
Stop Repeating Yourself: How to Reduce SME Time Without More Meetings
Tired of endless SME meetings for the same questions? Learn practical ways to reduce SME time with self-serve learning that scales answers across your team.
SMEs are swamped. They juggle their day jobs while fielding the same questions from IDs, trainers, and learners week after week. This eats hours and stalls projects.
You book a meeting to clarify a process. SME explains it well. A month later, another ID asks the same thing. Rinse and repeat. No wonder courses drag on.
The fix? Capture answers once and let people grab them anytime. This cuts repeat questions and frees SMEs for real work. Reduce SME time starts here.
What This Means in Real Work
SMEs face nine touchpoints in traditional course design. Each means reviews, edits, and meetings. One change ripples through everything.
Picture this: Your sales training needs SME input on objection handling. They explain in a call. You build the module. Then compliance wants tweaks. SME joins another call. Learners finish the course but email the same objections later. SME answers again.
Result? Wasted time on repeat questions. Projects slip. SMEs burn out. Self-serve learning flips this. One captured answer serves everyone forever.
Practical Steps
Junior IDs can do these right now. No big budget needed. Start small.
- Record SME sessions once. Next time you meet, hit record. Ask open questions. Let them talk through key topics. Transcribe it. This gathers content without notes.
- Chunk answers into FAQs. Pull key bits from transcripts. Make short Q&A docs. Share via Google Drive or Notion. Use for courses and team reference.
- Build a shared knowledge base. Use free tools like Notion or Confluence. Tag entries by topic. Link from course intros. Learners self-serve.
- Reuse in courses early. Embed FAQ links or summaries in Storyline layers. Test with one module. Expand if it works.
- Review and update yearly. Set a calendar reminder. Ping SME for quick confirms. Keeps it fresh without full meetings.
Common Mistakes
- Trying to capture everything. SMEs dump all knowledge. You end up with walls of text no one reads. Focus on top repeat questions first.
- Forgetting to organize. Raw transcripts sit unused. Always chunk into questions and short answers. Make search easy.
- No testing with users. You build the FAQ. Team ignores it. Share drafts early. Ask what they search for most.
- Skipping SME buy-in. They see it as extra work. Show them a sample. Prove it saves their time long-term.
Leader Lens
Evaluate by tracking SME meeting hours before and after. Count repeat questions via email or chat logs. Watch course completion rates and follow-up queries.
Risk is low if you pilot one topic. Adoption grows if you tie it to project timelines. Measure time saved on reviews. That shows ROI to bosses.
Freelancer Lens
Clients love faster delivery. Self-serve FAQs cut revision loops. Hand over a knowledge base with courses. Looks premium, justifies higher rates.
Rework drops when SMEs self-review against your captures. Finish projects early. Use time saved for more gigs. Clients notice the polish.
Quick Checklist
- Record next SME session?
- Top 5 repeat questions listed?
- FAQ doc built and shared?
- Linked in one course module?
- Team feedback collected?
- SME time tracked for proof?
FAQ
How do I pick what to capture first?
Log questions SMEs get over two weeks. Pick the top three. Start there.
What if SMEs resist?
Show a one-page FAQ from past talk. Highlight time saved. Offer to handle updates.
Does this work for complex topics?
Yes. Break into layers. Link short answers to deeper docs or videos.



