you would expect the documentation to be in a common format.
Nearly all the clients I've worked with have followed Oracle's AIM standard - and even those that use their own formats still refer to the documents with the same names.
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Templates have their place, I use many of them – admittedly these tend to be contractual & actual contracts, but for emails & the like I want to say over kill & decry the nanny state but having seen some of the emails sent from site I can see a need, as ever its working to the lowest common denominator
Leave a comment:
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