Published Geometry finds its greatest application in Top Down Design (you'll have to contact your PTC training guru to help you with this very complex concept). I will try to give you a flavor here. Suppose you have an assembly concept that will involve the interaction of 5 separate parts. Traditionally you would have to complete the design of each of these parts and them assemble them together. Also, in the traditional assembly scheme, the parts will reference surfaces of the other parts, creating multiple parent/child relationships. This won't become a problem until you have to change some of the parts. Then it is very likely that the assembly regeneration fails because the necessary reference feature(s) is no longer available (perhaps draft was applied, or a cut was made that eliminated the surface). The solution is to create a 'Skeleton' part. This part only contains datum planes, or axes, or other reference surfaces. Its purpose is to provide a scaffolding onto which you assemble your sub-parts; you can also define a 3D boundary using surfaces to act as a "space claim". (Then, by agreement, parts must remain entirely inside the boundary to be sure no interferences arise.) Since the sub-parts only reference the skeleton, you avoid the parent/child relationships between sub-parts. You can also assemble the sub-parts to the skeleton before any solid geometry is made (if you take care to define the datum interfaces beforehand). Then as you design your sub-parts, they are already in the assembly, properly located, and you can see how everything is fitting together. You can define common datum features in your skeleton and then share these to all the sub-parts using Copy Geom. Here is where Publish Geom really comes in handy. Inside the Skeleton, collect all the references to be shared into a Published Geom feature. Then when in the sub-part, Copy Geom and select the Published Geom feature. If you have multiple designers working in parallel, it is much simpler for them to grab one Pub Geom than try and pick all the correct individual geometry themselves. You really need to consult your local PTC rep and take the Advanced Assembly course to completely grasp this great design style. I simply cannot do it justice here. Good luck.