One of my software companies needed a User’s Guide and training materials, I thought it was the perfect opportunity for AI to load a video demo of the product and turn it into these materials…not so fast. Generic AI Chat tools couldn’t do it, nor could I find specialized tools to handle the task for me. Given the pace of development in the AI market, it’s just a matter of time, but there are some tools that can help with discrete steps in the process.
There are three primary phases to building training materials: Planning, Execution, and Evaluation. These can be further separated into distinct steps, all of which are very manual and time-consuming:
This multi-step process is often inefficient, error-prone, and requires significant human effort. The remainder of this post will focus on the Development step, with a use case of AI-based tools turning a user demo into training materials. It assumes that the other steps are handled separately. The ultimate solution to handle this step is not available yet, but there are tools that can facilitate specific aspects of the Development step.
Here are several tools that can streamline specific aspects of the process:
The potential benefits of an AI-powered solution that could automatically generate training materials and user guides from video demos are immense:
As AI technology continues to advance, we can expect to see further developments in this area. Until then, organizations must rely on a combination of human expertise and existing tools to bridge the gap between video demos and effective documentation.
Once you have the training materials, you can create high-quality general-purpose videos with tools like heygen.com, but those combine text call-outs and AI avatars speaking. It doesn’t incorporate a screen walk-through yet. Given the pace of development, I expect that within 18 months, there will be tools built on foundational AI and large language models, that consume a video walk-through and then incorporate the avatar, text call-outs, and create user on-boarding tools that are fully interactive. In other words, it can open an online meeting and walk you through the product in a series of educational videos while showing the steps onscreen and answering your questions. This will enable custom on-boarding at scale that is not hampered by time zones and trainer availability.
While companies focused on training materials are busy leveraging GenAI to address the full lifecycle, including Planning, Execution, and Evaluation, those will take some time to come to market. In the meantime, my personal need for developing training materials based on user demos of software is not yet ready for the market. While current tools can aid in specific steps, the journey toward a fully automated solution is ongoing. By leveraging a combination of AI tools and human expertise, we can develop more efficient, accurate, and scalable training solutions.
What do you think? Is there a specific tool or approach you've found particularly helpful in this process? Share your experiences in the comments below.
If you're exploring AI to streamline your customer support, we compiled a list of things that you need to know on building GenAI Chatbots here.
Mike Hogan
August 28, 2024
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