Download - SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

Transcript
Page 1: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

The  Reluctant  Subject  Ma0er  Expert  

or  

Helping  people  work  effec/vely  with  you  

1  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 2: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

For  many  of  us,  our  success  as  professional  communicators  depends  on  how  successfully  we  work  with  

SMEs.  

2  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 3: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

The  ideas  in  this  presenta/on  are  based  on  wri/ng  techniques,  

however,  they  are    valid  for  use  in  other  

professions.  

3  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 4: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

Always  remember:  ProducLve  relaLonships  with  SMEs  

don’t  happen  by  accident.  

4  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 5: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

The  acquisiLon  of  informaLon  is  managed  for  some  writers.  

5  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 6: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

Situa/on  normal  in  some  departments  and  companies:  

Providing  informaLon  to  the  tech  writer  is  low  priority.  

(But,  what’s  up  with  that?)  

6  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 7: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

With  shy  and  elusive  SMEs,  we  find  that  their  bad  behaviors  oIen  fall  

into  two  categories:  

• Avoidance  • Antagonism  

7  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 8: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

We  resort  to  hun/ng  SMEs.  

8  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 9: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

SME  hunLng  by  tech  writers  tends  to    fall  into  three  categories:  

•  Stalking  • Using  clever  lures  to  draw  them  into  traps  

• Making  offers  they  can’t  refuse  

9  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 10: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

What  if  you  could  get  SMEs  to  seek  you  out  in  order  to  give  you  info?  

! I’d  die  of  surprise.  ! I  wouldn’t  know  what  to  do  with  all  the  Lme  I’d  be  saving.  

! I’d  know  for  certain  that  I  was  dreaming.  

10  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 11: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

OK,  let’s  dream  about  some  reali/es:  

•  Most  people  like  to  talk  shop.  

•  Most  people  like  to  tell  their  stories.  

•  Good  storytellers  always  have  audiences.  •  Almost  everyone  wants  to  be  an  author.    

11  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 12: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

Here’s  a  key  convenient  truth:  

Almost  no  one  wants  to  do  the  hard  work  of  wri/ng,  and  that’s  

where  we’re  the  experts.  

☺    12  

The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 13: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

SME  Hunter  vs.  Knowledge  Partner  

SME  hunter   Knowledge  partner  

Short-­‐term  focus:  Concerned  with  immediate  project.    

Long-­‐term  focus:  Builds  knowledge  base  for  later  projects  and  expands  your  influence.    

Quick  fixes:  Driven  by  necessity,  results  can  be  uneven.  

Able  to  address  problems  at  their  source:  results  are  higher  in  quality.  

Seen  by  others  as  necessary  evil,  annoyance,  obstacle,  or  roadblock.    

Seen  by  other  as  a  contributor  and  part  of  the  team.  

Not  integrated  into  project.   Fully  integrated  into  project.  

Ogen  excluded.   Ogen  invited  and  included.  

13  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 14: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

The  magic  elixir:  

We’ve  got  story!  

The  art  and  crag  of  wriLng  gives  us  an  amazingly  powerful  set  of  tools…  

14  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 15: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

We  writers  are  astute  observers.  

Within  our  roles  as  writers,  we  make  careful  observaLons  with  respect  to:  

• Sekngs  

• Characters  • Dramas  

15  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 16: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

Working  as  knowledge  partners,  we:  

•  Set  the  stage  for  collaboraLon.  •  IdenLfy  SME  “red  flag”  behavior  and  deflect  their  pull  into  unproducLve  dramas.  

•  Realize  that  we  control  our  own  acLons  and  not  those  of  others.    

•  Respect  others:  listen  carefully  to  their  stories,  show  appropriate  empathy,  and  stay  flexible.  

•  Recognize  that  communicaLon  skills  are  useful  beyond  the  page  and  use  them  to  build  mutually  beneficial  relaLonships.  

16  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 17: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

Observe  your  work  sekng.  Ques/ons  about  your  company  culture    

to  answer  and  revisit  occasionally:  

•  Is  the  work  environment  informal  or  formal?  •  Is  the  power  structure  hierarchical  or  is  power  shared,  implicitly  or  explicitly?  

•  What  are  the  spoken/unspoken  rules?  

•  Are  there  hidden  agendas?  

17  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 18: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

SME  roles  (character)  within  sekng  

An  SME  responds  as  a  character  within  a  sePng.  Sco0  Myer’s  five  character  archetypes:    

Protagonist  Nemesis  A0ractor  Mentor  Trickster  

     How  do  you  see  your  SME?        How  does  your  SME  see  you?  

18  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 19: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

An  essenLal  “how  to”  for  creaLng  drama:  

What  a  character  wants  is  at  odds  with  what  they  need.  

So,  how  do  we  reduce  office  drama?  

19  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 20: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

Dealing  with  unintenLonal  sabotage  

•  Recognize  when  our  SMEs’  well-­‐intenLoned  efforts  cause  problems.  

•  Recognize  when  our  own  well-­‐intenLoned  efforts  cause  problems.  

You  can  usually  get  your  project  back  on  track  aIer  an  incident  of  uninten/onal  sabotage.  

20  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 21: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

More  on  unintenLonal  sabotage  

•  Special  case:  the  talented  SME  with  character  flaws  

•  Special  case:  when  you  as  a  writer  discover  that  a  situaLon  is  pushing  you  beyond  your  limits  

21  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 22: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

While  most  sabotage  is  unintenLonal,  occasionally  it’s  

not…  

22  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney  

Page 23: SST 2014; The Reluctant SME

Expanding  on  strengths,  both  ours  and  others:  

We  can  make  everyone  look  be0er.  

23  The  Reluctant  SME;  ©  2014  Elisa  Sawyer,  

MS  and  Ann  Marie  Queeney