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Advice on teaching REVIT users ArchiCAD

JaredBanks
Mentor
Anyone have any advice on teaching REVIT users ArchiCAD? I've found that the sooner a new user starts focusing on using ArchiCAD as ArchiCAD and not trying to use it like a former drafting program, the better. This is much easier done when the previous program the user knew was AutoCAD. I find there's more resistance with REVIT. "Well in REVIT if I did this it'd work. Why can't this program function exactly like that?" I'm hoping that I can point out some things that happen in the early stages of modeling to help highlight the joys of working in ArchiCAD v11. So far some of the things I've mentioned haven't left this user that impressed...

Thoughts? Teaching techniques you've used?

Thanks.
Jared Banks, AIA
Shoegnome Architects

Archicad Blog: www.shoegnome.com
Archicad Template: www.shoegnome.com/template/
Archicad Work Environment: www.shoegnome.com/work-environment/
Archicad Tutorial Videos: www.youtube.com/shoegnome
53 REPLIES 53
JaredBanks
Mentor
Wow. Lots to respond to and think about. I'm glad I asked my question this morning. Richard, thanks for giving me something to watch on Saturday while there's a baby shower going on in my house and I need to be out of the way. Dwight, I haven't taken a look at Lightworks in ArchiCAD in a long time. My old firm had a copy. But what you say does ring a bell. And I definitely agree with it.
Jared Banks, AIA
Shoegnome Architects

Archicad Blog: www.shoegnome.com
Archicad Template: www.shoegnome.com/template/
Archicad Work Environment: www.shoegnome.com/work-environment/
Archicad Tutorial Videos: www.youtube.com/shoegnome
Mats_Knutsson
Advisor
Dwight wrote:
And you moved on. Proves smartness already.

My notion is that:

BIM in general needs smarter, more focused people because there are more balls to juggle. You need to be calm and methodical from the get-go when the knee jerk reaction is to "just make a sketch. [And work it out later]"

Another problem we have in architecture is a truncated delegation pyramid. The billing pyramid gets kneecapped when BIM comes along since guys who don't know anything make kaka when they model. So it is harder to direct juniors. In the old days, fellows could learn making door schedules and other simple things while watching the real guys work - what a guy could do on the boards was a lot clearer than now.

In "LightWorks in Archicad" i refer to "Mechanic's Mind" and "Artist's Mind" as opposing qualities conflicting in architecture. To be really productive in Archicad requires a handle on both the technics of a structure and its design implications. You need to firmly hold both handles and still be able to work the keyboard and mousie! Tell me THAT doesn't need extra talent, or limbs!!
AMEN!!! Very well written!
AC 25 SWE Full

HP Zbook Fury 15,6 G8. 32 GB RAM. Nvidia RTX A3000.
Mats_Knutsson
Advisor
JaredBanks wrote:
Anyone have any advice on teaching REVIT users ArchiCAD? I've found that the sooner a new user starts focusing on using ArchiCAD as ArchiCAD and not trying to use it like a former drafting program, the better. This is much easier done when the previous program the user knew was AutoCAD. I find there's more resistance with REVIT. "Well in REVIT if I did this it'd work. Why can't this program function exactly like that?" I'm hoping that I can point out some things that happen in the early stages of modeling to help highlight the joys of working in ArchiCAD v11. So far some of the things I've mentioned haven't left this user that impressed...

Thoughts? Teaching techniques you've used?

Thanks.
I've done it once. There was basically one thing that bothered the Revit users in the beginning and it was that they didn't have to connect things the same way. It was a simple wall-to-slab thing. After explaining ArchiCADs approach (marquee, groups, SEO etc) to handling the model with parametric behaviour it was a pretty easy ride for them. It was a two day training and they got the basic modeling part within a couple of hours. This was like I said one case two years ago. We didn't go into the most relevant parts, CDs because these guys were visualization modelers and not engineers/architects.

Quote: "Well in XXX if I did this it'd work"...yes of course! Stupid comment that speaks for itself really (whatever software behind XXX...). The Swedish saying is that you can't teach old dogs to sit...

My best advice is to begin with explaining the overall picture. Features are not interesting before you get the overall picture...this is crucial to all BIM-wannabe-tools. Think total workflow. Revit has some nice features, ArchiCAD has some nice features, even MS Word has some nice features...but if you are talking BIM the overall picture is the one important thing.

/Mats
AC 25 SWE Full

HP Zbook Fury 15,6 G8. 32 GB RAM. Nvidia RTX A3000.
JaredBanks
Mentor
Mats_Knutsson wrote:
There was basically one thing that bothered the Revit users in the beginning and it was that they didn't have to connect things the same way.
YES! I am definitely hearing this. It's great to hear how universal the comments and issues are. Tells me that the solutions should be fairly similar too.

Thanks.
Jared Banks, AIA
Shoegnome Architects

Archicad Blog: www.shoegnome.com
Archicad Template: www.shoegnome.com/template/
Archicad Work Environment: www.shoegnome.com/work-environment/
Archicad Tutorial Videos: www.youtube.com/shoegnome
Brad Elliott
Booster
My experience is that people switching computer programs, especially similar ones, tend to hate the re-learning process for the first couple of weeks. After all you are asking them to take a developed skill and asking them to throw it away for a new one. It would be like asking an old hand draftsman to start using the opposite hand. The human brain does not like to re-learn a skill.

A slightly softer response than Dwight's is to let them know you expect them to dislike that they have to learn a new program and they get a couple of weeks free to complain, but they need to be constructive complaints or everybody's just wasting their time. Eat your cereal and drink your coffee with the opposite hand so you can be sympathetic to their plight.

It also helps if you have a good template and an understandable process so people can see the logic in what you are doing and believe at the end they will have a real product.
Mac OS12.6 AC26 USA Silicon
M1 Macbook Pro
Dwight
Newcomer
I am quite bitter about this issue since, in 1995, I went into an office with SONATA. The firm had spent $250,000 on five UNIX work stations and the program, stolen away their British support guy to join the office as ubergeek and it was a bad program.

"Archicad? haha. That's kid stuff."

Tool: Fifteen inch display, sixteen colors. lines against black background. stick font, only one of the five machines had a graphics card for rendering and the operator [the ubergeek] was color blind [not making this up].

Eight letter codes for each layer and a layer was manipulated vertically by dragging it on a z - axis matrix to change building elevation/story. We kept track of library parts made with eight letter codes in a big notebook because there was no way to view the library.

I had been using Archicad for three years by then so i took my project home and cranked out a building model for 42 dwelling units with perspectives and suite floor areas and net to gross, etc, all calculated over a weekend. They were impressed. I was relieved.

"Of course you can transfer this into Sonata?"

Send DXF to the SONATA program? Sure. Arcs all turned into coarse line segments, etc.
What a mess.

It was so hard to go backwards, and none of my Archicad strategies could be used in such a primitive system. I felt lost.

Then i realized that nobody expected me to be productive like i was in Archicad. No one knew what you could do..... and no one else was being productive. And i started helping the ubergeek with his colors, and started asking him to make things for me in their crude code language [a cowboy hat-like canopy over a Kuala Lumpur pedestrian bridge being one of them]. Things got easier.

Thank you Sonata for teaching me how to delegate.
Dwight Atkinson
Anonymous
Not applicable
I have switched several local designers over to Archicad from Autocad and all were happy. What I did was show them the basics and actually walked them thru a small project normally a garage and build on that. When I say basics I mean basic, no composit walls or roofs that can come with experience and when walked them thru I sat with them for entire time, so be prepaired to spend time with them don't throw them onto the fire of a mega story project . I also made myself available for calls for a couple of weeks. One example of the beniffits of teaching someone else is that I was self taught on archicad and they often would ask autocad does this can archicad and after a little looking we often find that it does so I learn as well.
Anonymous
Not applicable
ron wrote:
I have switched several local designers over to Archicad from Autocad and all were happy.
I have found switching people from AutoCAD to be relatively easy. There are lots of ways ArchiCAD is more fun and productive. Revit is another matter.

For one thing, it can do most of what ArchiCAD does but the approach is very different. This reduces the reward for effort ratio considerably.

Another problem is that Revit does a lot of things automatically that make it easier for many to get into the modeling aspects. This also leads to many of Revit's limitations and frustrations when compared to ArchiCAD but most of these differences show up at intermediate to advanced levels. Revit users come to expect the automatic functions and will be frustrated by ArchiCAD's relative lack of them.

Finally Revit's interface is more basic. There are fewer things to learn since everything is made of families. There is a single browser to navigate with and the properties dialogs all behave pretty much the same. Add two toolbars and that's four basic interface elements. There is also typically only one way to do any particular task. ArchiCAD's profusion of palettes and variety of methods for accomplishing similar (or the same) tasks can make it quite confusing by comparison.

There are lots of ways that ArchiCAD is superior but these can be difficult to demonstrate to a new user. It is certainly best if you have clear and well documented standards and templates to make the transition/training process smoother. ArchiCAD features to show off are the info palette, the pet palette and the marquee tool. Revit has nothing to really compare to these. ArchiCAD's Navigator (Project Map/View Editor/Layout Manager/Publisher) is quite superior to Revit's Browser in my opinion. I also find ArchiCAD's snaps, locks, constraints and numerical entry to be much more fluid and flexible than Revit, but a new user will miss Revit's auto-snap to similar elements (kind of like Apple's Pages) which is great when it does what you want.

In the end I think the only answer is to say that both programs have their strengths but that your guy will have to learn the software that the firm uses and that some complaining is understandable but too much is counterproductive.
JaredBanks
Mentor
Matthew,

Great post. Thanks. AutoCAD to ArchiCAD is nothing like REVIT to ArchiCAD. The REVIT 'does this or that automatically' is a huge hurdle to deal with. Humorously I started reading your post while on the phone with my ex-REVIT user and everything you wrote is spot on. Talking with him reinforces that it would be great to have the time to clean up all the basic fills and materials (in addition to the rest of our template stuff). I do get the impression that a lot of people just want the program to be able to read their minds. I guess REVIT 2009 does that? Or will that not be until REVIT 2011? Thanks again for the input.
Jared Banks, AIA
Shoegnome Architects

Archicad Blog: www.shoegnome.com
Archicad Template: www.shoegnome.com/template/
Archicad Work Environment: www.shoegnome.com/work-environment/
Archicad Tutorial Videos: www.youtube.com/shoegnome
Anonymous
Not applicable
Ahh, i have been looking for a post like this one. thank you for writing it. As my signature points out, i am a former revit user struggling with ArchiCAD and it is nice to hear a discussion on the matter. To preface my post, i will admit that i have not received formal training in ArchiCAD due to the budget restraints of the new office that i am working. However, i am a good at learning programs by using them and reading their manuals. To contrast my lake of training in ArchiCAD, i have received excellent training in Revit, backed up with 2yrs or experience using the program.

I have only been using ArchiCAD for the last 3 months, and probably have not given it enough time to impress me. That being said, the person i work with on the project has been using it for a year and still dose not enjoy it or find it to live up to the hype, so i have good reason to be pessimistic at this point.

I really want to talk to Dwight, you mentioned how your office switched to "Sonata". I was still in Highschool in '95 so i never heard of the program, but your situation sound very similar to the one i am in. As a young intern, i know it is not truly my place to suggest software changes to a firm, however, as you felt that Sonata was an inferior program to ArchiCAD; I feel that ArchiCAD is inferior to Revit. Now i know it is not so simple to say that, and the case could be made for the reverse, but for me, with 2yrs experience and a ton of training in Revit, it just makes sense to me.
My question to you would be; what would you do in my shoes?
Given that we are a 4 man firm, only 2 of which are drafting and of those 2 drafters 100% do not like using ArchiCAD to a great extent. Would you recommend that I show the ambition that you had to do a project on your own time in Revit and turn it in to my Principle?

I hope this gives you a glimpse into the mind frame of the Revit users you are trying to convert, it is much like that of Dwight and Sonata.



PS,
In the future, it helps to be kind to new users, and former Revit users, posting on the forums. I have seen and received a lot of rude replies to legitimate questions. (well most of the rude replies i received were deserved) but a little bit of empathy goes a long way to how ppl perceive the program you are supporting.