Use “Free, Basic, Business, Enterprise” once you’re talking about specifics.
Use ‘Private Q&A’ as a descriptor to refer to our product suite on stackoverflow.com or with an audience that we’re certain is aware of our special sauces – our Q&A format.
Once discussing in-depth, use the terms: Stack Overflow for Teams, Stack Overflow Business, Stack Overflow Enterprise. Note: we won’t reference the base tier as Stack Overflow Basic.
“Knowledge reuse” is a term we use frequently in reference to Stack Overflow for Teams as something it facilitates. It can be lowercase the majority of the time, except when referring to our proprietary metric, in which case use “Knowledge Reuse”.
“Unlike simply sharing information, knowledge reuse takes collaboration a step further by creating a system where ideas are shared, quickly accessed, improved upon, and then put back into the system.”
“We have calculated your Knowledge Reuse metric as…”
With Communities you can help your teammates know what’s trending, who’s sharing knowledge, and where there’s opportunity to contribute or learn around specific areas of interest.
Subscribe to a Community and get notifications for new questions and answers.
We have trademarked “Collectives™ on Stack Overflow”.
Apply the trademark ™ symbol to the first instance of “Collectives™ on Stack Overflow” in a document, communication, or marketing materials/assets.
If there is a headline/title slide, use the symbol in the first instance of the product name in the body copy of your document, in addition to using the ™ in the headline/title.
Where possible, use the unicode character for trade mark:
If a product or feature isn’t unique to Stack Overflow, don’t capitalize it (blogs, pages, etc.) If it is unique to Stack Overflow as its own product, do capitalize it.
This can be confusing, because we have a feature called “Articles,” under which you may write a how-to guide, or an announcement, or indeed, an article. So this one depends on the context.
If you’re referring to a generic article, it’s lowercase.
When in doubt, ask, “Is this referring to the specific website section (Articles), or to the thing (articles)?”
If you’re talking about the Articles section of your collective on Stack Overflow, you’ll call it “Articles.”
Don’t
Do
I’m writing an article and then I’m going to put it in our team’s articles section
I’m writing an article and then I’m going to put it in our team’s Articles section
In articles, you can find how-to guides, blog posts, and articles
In Articles, you can find how-to guides, blog posts, and articles