An easier way to guide your documentation readers and your writers is to provide each one of them with helpers and guidelines, as we have learned in the previous section of this chapter.
From a writer's point of view, this is done by having a set of reusable templates, together with a guide that describes how and when to use them in a project. This is called a documentation portfolio.
From a reader's point of view, it is important to be able to browse the documentation with no pain, and get used to finding the information efficiently. This is done by building a document landscape.
Obviously, we need to start from guiding documentation writers, because without them, the readers would not have anything to read. Let's see how such a portfolio looks and how to build a one.