How to make a quick start guide, with a little help from your friends at Tango.
<aside> 👌🏼 If following a checklist feels like the ideal level of hard, you’ve come to the right place.
Just duplicate this doc to get started. ****
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Before you start
<aside> 🔎 Who are you trying to help, and what are you trying to help them do?
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<aside> âť“ Is a quick start guide your best bet?
A quick start guide (QSG) is a concise set of instructions to help users get started using a product, service, or software application. If your goals go above and beyond that definition, you may want to consider a different deliverable.
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<aside> đź’¬ Have you talked to users and/or customers?
What’s even more important than validating the need for a QSG internally?
Confirming your community has a pressing need and/or desire for this kind of content.
Understanding common pain points.
Taking a data-driven approach to what you do (and don’t!) focus on. </aside>
[ ] Create and circulate a survey for quantitative feedback re: what it’s like to get started with your product.
[ ] Form a focus group for qualitative feedback re: preferred learning styles, sticking points within your product, popular use cases, favorite features, wish list items, and more.
[ ] Set up 1:1 interviews with successful and unsuccessful users.
[ ] Comb through support tickets to find common pain points during onboarding.
[ ] Look at product data to uncover key actions that correlate to quicker satisfaction.
[ ] Analyze Net Promoter Score (NPS) results to understand where you’re hitting a home run (and striking out).
[ ] Confirm the perceived and experienced value for your product are one and the same.