Managed Collaborative Authoring Process
A document creation technique, by which a structured and controlled collection of tasks and events create repetitive business value through quality, efficiency and security improvements, when applied to a group of writers, reviewers and/or approvers.[1]
The reuse of documentation and a means to improve the processes surrounding this has been an issue since the late 1980s/early 1990s, when wordprocessing was embraced by the masses as the main tool for document production. David M. Levy wrote a paper on this back in 1993, highlighting some of the issues regarding document reuse. "The world, though continually changing, is changing incrementally.Much remains the same (unchanged) at any one time, at least at the granularity of description we typically care about. This means that documents only need to be updated incrementally; and incremental updating is more easily achieved when existing material is reused.[2]"
Allowing the company to structure and control the rate and quality of the re-use of content, as well as keeping in line with compliance and security, gives an approach for Best practice when reusing content.
XaitPorter is currently one of the commonly used document collaboration software packages that is in line with the managed collaborative authoring process.
See also
- Project management
- Document management system
- Revision control
- collaborative editing
- mass collaboration
References
- ↑ "Agenda for Copenhagen Compliance". copenhagencompliance.com. Retrieved 2014-09-17.
- ↑ David M. Levy (1993-12-01). "Document Reuse and Document systems". Retrieved 2014-09-17.