Aaron
at Matthew mentioned, I have been leading our company through a rather slow transition to Archicad. We've been on Archicad since early 2003. We are a 60 person company, with about 30 now using Archicad in some capacity or another. Our transition was intentionally slow in some places, to make sure we did not get ahead of ourselves, and other times slowed by staffing/scheduling/project issues about who was trained and available for projects, who was capable of being "CAD Leader" for a project, etc.
In the beginning, it was painful, as we all learned new software, new methodology, new workflow, and new project staffing needs. Our first two projects were REALLY hard, and we struggled to meet the deadlines at all. Now, we have projects that struggleing to meet deadlines because we put 2 people on a project that used to get 4 or 5. The change is unbelievable.
Working with your local reseller is a good start. Some resellers are very technically competent, others retain the services of someone who is. Either way, they will work in your best interest. Can you tell us who your reseller is?
In our case, the decision was made early on that since I was CAD Manager on Arris (our old CAD software), was intimately knowledgable of our companies standards, intentions, and desires, and the switch was my idea, I was going to the in-house expert.
I made a LOT of mistakes early on, but I think a lot of them are things were easily repaired. A few lessons were:
- 1) Buy the "Project Framework" book. It really is a great guide to get you on your way.
2) Make sure that all the standard notation blocks (drawing titles, section markers, etc) you had before are available as Library Objects. If not, either learn how or retain the services of someone who can make them for you.
3) Develop a strong template. Your template will contain all your project layers, pens, linetypes, and other defaults. A good template can make or break an entire project in the beginning of a transition.
4) Get Training. Capitol-T-Training. Try to work through the Learning Guide on your own to get basic concepts and ideas, then sit through some form of formal hands-on training. It costs a lot up front, but you will never learn as fast on your own.
5) Be willing to dabble in GDL. You can make your own objects do simple things without a programming background. Even simple things like self-scaling drawing titles that seem like magic can be done with 2 lines of code in less than 5 minutes.
6) Make use of this forum. Guys like Matthew Lohden and our beloved moderator Djordje Grujic have been using this software for a really long time, and know a incredible amount about it.
Switching CAD software is a long-term benefit with a lot of short-term hassles. We made the mistake of short-changing the up-front preparation, and it hurt us throughout our first two projects. A lot of times I made mistakes, admitted it to the staff (hard to do!!), and adapted our standards and procedures.
By all means, let us know of you need more information
Tom Waltz