Case study / SAAS / 2023 / Research / Prototyping
Reimagining Helpdesk.media’s Knowledge Base for support agents
Helpdesk Media Foundation, a European non-profit, serves as a lifeline for victims of the war in Ukraine through an emergency hotline. The foundation supports 40 hotline managers and over 3,000 volunteers who assisted more than 35,000 people in 2022–23. Central to their operations is a secure conversational support system, similar to Zendesk or Intercom. However, the outdated knowledge base had become a bottleneck, hindering the efficiency of the support agents.
Foundation's website (RU+EN)
CEO’s article in the New York Times (EN)
About the Foundation’s helpline service in the Nieman Lab (EN)
P.S. All the designs here were translated from Russian to English for a better comprehension
Objective
Research
User interviews from regular users and stakeholders revealed significant dissatisfaction with the search and navigation functionalities of the knowledge base. Support managers found the system cumbersome, often resorting to external tools to manage frequently used responses.
Other insights from the interviews:
Defining problems
- Inefficient Search Mechanism: Users were unable to locate relevant information quickly, impacting response times.
- Poor Navigation: The lack of structured information made the system difficult to learn and use.
- Reusing articles: Users don’t have quick access to reusable materials, impacting response times.
Ideation and design
Some aspects were crucial:
- Do we preserve the current version of the knowledge base as part of the chats or remove it and work on the open version of the one that lives in another directory and at that time functioned as an editor for knowledge base contributers?
- There are several ‘types’ of articles in the knowledge base, the most important two are Instructions that agents use as an answer to a question in chats and Templates that agents use as intro, defining and closing statements, modifying for their usage — should we keep them in one place or make them separate and put them into different places?
In the research users also mentioned that instructions and templates do look similar because of the previous design decisions but they don’t mind having both types of articles in one place. In fact, they were happy it was that way because they search for an instruction the same way they search for a template and having them placed in two diferrent places wouldn’t benefit them. Thus, we I decided to keep them together.
Development
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Article hierarchy: Articles were grouped by categories, helping nagivating and exploring the knowledge base.
- Enhanced search and filters: Users could now search by article type or keywords, improving the discoverability of information.
- Favourites could be easily accessed from the home directory to speed up the response time.
Validation and Testing
Due to limited resources, full-scale usability testing was bypassed. However, feedback from prototypes tested with select users and stakeholders was overwhelmingly positive, confirming we were on the right track. Once coded, I tested the knew knowledge base for bugs on our development stage and it was ready to be launched.
Launch and Results
The redesigned knowledge base improved the operational efficiency of Helpdesk Media Foundation, directly enhancing the support provided to war victims. This project not only met its objectives but also demonstrated the power of user-centered design in critical service environments.
and learning of articles in the knoledge base became easier
‘This is all we ever wanted’
– a happy user said in the end
Special thanks
♥︎ To our stakeholder for believing in our ideas♥︎ To our software developers who were eager to shovel a lot of backend code
♥︎ To our users for helping make all the changes possible