Canopy Knowledge Base
OVERVIEW
I spent 2.5 years as the sole author for all of Canopy's Knowledge Base content. In that time, I completed various projects to make Canopy's help resources more accessible and more comprehensive. I migrated the knowledge base to a new content management system, cutting our CMS costs by 85% while improving the user experience and brand alignment drastically. I wrote hundreds of articles for the knowledge base, working especially closely with Canopy's QA team to test and document new features and provide educational resources for users on launch. I wrote, animated, and edited videos for different features to appeal to visual and auditory learners. I also linked my in-app guides to articles to appeal to hands-on learners.
This portfolio piece will show some of the different major projects I completed related to the knowledge base. For writing examples, you can still refer to most of Canopy's active knowledge base. I am still responsible for writing a majority of the content that exists there.
GOALS
- Provide accessible training materials that account for different learning styles
- Write clear, concise, and actionable articles for Canopy's new features
- Maintain Canopy branding and follow Canopy's content guidelines
- Thoroughly test and document features to ensure no surprises or bugs for users
GOALS
- In order to reach the most users effectively, knowledge bases should offer content for all learning styles. Including videos, visuals, or in-app guides can make your resources more accessible.
- Keep training consistent so that users can spend time learning the product rather than learning how to interpret the provided resources.
- Don't be boring, but don't be cutesy. Flowery, joke-laden language can distract users from learning and hinder problem solving, which is kind of the whole point of knowledge bases.
- Center the user and then get out of their way. Don't try to market to them with help resources - if you solve their problems efficiently you'll gain their loyalty and their cash.
ROLE
Content Designer
Technical writing, graphic design, UX design, Markup, HTML, CSS, Javascript, Content Management Systems, API Documentation, Documentation as Code, Instructional Design
MY INPUT
- Write, edit, and maintain 350+ knowledge base articles
- Create visual assets to accompany articles (images, screenshots, gifs, videos, illustrations)
- Thoroughly test new features, especially in unconventional ways to account for all user experiences
- Research, select, and migrate to a new CMS to cut costs and improve UX
- Maintain Canopy branding on knowledge base website - the old knowledge base looked bland and disconnected, lowering user trust
- Created clear and concise documentation. Followed familiar patterns with each article to encourage users to learn our product, not our documeentation.
Redesign and Migration
When I first joined Canopy, they had just moved to a new knowledge base platform that was frankly exorbitantly priced, and far too early stage of a company to provide everything a knowledge base needed. It was one of the first observations I made to the team.
I could create a better knowledge base for far cheaper on a different platform
With leadership's blessing, I began researching all of the different platforms out there. Soliciting input from key stakeholders in Marketing, Support and Success, and User Experience, I narrowed our choices down to Hubspot (marketing's preference), Zendesk (Success' preference), Helpjuice, and Madcap Flare. I was fairly opposed to Hubspot's solution because of the lack of customization and the poor authoring capabilities. We eliminated Madcap Flare for similar reasons - as a UX team, we just didn't love the end-user experience. Zendesk was the probably the preferred choice of everyone, but when it came down to it, Zendesk was simply too expensive for us at the time. Enter Helpjuice.
With Helpjuice, I was able to reduce our costs by 85%. I also handled all of the styling, design, and building of the website myself, saving Canopy developer time and money estimated at around $15,000.
One of the most important problems I wanted to solve with this redesign was improving the user experience of the website. The old site didn't really have any of Canopy's branding. This made it look unprofessional, and separate from Canopy's actual product. By creating new illustrations for this redesign and implementing Canopy's logo and footer, I was able to tie the knowledge base to Canopy's product.
Another UX experience that was lacking was the search engine. We wanted to be able to surface help articles to clients in an instant. The old knowledge base did not allow us to order articles as desired, and its search engine required a 100% title match to find anything. By using Helpjuice, I was able to implement a new search engine that learned which articles were most popular. It also searched all of an article's content, allowing us to cut the bounce rate in half, from 32% to 15%. Serving users the articles they need when they ask for them is key to enabling self-service and freeing up time for success reps.