Mention content strategy, and the first thing people often think of is web content. Yet, there are other parts of a business that have content at its core—the most important of which is the customer service center. Customer service centers are our direct line to customers. They answer calls, reply to emails, and often coordinate printed material—and we should be incorporating them more into our strategy. Developing a content strategy that includes your customer service center improves the customer experience, provides opportunities to monitor and act on customer feedback, and helps you measure if your content is (or isn’t) working.
I presented this talk at Confab Central in Minneapolis, May 2015. See a transcript at www.webcontentstrategy.com.au and video at http://livestream.com/confab/central
Taming fiefdoms: Collaboration, content and complex stakeholdersSally Bagshaw
CSForum Melbourne, October 2016. Transcript at: http://www.webcontentstrategy.com.au/taming-fiefdoms-collaboration-content-and-complex-stakeholders/
As content strategists, our work often involves trying to change the way an organisation does something—whether it’s by way of a new website, updates to navigation, a content review, or even implementing a governance model.
And at the heart of change are people. Some who will be excited and ready to embrace what you’re doing, and some who will be harder to engage as they become protective of their patch of turf. Competing priorities, battles over budget, and plain old internal politics can be tough to manage, especially if you’ve got a project to deliver.
This presentation looks at practical ways you can collaborate with complex stakeholders on your next content project. It will discuss different warning signs to keep your eye out for that could disrupt your plans, as well as offer tips for gathering stakeholder requirements, obtaining constructive input, and techniques for aligning different business groups to share a common vision.
Getting it Right: Building Quality into your Content (July 2014)Joe Gollner
This presentation was delivered as a webinar hosted by STC France on July 8, 2014.
This talk focused on the steps to be taken to design quality into your content assets and to then see that quality realized in high quality information products.
Practical Steps Towards Integrated Content Management (Nov 2015)Joe Gollner
This talk was delivered at TCWorld 2015 in Stuttgart Germany. It explores ideas initially touched upon in a talk at the Information Energy event in Utrecht.
Getting a Handle on the Content Life Cycle (April 2014)Joe Gollner
Slides from a Webinar conducted for the Society for Technical Communication (STC) Special Interest Group (SIG) on the Content Life Cycle. It introduces a Content Life Cycle model and situated within the context of a Content Solution framework.
An annotated slide deck from a webinar hosted by Stilo International and conducted on June 24, 2014.
The talk introduces tactics for moving a content solution project forward quickly while also attending to essential details.
A presentation that introduces three different approaches that have been used to justify XML investments. Case studies used to illustrate how each model has been deployed. Concludes that business cases should in fact leverage all three models if an initiative is not only going to be approved but will be supported when the going gets tough.
DITA and the Integrated Product LifecycleJoe Gollner
This presentation looks at the Darwin Information Tying Architecture (DITA) from the business perspective of how it fits into, and can help to facilitate, an integrated product lifecycle.
The presentation also included a test where one of the images presented gears that could never turn. As expected, several people pointed this out after the presentation and they were exactly the people who I expected would spot and object to the impossible arrangement. Nerds (in the most lovable sense) tend to self identify.
Taming fiefdoms: Collaboration, content and complex stakeholdersSally Bagshaw
CSForum Melbourne, October 2016. Transcript at: http://www.webcontentstrategy.com.au/taming-fiefdoms-collaboration-content-and-complex-stakeholders/
As content strategists, our work often involves trying to change the way an organisation does something—whether it’s by way of a new website, updates to navigation, a content review, or even implementing a governance model.
And at the heart of change are people. Some who will be excited and ready to embrace what you’re doing, and some who will be harder to engage as they become protective of their patch of turf. Competing priorities, battles over budget, and plain old internal politics can be tough to manage, especially if you’ve got a project to deliver.
This presentation looks at practical ways you can collaborate with complex stakeholders on your next content project. It will discuss different warning signs to keep your eye out for that could disrupt your plans, as well as offer tips for gathering stakeholder requirements, obtaining constructive input, and techniques for aligning different business groups to share a common vision.
Getting it Right: Building Quality into your Content (July 2014)Joe Gollner
This presentation was delivered as a webinar hosted by STC France on July 8, 2014.
This talk focused on the steps to be taken to design quality into your content assets and to then see that quality realized in high quality information products.
Practical Steps Towards Integrated Content Management (Nov 2015)Joe Gollner
This talk was delivered at TCWorld 2015 in Stuttgart Germany. It explores ideas initially touched upon in a talk at the Information Energy event in Utrecht.
Getting a Handle on the Content Life Cycle (April 2014)Joe Gollner
Slides from a Webinar conducted for the Society for Technical Communication (STC) Special Interest Group (SIG) on the Content Life Cycle. It introduces a Content Life Cycle model and situated within the context of a Content Solution framework.
An annotated slide deck from a webinar hosted by Stilo International and conducted on June 24, 2014.
The talk introduces tactics for moving a content solution project forward quickly while also attending to essential details.
A presentation that introduces three different approaches that have been used to justify XML investments. Case studies used to illustrate how each model has been deployed. Concludes that business cases should in fact leverage all three models if an initiative is not only going to be approved but will be supported when the going gets tough.
DITA and the Integrated Product LifecycleJoe Gollner
This presentation looks at the Darwin Information Tying Architecture (DITA) from the business perspective of how it fits into, and can help to facilitate, an integrated product lifecycle.
The presentation also included a test where one of the images presented gears that could never turn. As expected, several people pointed this out after the presentation and they were exactly the people who I expected would spot and object to the impossible arrangement. Nerds (in the most lovable sense) tend to self identify.
This talk was delivered at DITA Europe in Munich Germany. It explores the business and management considerations that apply to the deployment of DITA-enabled solutions that break out beyond the traditional technical documentation focus. Appropriately, the guiding theme for the presentation is drawn from Don Quixote.
Presented at CM Strategies / DITA North America 2013 in Providence RI
The slides are a little dense for my taste but I tried to make them sufficiently self-explanatory to be useful on Slideshare. During the actual presentations, my on-stage antics are intended to shift the attention off the slides although the effectiveness of this strategy is open to debate. The delivery of this particular presentation was made a little more interesting with there being a security interruption that required the evacuation of the over-crowded room. Several attendees lauded the gratuitous use of literary, historical and cultural references - running the gambit from Dante and Virgil through to Lady Gaga. Some were in fact spontaneous and maybe even unconscious.
The Content Revolution - LavaCon 2011 KeynoteJoe Gollner
This keynote presentation tackled some of the really big trends that are changing the way Tech Comm is conducted and how it fits into the modern enterprise.
International IT company with streamlined processes and a well-formed culture.
Agile philosophy, Java engineering and professional service for the development of IT solutions.
We provide comprehensive service for the development, customization, modernization and integration of IT products. We will implement your ideas and help you in a difficult technological situation!
The Nielsen Company BI COE: A Case StudyJohn Boyer
Presented at IBM Cognos Forum 2009. a) This case study describes the challenges in designing and implementing a BI COE. You will learn how The Nielsen Company leverages internal staff in the BI COE to support a total of 30,000 employees and a distributed global Cognos development environment.
This was a fast pitch deck to IT faculty (mostly MNSCU) and industry attendees at the New Directions in IT Education conference (http://advanceitmn.org/newdirections/). The message was that Agile methods are here to stay, there is solid theory behind them, and if we want to keep Minnesota relevant we need new approaches to IT curriculum. An "Agile Study Group" has been established, starting as a monthly book club to review Agile's theoretical foundations relevant to pedagogy.
AIIM Info 2011 Increasing mobile worker productivityZia Consulting
This session describes how education, healthcare and government organizations can implement a collaborative mobile ECM and Project management strategy for their workforce. Attend as we cover the benefits of using CMIS, mobile applications and devices, and best practices for a mobile ECM delivery strategy.
• The value of writing content rich mobile CMIS applications that work against multiple ECM repositories.
• How to build a strategy to enable increased mobile worker productivity by created task-oriented ECM and project management related activities delivered on mobile devices.
• Mobile ECM best practices that utilize a variety of free and widely available software packages on the iPhone and iPad.
• Examples of mobile content delivery and how it has saved local governments time and money.
Technology by itself is not going to be enough to make a workforce more productive -- it requires a clear line of site to business value.
Let's start by looking at the state of business today: businesses have developed and implemented over-engineered, automated processes. And in the quest to create productivity, we now have the 24 hr workday.
The question remains: How do we get workers to an even higher level productivity? I elaborate on the answer in this deck.
Learn more about Jive Software: http://bit.ly/1aTo6Vq
It's been six years since I wrote Content Strategy for the Web. Now, in 2015, the content strategy landscape is a much bigger, more complex place. How are companies keeping up with the crazy changes in content trends, technologies, and audience expectations? Here's what I'm seeing and how my own process has evolved.
This talk was delivered at DITA Europe in Munich Germany. It explores the business and management considerations that apply to the deployment of DITA-enabled solutions that break out beyond the traditional technical documentation focus. Appropriately, the guiding theme for the presentation is drawn from Don Quixote.
Presented at CM Strategies / DITA North America 2013 in Providence RI
The slides are a little dense for my taste but I tried to make them sufficiently self-explanatory to be useful on Slideshare. During the actual presentations, my on-stage antics are intended to shift the attention off the slides although the effectiveness of this strategy is open to debate. The delivery of this particular presentation was made a little more interesting with there being a security interruption that required the evacuation of the over-crowded room. Several attendees lauded the gratuitous use of literary, historical and cultural references - running the gambit from Dante and Virgil through to Lady Gaga. Some were in fact spontaneous and maybe even unconscious.
The Content Revolution - LavaCon 2011 KeynoteJoe Gollner
This keynote presentation tackled some of the really big trends that are changing the way Tech Comm is conducted and how it fits into the modern enterprise.
International IT company with streamlined processes and a well-formed culture.
Agile philosophy, Java engineering and professional service for the development of IT solutions.
We provide comprehensive service for the development, customization, modernization and integration of IT products. We will implement your ideas and help you in a difficult technological situation!
The Nielsen Company BI COE: A Case StudyJohn Boyer
Presented at IBM Cognos Forum 2009. a) This case study describes the challenges in designing and implementing a BI COE. You will learn how The Nielsen Company leverages internal staff in the BI COE to support a total of 30,000 employees and a distributed global Cognos development environment.
This was a fast pitch deck to IT faculty (mostly MNSCU) and industry attendees at the New Directions in IT Education conference (http://advanceitmn.org/newdirections/). The message was that Agile methods are here to stay, there is solid theory behind them, and if we want to keep Minnesota relevant we need new approaches to IT curriculum. An "Agile Study Group" has been established, starting as a monthly book club to review Agile's theoretical foundations relevant to pedagogy.
AIIM Info 2011 Increasing mobile worker productivityZia Consulting
This session describes how education, healthcare and government organizations can implement a collaborative mobile ECM and Project management strategy for their workforce. Attend as we cover the benefits of using CMIS, mobile applications and devices, and best practices for a mobile ECM delivery strategy.
• The value of writing content rich mobile CMIS applications that work against multiple ECM repositories.
• How to build a strategy to enable increased mobile worker productivity by created task-oriented ECM and project management related activities delivered on mobile devices.
• Mobile ECM best practices that utilize a variety of free and widely available software packages on the iPhone and iPad.
• Examples of mobile content delivery and how it has saved local governments time and money.
Technology by itself is not going to be enough to make a workforce more productive -- it requires a clear line of site to business value.
Let's start by looking at the state of business today: businesses have developed and implemented over-engineered, automated processes. And in the quest to create productivity, we now have the 24 hr workday.
The question remains: How do we get workers to an even higher level productivity? I elaborate on the answer in this deck.
Learn more about Jive Software: http://bit.ly/1aTo6Vq
It's been six years since I wrote Content Strategy for the Web. Now, in 2015, the content strategy landscape is a much bigger, more complex place. How are companies keeping up with the crazy changes in content trends, technologies, and audience expectations? Here's what I'm seeing and how my own process has evolved.
Six Steps for Building a Government Content StrategyErin Norvell
Do you work in a large government agency and wonder if your content is effective? Are you struggling to coordinate content across various levels of the organization? If so, a content strategy may be the right tool for you. This presentation covers the basics of building a content strategy and provides resources for additional information.
Adapted from an earlier cross-industry version, this edition was specifically created for government agencies. The steps are divided into work to be completed by the global brand (leadership level), by the subunits (topic-specific groups), or through a collaborative effort between both groups.
For more from Digital Edge Communications, visit our website: www.digitaledgecommunications.us
1. What it is?. Philosophy and Principles.
2. How to use it? methodology and basic tools.
3. Beyond UCD. Alternatives methodologies: Activity Centered Design and Goal Directed Design.
What's Your Perception Strategy? (Why It's NOT All About Content)Stephen Anderson
If we focus too much on content, we ignore what we know about how our associative brain comes to makes sense new information. Think about how many people respond before reading past the first sentence of an email, or how a magazine article doesn't get the same reaction when displayed in HTML. Or consider how knowing the author of a publication influences your judgement of that content.
Picking up from the session Stephen P. Anderson gave last year on "The Stories We Construct" (a biological look at the narratives that influence behavior), this session focuses on how we come to perceive—and respond to— information. From phantom limbs to magicians fooling our senses, Stephen proposes a model that makes sense of how we truly experience information. Practical? You'll leave with a deep understanding of everything UX is about and an awareness of common practices that don't account for this knowledge.
Responsive. Adaptive. Mobile first. Cross-channel. We all want a web that’s more flexible, future-friendly, and ready for unknowns. There’s only one little flaw: our content is stuck in the past. Locked into inflexible pages and documents, our content is far from ready for today’s world of apps, APIs, read-later services, and responsive sites—much less for the coming one, where the web is embedded in everything from autos to appliances.
We can’t keep creating more content for each of these new devices and channels. We’d go nuts trying to manage and maintain all of it. Instead, we need content that does more for us: Content that can travel and shift while keeping its meaning and message intact. Content that’s trim, focused, and clear—for mobile users and for everyone else, too. Content that matters, wherever it’s being consumed.
Sine Qua Non: Core Values and Content StrategyJonathon Colman
Core values aren't created; they’re found. They're not selected; they’re discovered. And they’re not your mission or vision; they're what support them. But for most of our organizations or clients, content and design are not—and never will be—core values. Rather, they’re simply just commodities.
Our content strategy work so often focuses on tactics, techniques, and tools that when it comes to creating a core content strategy, we find ourselves blocked. Never for the lack of goals or objectives, but for the values that help us create authentic experiences in support of them. Our values help us find our voice and delight our audience.
Using real-world examples, we’ll walk through the hard questions that you need to ask in order to discover your organization's core values and build them into your content and design.
In this presentation, you'll learn:
- What are core values (and what aren't!)
- How to discover your organization's core values and build them into your brand
- How to align your content with your core values to build lasting results
Based on the works of Jim Collins, Jerry Porras, Patrick Lencioni, and several others. Featuring examples from NatureBridge, Etsy, Moz, Pack, and Facebook. Originally presented at the Content Strategy Forum #csforum13 in Helsinki, Finland on September 12, 2013.
You can learn more about Jonathon Colman at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/ and follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jcolman
Also see 200+ free Content Strategy resources at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/2013/02/04/content-strategy-resources/
A keynote on aliens, nuclear waste, wicked problems, and the one big thing that unites everyone working in user experience: AMBIGUITY.
See a video and the full transcript of this keynote at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/2015/05/21/wicked-ambiguity/
How do you solve the world’s hardest problems? And how do you respond if they’re unsolvable? As user experience professionals, we're focused on people who live and work in the here and now. We dive into research, define the problem, break down silos, and build value by focusing on intent.
But how does our UX work change when a project lasts not for one year, or even 10 years, but for 10,000 years or more? Enter the “Wicked Problem,” or situations with so much ambiguity, complexity, and interdependencies that—by definition—they can’t be solved.
Using real-world examples from NASA’s Voyager program, the Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository, and other long-term UX efforts, we’ll talk about the challenges of creating solutions for people whom we’ll never know in our lifetimes. The ways we grapple with ambiguity give us a new perspective on our work and on what it means to build experiences that last.
Originally presented as the opening keynote for the 2014 Society for Technical Communication Summit in Phoenix, Arizona. Redeveloped as the opening keynote for the 2015 Confab Central conference and presented on May 21, 2015 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Let’s be honest: for most content strategists and other people working with online content, SEO is The Worst Part Of The Job.
It’s hugely technical, it’s shrouded in mystery, it seems to be focused on robots instead of people, there are unspoken rules, everything can turn on a dime, and it never, ever seems to end.
But SEO doesn't have to be this way. It’s time to begin a conversation between these two disciplines – they’re far more alike than you might think. And when they work together on behalf of users and customers, amazing things can happen that will drive your organisation forward.
I can’t promise to change your mind about SEO, but you’ll leave this session understanding how to build the essentials into your work in ways that are simple, make sense, and are pain-free. You’ll see what business impacts and wins for the customer SEO and Content Strategy have had at REI, a major retailer in the US. And you’ll have the vocabulary, understanding and tools that you need to talk with your SEO... or to take it for yourself.
Drive traffic, amaze your visitors, and Win the Internet -- with SEO and Content Strategy working together.
Originally presented at the 2012 Content Strategy Forum in Cape Town, South Africa.
You can learn more about Jonathon Colman at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/
Also see 200+ free Content Strategy resources at http://www.jonathoncolman.org/2013/02/04/content-strategy-resources/
How to make a website: discover, define, design, develop, deploy. It’s a familiar framework for most of our project processes. Now along comes this content strategy thing. Sure, it sounds like a great idea, but how does it fit in with what we’re already doing? Walk through a a typical website project to find out how content strategy fits (and why it will make you so happy!)
How to Turn Millions of Website Views Into Valuable Insights with QualtricsQualtrics
SAP’s Community Network site receives an average of 2.1 million unique visitors each month, but methods for capturing customer experience feedback were ineffective and outdated... until SAP implemented Qualtrics Site Intercept.
Join us for a webinar as we explore how SAP turned their stale feedback process into an efficient, results-driven machine, ultimately increasing customer feedback rates by 20X and decreasing collection time from 12 months to one month.
Today\'s best consumers are multi-channel users who rely on different ways to access
businesses whether it\'s the Internet, mobile or apps, to name a few.
Businesses are
focusing on ways to optimize these channels to improve conversion rates and achieve greater results.
However, delivering an optimal customer experience is becoming increasingly more
complex. Consumer\'s expectations are higher than ever, showing less patience for slow-performing sites.
SERIES RECAP: As you start planning for 2015, it’s more important than ever to develop real relationships with your customers—creating customer journeys like never before. Over the past 5 months, we hope you were inspired to make the most out of every customer interaction of the customer lifecycle by creating personalized, cross-channel customer journey that will deliver an exceptional brand experience! On December 4th, join Joel Book as he recaps the webinar series and delivers the top 5 things you need to keep in mind when planning for a successful new year.
Speakers: Joel Book, Principal, Marketing Insights, ExactTarget Marketing Cloud
How spark improved service and reduced response times with logicalware final ...Daniel Parker
Adopting a Multichannel Customer Service Strategy
Discover how Utilities supplier Spark Energy:
* Achieved a 90% reduction in new customer on-boarding costs
* Track, manage and provide management reports that comply with Industry Service Level Agreements
By leveraging the latest technology Spark now aggregates and distributes Email messages to their agents saving valuable time, money and resources.
How to build a data analytics strategy in a digital worldJim Kaplan CIA CFE
TSB is a digital-first bank that is undergoing a massive transformation to cloud-based banking. Senior Audit Manager, Ian Kirton, drove the design and development of an audit function capable of adapting while the organization undergoes this change.
This presentation will take you through TSB Bank’s journey from first establishing the audit function through to developing a data analytics strategy as the organization gets ready to move to a new, state-of-the-art online banking platform.
Key learning objectives:
• How to develop an audit function for a cloud-based bank
• Creating a data analytics strategy to support the cloud-based enterprise
• Observing practical examples of how data analytics can be applied to get better audit results
• Learning Ian’s approach to analytics in a digital environment, and how it has made TSB Bank one of the Top 10 Best Big Companies
8 Issues Preventing Connected Customers From Doing Business with YouFive9
Discover and learn how to address the 8 issues preventing connected customers from doing business with you. Watch the full webinar recording here: http://bit.ly/1qaPh5Q
Roundtable: Best Practices - Quality Assurance & AnalyticsSheri Greenhaus
Top 5 quality assurance and optimization and best practices roundtable discussion with VPI, Genesys, inContact and CallFInder. Discussing virtual call agents, speech and data analytics, quality assurance, workforce management, performance management and more.
Visit CRMXchange.com and join the premiere CRM community.
The Future of Auditing and Fraud Detection – Re-imagining the art and science of auditing and fraud detection is coming to the forefront of risk management functions. What was seen as a “nice to have” a few years ago has become a “must have” as digital transformation and data surrounds all aspects of the organization.
Specific learning objectives include:
o See how analytics can maximize the annual audit plan and better ensure focus is placed on top organizational risks.
o Establish a framework to using analytics and automation across the entire audit lifecycle.
o Use the general ledger as a case study to provide a digital road map for analytics for detecting fraud (and errors) within the organization.
o Define the top company areas for data integration from structured, unstructured and external data sources.
o Highlight culturally what audit and fraud detection functions must do to embrace continuous embedded analytic reviews.
Beyond words using content strategy for better uxSally Bagshaw
Web Directions Design 2018: We know an important part of creating a great user experience is getting the right information to the right person, at the right time. And a clear content strategy provides the framework to make this happen. But did you know that content strategy can help with more than words? It can embed empathy into your service, architect content systems that will deliver the experience you design and build robust teams with the right skills to sustain digital products. This presentation covers practical advice about other ways a content strategist can help with your projects, plus give you tips on incorporating content strategy into your own UX toolkit.
Presentation to the Brisbane Content Strategy meetup.
Meetup description: The language that we choose and the style in which we write can shape our customer's perception of our products and services. It can build trust, create rapport, and set us apart from our competitors. But how do you define voice? And, what about tone? In this meetup, I am going to show you a number of ways you can identify and document your brand's voice and tone. I'll explain the difference between voice and tone, take you through some practical workshop exercises you can run with your team or stakeholders, and provide you with examples of tools to communicate it to your content writers.
Key initiatives to engage your audience through content marketingSally Bagshaw
This is my presentation from the Email Marketing Summit in Brisbane. I was asked to talk about content marketing and its role in email marketing campaigns.
# Internet Security: Safeguarding Your Digital World
In the contemporary digital age, the internet is a cornerstone of our daily lives. It connects us to vast amounts of information, provides platforms for communication, enables commerce, and offers endless entertainment. However, with these conveniences come significant security challenges. Internet security is essential to protect our digital identities, sensitive data, and overall online experience. This comprehensive guide explores the multifaceted world of internet security, providing insights into its importance, common threats, and effective strategies to safeguard your digital world.
## Understanding Internet Security
Internet security encompasses the measures and protocols used to protect information, devices, and networks from unauthorized access, attacks, and damage. It involves a wide range of practices designed to safeguard data confidentiality, integrity, and availability. Effective internet security is crucial for individuals, businesses, and governments alike, as cyber threats continue to evolve in complexity and scale.
### Key Components of Internet Security
1. **Confidentiality**: Ensuring that information is accessible only to those authorized to access it.
2. **Integrity**: Protecting information from being altered or tampered with by unauthorized parties.
3. **Availability**: Ensuring that authorized users have reliable access to information and resources when needed.
## Common Internet Security Threats
Cyber threats are numerous and constantly evolving. Understanding these threats is the first step in protecting against them. Some of the most common internet security threats include:
### Malware
Malware, or malicious software, is designed to harm, exploit, or otherwise compromise a device, network, or service. Common types of malware include:
- **Viruses**: Programs that attach themselves to legitimate software and replicate, spreading to other programs and files.
- **Worms**: Standalone malware that replicates itself to spread to other computers.
- **Trojan Horses**: Malicious software disguised as legitimate software.
- **Ransomware**: Malware that encrypts a user's files and demands a ransom for the decryption key.
- **Spyware**: Software that secretly monitors and collects user information.
### Phishing
Phishing is a social engineering attack that aims to steal sensitive information such as usernames, passwords, and credit card details. Attackers often masquerade as trusted entities in email or other communication channels, tricking victims into providing their information.
### Man-in-the-Middle (MitM) Attacks
MitM attacks occur when an attacker intercepts and potentially alters communication between two parties without their knowledge. This can lead to the unauthorized acquisition of sensitive information.
### Denial-of-Service (DoS) and Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) Attacks
This 7-second Brain Wave Ritual Attracts Money To You.!nirahealhty
Discover the power of a simple 7-second brain wave ritual that can attract wealth and abundance into your life. By tapping into specific brain frequencies, this technique helps you manifest financial success effortlessly. Ready to transform your financial future? Try this powerful ritual and start attracting money today!
1.Wireless Communication System_Wireless communication is a broad term that i...JeyaPerumal1
Wireless communication involves the transmission of information over a distance without the help of wires, cables or any other forms of electrical conductors.
Wireless communication is a broad term that incorporates all procedures and forms of connecting and communicating between two or more devices using a wireless signal through wireless communication technologies and devices.
Features of Wireless Communication
The evolution of wireless technology has brought many advancements with its effective features.
The transmitted distance can be anywhere between a few meters (for example, a television's remote control) and thousands of kilometers (for example, radio communication).
Wireless communication can be used for cellular telephony, wireless access to the internet, wireless home networking, and so on.
Multi-cluster Kubernetes Networking- Patterns, Projects and GuidelinesSanjeev Rampal
Talk presented at Kubernetes Community Day, New York, May 2024.
Technical summary of Multi-Cluster Kubernetes Networking architectures with focus on 4 key topics.
1) Key patterns for Multi-cluster architectures
2) Architectural comparison of several OSS/ CNCF projects to address these patterns
3) Evolution trends for the APIs of these projects
4) Some design recommendations & guidelines for adopting/ deploying these solutions.
Bridging the Digital Gap Brad Spiegel Macon, GA Initiative.pptxBrad Spiegel Macon GA
Brad Spiegel Macon GA’s journey exemplifies the profound impact that one individual can have on their community. Through his unwavering dedication to digital inclusion, he’s not only bridging the gap in Macon but also setting an example for others to follow.
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
5. “51 per cent of U.S. consumers
switched service providers in
the past year due to poor
customer service experiences.”
Source: Accenture 2013 Global Consumer Pulse Survey
6. Top customer content frustrations
Self-help sites and systems that
can’t answer my questions
Not being able to understand the
information provided to me
Too much paperwork or online
forms
Source: Accenture 2013 Global Consumer Pulse Survey | Icons by Norbert Kucsera & SuperAtic LABS for the Noun Project CC3.0
9. Why we should pay more notice
Contact with the customer
Better for the bottom line
Everything is measured
Icons by Norbert Kucsera for the Noun Project CC3.0
10. Content plays a
critical role in
customer
service centers.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/plantronicsgermany CC2.0
11. Types of content
• Product guides
• Social media
• Forms
• Web content
• Intranet content
• Knowledge bases
• Instant chat
• Email and letters
• Scripts
• Fact sheets
• CRMs
• FAQs
18. Having completed our review of your
claim, we have avoided the cover due
to the Late <insert insured persons
name>’s breach of their duty of
disclosure in their application for the
<name of product> Policy. As a result of
this decision, no benefits are payable.
19. Having completed our review of your
claim, we have avoided the cover due
to the Late <insert insured persons
name>’s breach of their duty of
disclosure in their application for the
<name of product> Policy. As a result of
this decision, no benefits are payable.
20. Create content with empathy
Use the appropriate tone
Respect privacy& personal info
Use clear, familiar language
Icon by Stepan Prokop for the Noun Project CC3.0
22. Optimise for the operator
Improve internal search
Tag content properly
Use logical file names & URLs
Icon by Arthur Shlain for the Noun Project CC3.0
25. Design better forms
Only ask for what you need
Make instructions clear
Group questions logically
Focus on good flow
Icon by Scott Baker for the Noun Project CC3.0
26.
27.
28. Complete this field if you were not the driver
Do not complete this field if you were the
driver
Photocopied forms are not permitted
No photocopies are permitted
30. Think format and structure
Know how content will be used
Include headings & subheadings
Design for scanning
Icon by hatayas for the Noun Project CC3.0
33. Plan the right workflow
Include content in workflows
Capture feedback & updates
Create a maintenance plan
Icon by Candice McCollough for the Noun Project CC3.0
35. Legal Aid Queensland call centre
Client service officers
Use legal info page as reference
Calls a month
16
60%
12k
36. Top legal information pages (out of 180)
1. Criminal convictions
2. Driving and licence offences
3. Having sex
4. Do I have to talk to the police?
5. Young driver laws
6. Drink driving offences
7. Collection and enforcement of child support
8. Parenting orders
9. Car accidents
10. Leaving home
37.
38. What we had to consider
• Legal terms vs. client terms
• Pages would be read out loud
• Vulnerable clients should seek
legal advice
39. Our approach
• Call centre visit
• Interviews, analytics
• Inventory & qualitative audit
• New digital style guide
48. What we had to consider
• Superannuation is complex &
heavily regulated
• People care about different things
at different life stages
• We wanted to encourage people
to use Member Online
49. Our approach
• Existing template review against
web content
• New template that structured
emails consistently
• Tone of voice guidelines and
standard calls to action
50.
51.
52.
53.
54. In summary
• Create content with empathy
• Optimise for the operator
• Design better forms
• Think format and structure
• Plan the right workflow