Any wiki software suffers from the problem that only a small percentage of the company uses it. It's essentially a tax on the most productive people. If someone asks you for the same thing 8x, you will write it down and share it via a wiki.
I've spend years trying to solve the problem - how do you get the average person writing more at work? What I've come up with resembles a company "journal", but helps you automate any routine communication or update (daily standup, weekly update, retros, etc).
Would love any/all feedback on the idea, here's the website (https://www.friday.app/). You can use it as an individual, team, or with the entire org.
> how do you get the average person writing more at work?
Some people have many answers, but other people have many questions. So I think encouraging people to ask more (even stupid) questions might be a way to get the discussion going.
Its pages can be typical wiki-docs but also things like internal news posts or discussions, and is organized into subsites for different teams/projects.
What about sub 100?
We are fully distributed. Lots of Slack and Zoom. Trying to create a central source of truth in Notion but that feels very static.
Any smaller teams using this?