On Oct 3, 2010, at 01:19 , Jean Hollis Weber wrote: > I want to start developing a "wish list" for documentation for ordinary > users (things like user guides, howtos, FAQs, tutorials, training > materials, and others). We won't have enough people to do everything on > the list, but it might encourage new people to contribute in areas that > most interest them. > > Some issues to consider are: > * What audiences do we want to reach? What are their needs? Lots of > overlap with training here.
If I may be allowed to suggest, there are three main markets to target. 1. The very young. Since LibO is free, they can get a first class product at a price they can afford, and once they're hooked, they'll stay with it. People do. And the very young are used to free things from the Internet, but they are also more willing than older people to actually send a donation for something that they use. Young people do that. Old people buy licences and there is no LibO licence to buy. 2. The very old. Often they've inherited a computer from someone else in the family who has bought a new one, and they don't have the money to buy pay-for products. 3. Corporations. Who knows, if they get the equivalent of Microsoft's product for nothing, maybe they'll donate something to the pool. But I put my faith in 1 and 2. //James -- To unsubscribe, send an empty e-mail to discuss+unsubscr...@documentfoundation.org All messages you send to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted. List archives are available at http://www.documentfoundation.org/lists/discuss/