Reaching out to ask how others who have adopted teams have approached bringing in existing documentation, especially existing documentation relevant to the entire team that is buried inside some unmaintained github wiki or google doc.
Our goal is broadly to have SO for Teams as the first place to look when trying to work something out, and then SO for Teams will either (a) hold the answer or (b) have a link to where the answer can be found. We don't intend to migrate everything to SO for teams: eg, it can't replace Google Docs/Sheets, and things that are specific to a particular codebase (eg, "what version of Ruby does this need?") should stay in that codebase.
I'm directly copy/pasting things that are both self-contained and relevant to the entire team (eg "Obtaining access to AWS instances via a Bastion host" or "Training expense approval process").
What strategies have worked for onboarding this content in a way that makes it both searchable and well-presented? Specifically, do people "fake" a question and put the existing content in the first accepted answer, or do you just put the content in the question with the original document title as the question's title?