31분

How reuse eliminates redundant learning content with Chris Hill (podcast‪)‬ The Content Strategy Experts - Scriptorium

    • 비즈니스

In episode 164 of The Content Strategy Experts Podcast, Alan Pringle and special guest Chris Hill of DCL talk about where you can find redundancy in your learning content, what causes it, and how a single source reuse strategy can eliminate duplication.

You really start to run into trouble when you need to make version two, and you discover a problem with version one. If I’m making some marketing materials, maybe I need to use some information from the engineering team or from the manuals for whatever product I’m marketing. I might just copy that information over and put it into my marketing materials. Then, when we go to produce our training for that particular product, we might say, “Okay, I need that stuff. I’m gonna copy that from wherever I can find it,” which might be from marketing or engineering depending on where I look and who I know better or which repository is easier for me to get to. The problem here is that if anybody has made any edits along the way, they have to ensure that those edits are propagated through all these departments. And that doesn’t always happen. 

— Chris Hill





Related links:



* Data Conversion Laboratory (DCL)

* Harmonizer by DCL

* Confronting the horror of modernizing content (case study)

* Training content paradox: Standardization = personalization



LinkedIn:



* Chris Hill, DCL

* Alan Pringle, Scriptorium



Transcript:

Alan Pringle: Welcome to the Content Strategy Experts Podcast brought to you by Scriptorium. Since 1997, Scriptorium has helped companies manage, structure, organize, and distribute content in an efficient way. In this episode, we talk with guest Chris Hill of DCL about learning content and where you can find redundant duplicated content, what causes it, and how a reuse strategy can eliminate that duplication. Hey everyone, I am Alan Pringle and we have a guest here today, Chris Hill of DCL. Hey Chris, how are you doing?

Chris Hill: Doing well, thank you, Alan. It’s nice talking to you.

AP: Great, yes as always. Chris, tell folks out there a little bit about yourself, DCL, and your role there if you would.

CH: Sure. DCL stands for Data Conversion Laboratory. And so we got our start doing data conversion, which is moving content between formats. And over the last, let’s see, that started in the 80s, if you can imagine a tech company starting in the 80s. 

AP: Yes, I can. I am of an age, yes.

CH: So since then, we’ve expanded out into lots of areas, but basically any kind of content transformation, workflows, content enrichment, all sorts of activities around content. So that’s our key theme. I joined DCL about four years ago, and I’ve actually been in the content management space for a good more than 20 years now, and have a lot of experience with both migrating from, you know, using tools like Word and such, and then moving into a content management system. I actually managed, product managed a content management system and then got into conversion. And as part of my job here, I oversee a product called Harmonizer, which is our tool for doing content analysis and specifically reuse analysis to find places where content is redundant, duplicated,

In episode 164 of The Content Strategy Experts Podcast, Alan Pringle and special guest Chris Hill of DCL talk about where you can find redundancy in your learning content, what causes it, and how a single source reuse strategy can eliminate duplication.

You really start to run into trouble when you need to make version two, and you discover a problem with version one. If I’m making some marketing materials, maybe I need to use some information from the engineering team or from the manuals for whatever product I’m marketing. I might just copy that information over and put it into my marketing materials. Then, when we go to produce our training for that particular product, we might say, “Okay, I need that stuff. I’m gonna copy that from wherever I can find it,” which might be from marketing or engineering depending on where I look and who I know better or which repository is easier for me to get to. The problem here is that if anybody has made any edits along the way, they have to ensure that those edits are propagated through all these departments. And that doesn’t always happen. 

— Chris Hill





Related links:



* Data Conversion Laboratory (DCL)

* Harmonizer by DCL

* Confronting the horror of modernizing content (case study)

* Training content paradox: Standardization = personalization



LinkedIn:



* Chris Hill, DCL

* Alan Pringle, Scriptorium



Transcript:

Alan Pringle: Welcome to the Content Strategy Experts Podcast brought to you by Scriptorium. Since 1997, Scriptorium has helped companies manage, structure, organize, and distribute content in an efficient way. In this episode, we talk with guest Chris Hill of DCL about learning content and where you can find redundant duplicated content, what causes it, and how a reuse strategy can eliminate that duplication. Hey everyone, I am Alan Pringle and we have a guest here today, Chris Hill of DCL. Hey Chris, how are you doing?

Chris Hill: Doing well, thank you, Alan. It’s nice talking to you.

AP: Great, yes as always. Chris, tell folks out there a little bit about yourself, DCL, and your role there if you would.

CH: Sure. DCL stands for Data Conversion Laboratory. And so we got our start doing data conversion, which is moving content between formats. And over the last, let’s see, that started in the 80s, if you can imagine a tech company starting in the 80s. 

AP: Yes, I can. I am of an age, yes.

CH: So since then, we’ve expanded out into lots of areas, but basically any kind of content transformation, workflows, content enrichment, all sorts of activities around content. So that’s our key theme. I joined DCL about four years ago, and I’ve actually been in the content management space for a good more than 20 years now, and have a lot of experience with both migrating from, you know, using tools like Word and such, and then moving into a content management system. I actually managed, product managed a content management system and then got into conversion. And as part of my job here, I oversee a product called Harmonizer, which is our tool for doing content analysis and specifically reuse analysis to find places where content is redundant, duplicated,

31분

인기 비즈니스 팟캐스트

슈카월드
슈카친구들
손에 잡히는 경제
MBC
출근길 마케팅 트렌드
곽팀장
월급쟁이부자들 [직장인 재테크 학교]
월급쟁이부자들,월부,월부닷컴
김동환 이진우 정영진의 신과함께
이브로드캐스팅
직장인의 책읽기, 직책
keenestbooktalk