The document discusses how to build cross-team collaboration for content by addressing flawed assumptions, establishing shared goals and responsibilities, improving communication across teams, ensuring content has a voice in product design, analyzing content performance data together, and continually fostering learning and creativity among content creators from different teams. It provides tips for planning cross-team strategy, preparing content sources, developing content together, and keeping teams engaged over time through tactics like governance reviews, design workshops, and staff exchanges. The overall aim is to break down silos between teams and align content work across the organization.
9. IDEATION AND PLANNING
Goal:
โ Ensure content strategy is on executive
stakeholder radar.
Tactic / tool:
โ Create and socialize a roles and
responsibilities document. Fight for it to live
beyond product launch.
10. IDEATION AND PLANNING
This example from Meet Content / Rick Allen
includes useful Roles and Responsibilities
questions, like:
โ Does every role have defined responsibilities?
Does everyone understand their
responsibilities?
โ What are the knowledge gaps? Is there
expertise that is not adequately supported by
those involved in the publishing process?
โ Are there adequate staff resources to support
your content strategy?
โ Does everyone understand how his or her
work relates to and affects others?
11. IDEATION AND PLANNING
I would add:
โ What role will the Product Owner play, on an
ongoing basis, to promote cross-team
collaboration around content?
โ What role will HR play? How can we loop them
in for awareness of hiring criteria and training
as content teams evolve?
โ Once weโve established what skills gaps are /
training needed, who will advocate for gaining
those skills?
โ Do we have a shared bar for what โexcellentโ
or even โgood enoughโ looks like, and who will
contribute to keeping us aligned?
13. Building a culture of high standards is well worth the
effort, and there are many benefits. Naturally and most
obviously, youโre going to build better products and
services for customers โ this would be reason enough!
Perhaps a little less obvious: people are drawn to high
standards โ they help with recruiting and retention.
More subtle: a culture of high standards is protective of
all the โinvisibleโ but crucial work that goes on in every
company. Iโm talking about the work that no one sees.
The work that gets done when no one is watching. In a
high standards culture, doing that work well is its own
reward โ itโs part of what it means to be a professional.
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1018724/000119312518121161/d456916dex991.htm
14.
15. IDEATION AND PLANNING
Goal:
โ Engage your peers to define the tools you will
use for cross-team communication.
Tactic / tool:
โ Survey and interview content-responsible
peers: whatโs best for talking and learning?
Just by asking the question, youโve built a
bridge.
18. Goal:
โ Drive attention to administrative interface to
improve all content managersโ workflow.
Tactic / tool:
โ Spend time observing your usersโ workflow
for similar products. How does a piece of
content get posted? Where are the assets
stored, and what is their retrieval process?
How are they using rollback and version
history? Whatโs confusing or intuitive to
them?
DISCOVERY AND
PREPARATION
20. DISCOVERY AND
PREPARATION
Goal:
โ Build a shared understanding of content and
data sources and their readiness.
Tactic / tool:
โ Build a draft content/data source checklist,
and shop it around to other departments to
surface hidden assumptions.
21. DISCOVERY AND
PREPARATION
Sample checklist:
โ Make sure you have the definitive list of
content/data to be integrated.
โ How often is the source content updated?
โ Whether manual or auto, have plan for updated or
removed source content
โ What format will the content be in?
โ Build in flexibility to handle format variations
โ Have a fall-back plan for integration failure (network,
content source down, etc.)
โ Allow for manual override where possible
โ Determine whether it will be manual or
automated.
โ Complexity of source content
โ Amount of content and frequency of content updates
23. Goal:
โ Build a community of practice to sustain
connections and learning among content
creators.
Tactic / tool:
โ Get started with peer-to-peer, and budget for
experts. Make the case to executive
stakeholders of the value of community in
hiring, retention, and quality output.
DESIGN AND
DEVELOPMENT
24. DESIGN AND
DEVELOPMENT
Digital Academy:
โ Different captains
โ Project manager
โ External and internal
voices
โ Different venues
โ Both formal presentations
and poster sessions
โ Food!
25. Goal:
โ Ensure content is at the table as a product
stakeholder in the design phase.
Tactic / tool:
โ Consider using โcontent priority guidesโ
rather than typical wireframes.
DESIGN AND
DEVELOPMENT
27. Goal:
โ Get a shared, cross-team understanding of
content analytics during this build phase.
Tactic / tool:
โ Identify what "actions" are possible -- which
content can be adjusted, then ensure the
analytics reports enough data to help support
these "actions."
โ Figure out the business insights required
from analytics for all the content teams.
โ Use a checklist for what makes a good
analytics practice and defining goals.
DESIGN AND
DEVELOPMENT
28. DESIGN AND
DEVELOPMENT
Sample checklist:
โ How are we integrating content performance
analytics across social / mobile / web?
โ Are there shared dashboards in Data Studio
or similar? Are these regularly reviewed /
publicly displayed?
โ What does MVP reporting look like:
maximum insight and minimum clutter?
โ Are teams making the same inferences based
on the data?
โ How are insights being translated back into
content team actions? Shared with executive
suite? Aligned with revenue goals?
29. Goal:
โ Get a shared, cross-team understanding of
accessibility -- to develop empathy for users
and a culture of holding content teams
accountable.
Tactic / tool:
โ Bring in native user of assistive tech to speak
to content creators across teams.
DESIGN AND
DEVELOPMENT
32. Goal:
โ Whether you chose a centralized, hybrid, or
decentralized web publishing model, itโs
important to see where workflow is
succeeding or failing.
Tactic / tool:
โ Conduct a content governance health check.
FEEDING THE BEAST
33. FEEDING THE BEAST
Governance health check session:
โ Pre-select two content workflows: one that went
well, and one that encountered challenges.
โ Invite 5-7 participants: creators, reviewers,
stakeholders.
โ Appoint a facilitator / moderator for the session
-- ideally, someone not in the workflow.
โ In the meeting, track the path of each piece of
content. What happened and why?
โ Develop a hypothesis of the impact on
governance guidelines, standards, and tools, and
share with broader team.
34. FEEDING THE BEAST Goal:
โ Keep creativity flowing back and forth among
groups.
Tactic / tool:
โ Create excitement and energy by holding
quick design studio workshops to solve a
problem.
36. FEEDING THE BEAST Goal:
โ Build trust through an โexchange of
hostagesโ.
Tactic / tool:
โ Explore a secondment model. Look at peer
roles across the org and see how โtrading
placesโ might work. A day a week? A
six-month stint?