Effective Wiki Model

Effective Wiki sites don't just happen. They require the careful attention of someone who understands human nature and has a good picture of what works. This page hopes to promote such knowledge.

About this page

Original author: SteveDavison.

The aim of this page is to establish one (of many) effective model for using a Wiki, and to document the model well enough that others can easily benefit from the information. Hopefully it will also support the implementation of some new features that this model holds as essential. While the focus (at least in the beginning) will be on the documentation needs for a medium to large sized corporate group (how is this defined??), I believe that most of the principles apply to a much larger audience, and in fact I hope to identify those principles that apply to just about any Wiki application.

During its initial development, I will keep this page under my homepage, but eventually it can find a home as an article or discussion page for the general MoinMoin audience.

Philosophy Statements

These statements embody the power of a Wiki, at least within the scope I'm trying to address here.

Changing the Culture

To have an effective wiki, much of your work may be in the area of social engineering.

  1. Spend some time defining the ideal end-state for your wiki
  2. Create an expectation of this end-state among your users.
  3. Also communicate that the wiki will never completely reach this ideal state, but it is up to everyone to help it move in this direction.
  4. Define the process that a user should go through when they discover that the wiki is somehow imperfect.
  5. Put systems and processes in place that will support the incremental process of improving the wiki.
  6. Always have a last-resort fallback plan for users to easily give feedback. If the user cannot find the "correct" channel for their comments, questions, complains, etc., then there still must be an easy way for them to be heard.

Requirements

MoinMoin: SteveDavison/EffectiveWikiModel (last edited 2007-10-29 19:13:48 by localhost)