I would fail to use such a Tool for the first time by just watching the The destination point before you select a start point or select the object. I would expect to start with selecting the primary object first.įor me that feels like, translated to Move Tool, you would have to click Or why do I need to select the peripheral geometry first in "Propagate", "last selected" instead of the first selected. Like why does "Nearest Distance" with number input moves the That is where I need the webinars that show the why or why notĪlso many Bricscad Tool's usage feel unfamiliar, unintuitive Because of slight differences and I don't My problem with Tutorials is when translating to an own project. Imagine a tired BIM technician trying to learn BricsCAD after fighting with Revit for 10 hours at their day job 3 - 10 minute tutorials will look way less imposing than one 30 minute tutorial. Simply breaking the tutorials into smaller parts could work wonders. Compared to say, 4 - 10 minute tutorials. If everything is clumped into a 40 minute tutorial they can't find what they are looking for. This is for a couple reasons: 1) our attention spans are horrible these days, and 2) often times users only need to know specific things. You'll notice that most tutorials are 5 - 10 minutes rarely exceeding 20 minutes. Check out the top Revit guy his videos are amazing (reach out to him and consider hiring him!). What type of tutorials do people need? The best place to look is to look at the most successful individuals making videos for the competitors products. And those view counts are people who "clicked", not necessarily people who viewed the entire tutorial (Bricsys would be able to look at that via their channel analytics). If you take a look at the view counts, very few people are actually watching these. I think they are targeting new users rather than their actual prospective customer base. But the Bricsys tutorials move painfully slow. They are thorough and have good instruction.