,
Alejandra Quetzalli

more photos (1)

Alejandra Quetzalli’s Followers (6)

member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
Livia B...
1,502 books | 2,839 friends

Melissa...
3,063 books | 481 friends

Nikki
2,607 books | 105 friends

Paula  ...
10,701 books | 4,988 friends

Megan H...
482 books | 60 friends

Roni Loren
3,369 books | 1,835 friends

Lindsay
224 books | 1,247 friends

Megan A...
911 books | 29 friends

More friends…

Alejandra Quetzalli

Goodreads Author


Born
Mexico
Website

Twitter

Genre

Influences

Member Since
August 2012

URL


Alejandra Quetzalli is a Latina from México with 10 years of experience in the tech industry and a devoted autism service dog, Canela. Canela works side-by-side with Alejandra, even joining her traveling and speaking engagements at tech conferences worldwide.

Throughout her career, Alejandra has worked in SEO, Paid Search, Full-Stack development, UX, Developer Relations, Technical Writing (Engineering Documentation), AWS Cloud Advocacy, startups, and Open-Source (OSS). She's a core maintainer at AsyncAPI Initiative, leading OSS initiatives for AsyncAPI Docs and Education. In 2022, she joined the AsyncAPI Technical Steering Committee (TSC).
...more

To ask Alejandra Quetzalli questions, please sign up.

Popular Answered Questions

Alejandra Quetzalli I step away and train outside with my dogs in our fav sports and tricks. Fresh air and exercise always help unblock me!
Alejandra Quetzalli I used to see docs as a product to be created/delivered to users. Over time, I began to see documentation as an ecosystem, a conversation between dive…moreI used to see docs as a product to be created/delivered to users. Over time, I began to see documentation as an ecosystem, a conversation between diverse documentation creators and the community. (less)
Average rating: 4.25 · 4 ratings · 0 reviews · 1 distinct work
Docs-as-Ecosystem: The Comm...

4.25 avg rating — 4 ratings2 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating

* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

Quotes by Alejandra Quetzalli  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“WHY COMMUNITY IS MORE REPRESENTATIVE THAN “USERS”
In the traditional software development model, we're used to writing technical documentation with a specific user in mind. However, this approach can be limiting because it assumes a single "ideal" user represents your entire user base.

The docs-as-ecosystem model proposes a different way of thinking about technical documentation; it recognizes technical documentation is not just a product but an ongoing conversation between diverse documentation creators (contributors) and the community.

Thinking in terms of community has several advantages over focusing only on users:

More inclusive: Focusing on the community is more inclusive than focusing only on users because it recognizes that many different types of stakeholders contribute to and read the documentation.

More diverse: Focusing on the community encourages diversity and inclusion because it recognizes many different backgrounds and experiences.

More collaborative: Focusing on the community also fosters a more collaborative approach to documentation because it encourages anyone from any background to participate.

By focusing on community, the docs-as-ecosystem approach offers a more flexible, adaptable, and sustainable way to approach technical documentation. Rather than assuming that there is a single "ideal" user, we recognize that technical documentation is a dynamic and ongoing conversation between documentation creators and the community.”
Alejandra Quetzalli, Docs-as-Ecosystem: The Community Approach to Engineering Documentation

“Here are some reasons for the software developer community to adopt "docs-as-ecosystem":

Proposes a more holistic and community-centered approach: The term "docs-as-ecosystem" recognizes that documentation is not just a set of markdown files or code snippets but an ecosystem that needs to be managed and nurtured. The term "docs-as-code" has been widely adopted recently, but it may not fully capture the complexity and diversity of documentation development. The term "docs-as-ecosystem" aligns with the industry trend towards a more holistic and community-centered approach to documentation development.

Encourages collaboration: The term "docs-as-ecosystem" acknowledges that documentation development involves different roles and stakeholders, such as technical writers, designers, developers, community members, and beyond. By adopting this term, the software developer community can encourage collaboration across diverse stakeholders and facilitate the creation of high-quality documentation.

Emphasizes the importance of retrieving and incorporating community feedback: The term "docs-as-ecosystem" highlights the importance of retrieving and integrating community feedback in documentation development. It recognizes that documentation is about providing information and meeting community needs and preferences.”
Alejandra Quetzalli, Docs-as-Ecosystem: The Community Approach to Engineering Documentation

“The docs-as-ecosystem model starts with community feedback (A), captured through various channels such as public GitHub discussions, public surveys, forums, social media, and support requests. This feedback is then incorporated into the documentation codebase, which is managed through version control (B) to ensure that all changes are tracked and reviewed.

The documentation codebase is then integrated continuously (C) through a continuous integration process, which helps catch errors and ensure that documentation updates are consistent with the rest of the codebase. The codebase is then used to generate static site documentation (D), the basis for the final generated documentation (E).

The generated documentation is then published (F) to a production environment, where it’s accessible to the community. Finally, the community can review the results and provide updated feedback on the published documentation (H), which starts the cycle anew.

Incorporating community feedback ensures documentation remains up-to-date and accurate, reflecting the needs and concerns of the community. Building stronger relationships between community and documentation creation processes lead to engaged and thriving communities.”
Alejandra Quetzalli, Docs-as-Ecosystem: The Community Approach to Engineering Documentation

“Here are some reasons for the software developer community to adopt "docs-as-ecosystem":

Proposes a more holistic and community-centered approach: The term "docs-as-ecosystem" recognizes that documentation is not just a set of markdown files or code snippets but an ecosystem that needs to be managed and nurtured. The term "docs-as-code" has been widely adopted recently, but it may not fully capture the complexity and diversity of documentation development. The term "docs-as-ecosystem" aligns with the industry trend towards a more holistic and community-centered approach to documentation development.

Encourages collaboration: The term "docs-as-ecosystem" acknowledges that documentation development involves different roles and stakeholders, such as technical writers, designers, developers, community members, and beyond. By adopting this term, the software developer community can encourage collaboration across diverse stakeholders and facilitate the creation of high-quality documentation.

Emphasizes the importance of retrieving and incorporating community feedback: The term "docs-as-ecosystem" highlights the importance of retrieving and integrating community feedback in documentation development. It recognizes that documentation is about providing information and meeting community needs and preferences.”
Alejandra Quetzalli, Docs-as-Ecosystem: The Community Approach to Engineering Documentation

“The docs-as-ecosystem model starts with community feedback (A), captured through various channels such as public GitHub discussions, public surveys, forums, social media, and support requests. This feedback is then incorporated into the documentation codebase, which is managed through version control (B) to ensure that all changes are tracked and reviewed.

The documentation codebase is then integrated continuously (C) through a continuous integration process, which helps catch errors and ensure that documentation updates are consistent with the rest of the codebase. The codebase is then used to generate static site documentation (D), the basis for the final generated documentation (E).

The generated documentation is then published (F) to a production environment, where it’s accessible to the community. Finally, the community can review the results and provide updated feedback on the published documentation (H), which starts the cycle anew.

Incorporating community feedback ensures documentation remains up-to-date and accurate, reflecting the needs and concerns of the community. Building stronger relationships between community and documentation creation processes lead to engaged and thriving communities.”
Alejandra Quetzalli, Docs-as-Ecosystem: The Community Approach to Engineering Documentation

“WHY COMMUNITY IS MORE REPRESENTATIVE THAN “USERS”
In the traditional software development model, we're used to writing technical documentation with a specific user in mind. However, this approach can be limiting because it assumes a single "ideal" user represents your entire user base.

The docs-as-ecosystem model proposes a different way of thinking about technical documentation; it recognizes technical documentation is not just a product but an ongoing conversation between diverse documentation creators (contributors) and the community.

Thinking in terms of community has several advantages over focusing only on users:

More inclusive: Focusing on the community is more inclusive than focusing only on users because it recognizes that many different types of stakeholders contribute to and read the documentation.

More diverse: Focusing on the community encourages diversity and inclusion because it recognizes many different backgrounds and experiences.

More collaborative: Focusing on the community also fosters a more collaborative approach to documentation because it encourages anyone from any background to participate.

By focusing on community, the docs-as-ecosystem approach offers a more flexible, adaptable, and sustainable way to approach technical documentation. Rather than assuming that there is a single "ideal" user, we recognize that technical documentation is a dynamic and ongoing conversation between documentation creators and the community.”
Alejandra Quetzalli, Docs-as-Ecosystem: The Community Approach to Engineering Documentation

220 Goodreads Librarians Group — 297162 members — last activity 0 minutes ago
Goodreads Librarians are volunteers who help ensure the accuracy of information about books and authors in the Goodreads' catalog. The Goodreads Libra ...more
No comments have been added yet.