A first prototype for a Tiny Service Design Bible
In this article I'll share how I created a prototype of a searchable Bible of Service Design with Super.so + Notion and Helpscout.
Funny context
I a friend of mine said one day that it feels that with all the content I'm creating around Service Design I'm trying to create the Bible of Service Design. I kind of like this idea for a few reasons:
- Like a Bible, it would make sense to bring together a lot of different content pieces in one unique place for all the people interested in the field
- There are many versions of the Bible, so here also the idea wouldn't be to say: that's the exact way of seeing things, but it's one version
- Today the Bible has awesome tools that make it easy to do research in it and find content in it. That's something inspiring.
The idea
In the last days I made a few more steps towards these idea of:
Creating one place where all the service design knowledge pieces I have (historic events, principles, Q&A, definitions, tools, processes, etc.) can be easily searched in one place.
The problem
The problem is that the tool I'm using for now to run my website (Podia) doesn't offer a site wide search. And to add such a feature I would have to:
- Make it happen with an external service (that's extra money)
- And get to the most expensive tier of Podia that would allow me to connect such external services.
So paying around 1500-2000$ more per year to make my content searchable hurts a bit too much.
The prototypes: helpscout and notion+super.so
Since I've been playing with the idea of having a new version of my website, I've realized that the format of website that makes the most sense for me for the future is to create something like a knowledge base.
So I've googled and compared all types of knowledge bases. In short here is what I found:
So I've googled and compared all types of knowledge bases. In short here is what I found:
- Most solutions are way too expensive for my wallet
- Many of these solutions look very crappy
- There are two that seemed to fit my criteria of good design + "affordable pricing": Helpscout Docs and Super.so + Notion
So I've setup a free trial for both of these two tools and built a prototype in each. Here is what I learned:
Help Scout Prototype
How the shitty prototypes looks
The overview
(- means bad stuff, + means good stuff)
- - Fixed page structure
- + Beacon feature
- + Feedback button and analytics
- + Categorie navigation
- - Basic search
- + Focus on search on home
- 289$ for the first year or 20$ per month + 69$ on time template
Super.so + Notion
How the shitty prototype looks
The overview
(- means bad stuff, + means good stuff)
- + Freedom in page structure
- - No beacon but could be done with free tool
- - No feedback button (manual)
- - Needs time to setup navigation
- + Advanced search
- - Can’t make search bigger on home
- 264$ for the first year or 22$ per month
What I learned
Here a few of things I learned while doing these prototypes:
- In Notion use one database for all knowledge pieces: Historic events, Q&A, Principles, definitions, etc can all be in one database so that I can quickly show other knowledge pieces that have a specific tag but that come from a different format.
- Get the "Pro site" plan on super.so: The advanced search feature for Super.so is in the most expensive tier
- Use Emoji coding of pages: having in the title of each piece of knowledge an emoji makes it possible to quickly differentiate during a search the types of knowledge pieces (definitions, principles, Q&A, etc.)
- Not many templates for Helpscout: There only very few HelpScout templates still with a bit of custom css you can create something lovely.
What's the winning tool so far?
Whenever I have time or motivation to build my searchable "Tiny Service Design Bible" notion with super.so is a viable solution. Because Super.so has
- the best flexibility that makes it possible to create something truely custom
- a good search that shows not only titles of pages but content
- a good free tier that lets me continue to prototype without spending money
How much time would it take?
Now that I know it's technically possible to do what I have in mind and that it's also possible for my wallet, the question is: how much time would I need to add the 1000+ content pieces I already have in such a system? Here is an approximation:
- Base setup in 1 day: I think in one day of work I can create the base layout and system in notion + super
- Content migration 2 days: If I take 1 minute in average per content piece, that would then take me about 16,6.. hours to migrate the content, so basically two full days of work
- Bonus time 1 day: another day to do some cleaning and fixing mistakes
So basically in about 4 days of work I could have a first usable version with all my existing content in one searchable place.
The future
So these prototypes proved that:
- super.so + notion could be a good technical solution (both in terms of features and price)
- it would take me about one week of deep focus to create a first version of this idea
Now I let this idea on the side and see how my thoughts mature about this idea of building a tiny service design bible.
Written on Saturday 11th of February 2023, by Daniele Catalanotto