How to write a knowledge base article
All the information you’ll ever need to contribute to the knowledge base
Creating clear, helpful knowledge base (KB) articles is essential for supporting customers and internal teams. At Teleflora, we use Notion as our authoring tool and HelpKit to publish those articles to a customer-facing website.
This guide walks through how to structure, write, and enhance a knowledge base article in Notion, while ensuring it displays cleanly and correctly in HelpKit.
Why We Don’t Use H1 Headings
Before we start, an important rule:
Do not use H1 headings in Notion.
HelpKit does not display H1s in the table of contents (ToC) on the front-end. To ensure your article is easy to scan and navigate:
- Start with H2 headings as your top-level sections
- Use H3s and H4s for subsections
- Rely on the page title as the “H1 equivalent”
Step 1: Start With a Clear Page Title
Your Notion page title acts as the article’s main heading.
Best practices for titles:
- Be specific and action-oriented
- Match what a user would search for
- Avoid internal jargon if the article is customer-facing
Good examples:
- “How to Update Delivery Preferences”
- “Troubleshooting Order Status Issues”
- “Understanding Delivery Time Windows”
Step 2: Structure Your Article Using Headings (H2–H4)
A strong structure helps readers skim and helps HelpKit generate a useful ToC.
Recommended Heading Hierarchy
Use headings like this:
- H2 – Main sections
- H3 – Subsections within a topic
- H4 – Optional details or edge cases
Example structure:
H2: What This Feature Does
H2:Whento Use ThisOption
H2: Howto Update Delivery Preferences
H3:Step1: Open theOrder Details
H3:Step2:Select a Delivery Window
H2: Common Issuesand Tips
Tips for Headings
- Keep headings short and descriptive
- Avoid punctuation when possible
- Write them so they make sense in the ToC alone
Step 3: Write Scannable, Helpful Body Content
Most users won’t read every word. Make your content easy to consume.
Use Short Paragraphs
- Aim for 1–3 sentences per paragraph
- Break up dense explanations
Use Bulleted and Numbered Lists
Notion renders lists beautifully in HelpKit and they’re ideal for:
- Steps
- Requirements
- Options or variations
Example:
- Orders must be submitted before the cutoff time
- Delivery windows depend on florist availability
- Fees vary by location
Use Plain Language
- Write at a conversational, instructional level
- Avoid unnecessary technical terms
- Explain acronyms on first use
Step 4: Use Notion Callouts for Emphasis
Notion callouts are one of the best ways to highlight important information.
Common Use Cases
- Warnings or limitations
- Helpful tips
- Notes about edge cases
Examples:
- 💡 Tip: Orders placed after 2 PM may be delivered the next business day.
- ⚠️ Note: Same-day delivery is not available on certain holidays.
Keep callouts concise—too many can overwhelm the reader.
Step 5: Add Visuals the Right Way
Images and visuals can dramatically improve understanding.
Best Practices for Images
- Use screenshots only when they add value
- Crop to the relevant area
- Avoid tiny text or cluttered screens
Captions
If context isn’t obvious, add a short caption below the image explaining:
- What the user is seeing
- What they should do next
Step 6: Use Toggle Lists for Optional or Advanced Content
Toggle lists are perfect for:
- FAQs
- Advanced scenarios
- Rare edge cases
- Long explanations that not all users need
Examples:
- “What if the customer requests a specific time?”
- “Why is this option unavailable?”
This keeps the article clean while still thorough.
Step 7: Link to Related Articles
Help users continue their journey by linking to relevant KB articles.
When to Link
- Related setup steps
- Deeper explanations
- Troubleshooting guides
Best practices:
- Use descriptive link text
- Avoid “click here”
- Open links in the same tab (default behavior is fine)
Step 8: End With Helpful Closure
Wrap up the article with one of the following:
- A brief summary
- Next steps
- A pointer to support if the issue isn’t resolved
Example closing:
If you’re still experiencing issues with delivery options, please contact support with the order number and delivery date.
Step 9: Final Quality Checklist
Before publishing, review your article:
- ✅ No H1 headings used
- ✅ Clear H2/H3 structure
- ✅ Headings appear correctly in the ToC
- ✅ Short paragraphs and scannable lists
- ✅ Callouts used intentionally
- ✅ Images are clear and relevant
- ✅ Links work and are helpful
Writing With the Reader in Mind
The best knowledge base articles:
- Answer questions quickly
- Reduce back-and-forth with support
- Feel easy, not overwhelming
By combining Notion’s powerful writing features with thoughtful structure, you ensure your articles look great in HelpKit and genuinely help the people reading them.
Last updated on August 4, 2021