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Author: Sarah O'Keefe

AI Structured content Webinar

How to survive the four horsemen of the AIpocalypse (webinar)

Confront the chaos that generative AI can unleash on your content and discover how to regain control. In this practical session, Torsten Machert (Congree Language Technologies) and Sarah O’Keefe (Scriptorium Publishing) revealed the four biggest threats that undermine quality when you rely on GenAI for content creation.

Sarah O’Keefe: It is way, way cheaper to build out the maturity of your content, to do the terminology work, to do the structure work, to do the metadata work, label everything, give it categories, give it classifications ahead of time than it is to try and remediate the content after the fact, after it’s been processed, after it’s been ingested into the AI and then spit back out. My fear right now is that we’re seeing a lot of, “Ingest everything, spit it back out, then consider how to fix it.”

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AI Content management Podcasts QA

Tool selection and the unpredictable variable

How do you really choose the right documentation tool? In this podcast episode, Sarah O’Keefe (Scriptorium) talks with Paweł Kowaluk and Michał Skowron (Guidewire Software) about building a successful tool selection process, the realities of docs as code, and what happens when the technology becomes the unpredictable variable.

Paweł Kowaluk: It’s funny how programming used to be deterministic, and it was the people who were messy. We always knew that people are going to be whimsical and maybe harder to rein in, but the technology is going to be predictable. Whereas now, technology is not predictable anymore, and you give it a prompt and you hope it’s going to do what you want. You adjust the system prompts and change the weight of things which are retrieved versus metadata, et cetera, and it doesn’t always work the way you expect it to.

Sarah O’Keefe: And now the people are being asked to be the deterministic layer, right? To be the QA on top of the AI.

Paweł Kowaluk: That’s actually very insightful. I like that. That is true. The human in the loop or whatever you call it, that’s supposed to be the voice of reason.

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AI Structured content Webinar

Conversational AI: The cost of ignoring structured content (webinar)

Conversational AI is everywhere, but reliable AI responses depend on reliable content. So, how do you ensure your content is reliable? In this webinar, guest Rahel Bailie, Content Solutions Strategist at Content Seriously, and host Sarah O’Keefe, Founder & CEO of Scriptorium, examined how the intersection of structured content and conversational AI has evolved. They also share practical next steps that organizations can take to create a successful AI content strategy.

Rahel Bailie: How do you know your content is ready for AI? The level 1 test is, “Is the AI agent working well?” If it’s working well, then you go to, “Why isn’t it getting the right answer?” Then, you go to the content. The content can be good or bad and can be measured in a couple of ways. Is the source content marked up well? Does it have the right semantics on it? Does it have the right metadata? Do you have a knowledge graph in the background that’s making these relationships, so that the AI can pull out the right content?

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AI Content management Podcasts Structured content

Taming AI: Using AI for content conversion at scale

AI promises to transform content conversion, but what does it actually look like when you’re processing thousands of documents a day? In this episode, Sarah O’Keefe (Scriptorium) and Rich Dominelli (DCL) dig into the real-world challenges of using AI for large-scale structured content conversion.

Rich Dominelli: If you have millions of articles and you’re asking the AI, ‘What did we do for this project six months ago?” The AI has to find those articles, pull the relevant information out of those articles, summarize it, and hand it back to you. The best way of doing that is to give extra signals to the AI, structured relevant bits of information, front matter, back matter, publication date, keywords, abstract, that allows the AI to query the corpus and get the relevant chunks out of that corpus in a very quick manner. Then, it can summarize what those chunks are. So the AI almost becomes the user interface over that corpus. But to find that data in the first place, structured content is key. Structured content is key when you’re dealing with big indexes and the web, and it’s the same with AI.

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AI Content delivery portal Industry insights Webinar

UI for AI: Responsible content delivery (webinar)

With AI, users are taking control over content delivery through summarization, personalization, translation, and more. But what are the risks? In this webinar, Sarah O’Keefe, CEO of Scriptorium, and Fabrice Lacroix, CEO of Fluid Topics, explore strategies and share examples of UI for AI that empower users while protecting them—and your organization—from misinterpretation, incomplete information, and compliance breaches.

As somebody who works in structured content with metadata, taxonomy, and all those other fun things, we’re telling people, you have to do the work. You have to do the work upfront because once that ingestion step happens and the AI is ingesting not structured, not consistent, not governed, not accurate, not up-to-date content, then what chance does the AI have? The AI is not going to make your content magically more accurate. It’s not magic. I mean, it can do some magic looking things, but it is not magic. Your entropy always wins. Your content will always sort of degenerate, right? So you start for your best possible, and it goes down from there. So what’s the best possible thing that you can get into your database?

— Sarah O’Keefe

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AI CCMS Content management Industry insights Podcasts

Machine experience (MX): Making content work for humans and machines

Your website may look great to humans, but can machines understand it? In this episode, Sarah O’Keefe (Scriptorium) and Tom Cranstoun (Digital Domain Technologies) explore the emerging discipline of machine experience (MX). Sarah and Tom discuss what AI agents actually encounter when they visit your web pages, why microdata and metadata are critical, and what content creators must do to ensure content is consumable for both human and machine audiences.

Tom Cranstoun: Humans are looking for pictures, they’re looking for text, and they can infer. You may think, “Well, we’ve already added information on the page,” but by putting it in as microdata, it doesn’t appear on the page for the humans. It appears on the page for the machine. I think that that’s a critical distinction. We are trying to design for both. We don’t want to overload a human with information, but we do want to give the machine as much information as it can take.

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AI Content governance Content management Podcasts

Who controls your content? AI and content governance

What does it actually mean to govern your content in the age of AI, and who’s really in control? In this episode, Sarah O’Keefe sits down with Patrick Bosek, CEO of Heretto, to unpack why the quality, accuracy, and structure of your content may be the most critical factors in what your users experience on the other side of an AI model.

Patrick Bosek: In today’s world, you don’t have 100% control. There are a couple of different places where this needs to be broken up. One is the end user: what they physically get and what control they have versus what control you have. Then, there’s what control you have of how the AI model is going to behave based on your information and your inputs. Whether or that model is public, like a user accessing your documentation through Claude Desktop, or private, like a user accessing your documentation through your app or website, the governance piece comes down to what control you have immediately before the model. And that breaks down into a couple of things: completeness, accuracy, and structure of the content.

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AI Industry insights Webinar

Chart your AI-ready content ops career (webinar)

In this webinar, Emilie Herman, Director of Content Operations at the Financial Accounting Foundation (FAF), shares lessons from her career journey. Through the lens of publishing services and large-scale content workflows, Emilie shows how the shift from manual processes to automation mirrors what’s happening with AI, and how these adaptation techniques apply to your content ops career.

It’s isolating when you feel like it’s all on you to figure out how to reinvent your career. Reach out and talk to people. It’s nice to make a human connection, which is very important to get past AI, but also to look at what other people are doing. Collaborate, talk things through, and acknowledge that everybody’s trying to figure things out. People want to experiment! There’s strength in numbers. If you have a manager, mentor, or someone who can help put you in the room to be part of the discussion, you feel empowered to take control of your destiny.

— Emilie Herman

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Learning content LMS Structured learning content Webinar

Learning experiences at scale, a case study presented by Sarah O’Keefe

Ready to learn how robust content operations keep pace with evolving and complex learning demands? In this webinar, Sarah O’Keefe, the founder and CEO of Scriptorium, describes the successful implementation of a component content management system (CCMS). This project was for a major organization that supports technology professionals with training and certifications.

The level of interest and commitment that we had from the client’s team was a big deal. They now have structured learning content. They have the scalability and reuse they needed and could not get any other way. We aligned their content ops with their business goals of scalability, reuse, and time to market.

Sarah O’Keefe

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