There is no such trend. Signing off on this conversation. Your welcome to the 
last word on it.


----- Original Message ----
From: Technical Writer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Leslie Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; framers@lists.frameusers.com
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2007 8:52:21 AM
Subject: RE: radical revamping of techpubs

The experience of one person, or even a handful, do not in any way negate an 
obvious and growing trend in the software industry--directly related to "agile" 
development--to consider TW involvement as pointless until the final iteration. 
 
Yes, there are organizations that still do business as they did 20 or 30 years 
ago, just as there are still organizations using COBOL, SNOBOL, and other odd 
applications. If their system works, more power to them, and to the TWs they 
employ.
 
The difference is in whether or not the organization is developing software, or 
creating an application that "implements the vision" of a handful of movers and 
shakers at the top. That handful can do as they please, whether or not it is of 
long-term benefit to the organization. For software developed in a competitive 
marketplace, the role of the TW is rapidly changing to a diminished involvement.
 


http://www.tekwrytrs.com/
Specializing in the Design, Development, and Production of:
Technical Documentation - Online Content - Enterprise Websites





From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: RE: radical revamping of techpubs
Date: Mon, 29 Oct 2007 21:14:18 -0500


This may be your experience, in my experience in fact there is no IF about it, 
I just put it that way to be gentile.
 
Our documents pre-sage multi-mullion dollar contracts (at each stage of the 
project) and there is always plenty of fuzzy concepts to go around at the early 
stages. No documents, no contracts. 
 
TWs and in particular the directors, managers are involved at these stages. 
Documentation is a 100% necessary adjunct to business development from the 
outset.
 
From: Technical Writer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, October 29, 2007 8:29 PM
To: Leslie H Schwartz; framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: RE: radical revamping of techpubs
 
That is a very big if. A full partner participant-stakeholder, or more likely 
the department manager? It is more likely that the software developers, 
business analysts, and the project manager are collaborating to get a decent 
set of requirements down. At that stage, TWs have no place, whether department 
managers, full partner participant-stakeholders, or something else.
 
When the requirements are determined, and possibly after several iterations, 
possibly after a prototype is up and running, TWs might be brought in. Even at 
that stage, it is early, because the GUI crew may not have the interface coded, 
the developers might not have the functionality carved in stone, and everything 
is still uncertain (in regards to exactly what the final product will be and 
do).
 
TWs complete a very necessary task; creating user assistance. Until the final 
iteration, until all the requirements have been met, until there is little or 
no possibility of changes to the end product, there is little point in 
generating documentation that might become obsolete at the next iteration.
 


http://www.tekwrytrs.com/
Specializing in the Design, Development, and Production of:
Technical Documentation - Online Content - Enterprise Websites





Date: Mon, 29 Oct 2007 08:26:46 -0700
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: radical revamping of techpubs
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Actually, I disagee, if the TW is a full partner participant - stakeholder, or 
more likely the department manager in the scenario you are discussing, they 
should also participate early on to get the sense of the uncertainty and what 
those issues are, at the very least these issues are going to affect their 
scheduling and the expectations they have to deal with.
----- Original Message ----
From: Technical Writer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Leslie Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; framers@lists.frameusers.com
Sent: Monday, October 29, 2007 8:44:16 AM
Subject: RE: radical revamping of techpubs

I agree wholeheartedly. That is not the issue. The issue goes back to the BA 
interpretation of (and translation of) the software requirements. If there is a 
high level of certainty on the client side about what the finished product 
should be, TWs should start early. If not, and it is essentially a fishing 
expedition with ambiguous outcome, TWs are only useful at the last. 
Unfortunately, the "agile" methodologies strongly sell the sense of control to 
executives, pushing the idea that they can develop on the fly, adding and 
removing "requirements" as the executives see fit. 


http://www.tekwrytrs.com/
Specializing in the Design, Development, and Production of:
Technical Documentation - Online Content - Enterprise Websites

> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; framers@lists.frameusers.com
> Subject: RE: radical revamping of techpubs
> Date: Sun, 28 Oct 2007 19:04:10 -0500
> 
> I belong to several message - interest groups and I am used to hearing people 
> give their opinions in a bombastic manner. So its no
> big deal to see that happening here. But if this discussion is to have any 
> real value it will be to share our perspectives with
> others and learn something about points of view's entirely different than our 
> own, which requires some tolerance and mutual respect.
> 
> 
> My view and experience is that it definitely helps to get the TW involved 
> early on, but it’s a waste of time for them to sit all the
> way through each meeting, and for the entire duration of each meeting.
> 
> Marketing requirements documents and engineering specification documents, if 
> they are adequately written will help the TW formulate
> the user documentation at a fairly early stage, but the bulk of the 
> documentation effort comes towards the end of the development
> cycle. And ideally the writer of the user guide if that is they type of 
> documentation we are discussing now, should be a
> knowledgeable user with some fresh insights into the learning curve the 
> novice user will face, and some empathy for that new user.
> 
> Ignoring the need for documentation, putting it off until the last moment is 
> a formula for poor quality documentation.
> 
> - In my humble opinion.
> 
> Have a great work week!
> 
> Leslie
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of Technical Writer
> Sent: Sunday, October 28, 2007 5:47 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; framers@lists.frameusers.com
> Subject: RE: radical revamping of techpubs
> 
> 
> Well, a difference of opinion is what makes a horse race. Iterative software 
> methods do not require iterative documentation methods;
> in most cases, documentation before the last iteration is considered both 
> wasteful and useless. While I have a great deal of respect
> for Steve McConnell, proposing early draft user guides as a replacement for 
> requirement specs is a bit off the road. 
> 
> If you develop software, and intend to use early draft user guides instead of 
> requirements, you are going to be greeting the folks
> at Wal-Mart rather than trying to pull back a contract or two from Bangalore. 
> The statement is at odds with most developers' (and
> most business analysts') understanding of "requirements." Putting an 
> occasional "agile" into a sentence doesn't make the process any
> more reasonable. 
> 
> I didn't invent the idea of ignoring documentation until the final product is 
> ready (or almost ready) to ship. Far more intelligent,
> competent, and capable people than me have decided that "involving TWs from 
> the early stages of development" is only useful when the
> end product is carved in stone before the first line of code is written. 
> That, for better of worse, is rarely the case.
> 
> Lastly, given that about a third of all software projects, agile or 
> otherwise, fail so badly they are abandoned, if you ignore
> documentation completely, you have a one in three chance of coming out ahead 
> when the project flops because you have at least saved
> the cost of documentation.
> http://www.tekwrytrs.com/Specializing in the Design, Development, and 
> Production of:Technical Documentation - Online Content -
> Enterprise Websites
> 
> 
> Date: Sun, 28 Oct 2007 12:21:17 -0700From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: re: radical 
> revamping of techpubsTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED], but I find the thread both:a) Off-topicb) Misleading. 
> Iterative sofware methods require iterative
> documentation methods, but by no means do they eliminate the parallel need 
> for early draft user manuals. In fact, Steve McConnell
> (Code Complete) proposes early draft user guides as an agile replacement for 
> requirements specs.Ben> Because the application itself
> is built in an iterative process, rather than > being carved in stone, 
> reacting to feedback from the client, documentation > before
> the last minute is pointless. The reason should be obvious; the > application 
> being documented in the early stages bears little
> resemblance > to the application delivered. Ben Hechter Vancouver BC [EMAIL 
> PROTECTED]
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