Date post: | 27-Jan-2015 |
Category: |
Technology |
Upload: | vanessa-turke |
View: | 113 times |
Download: | 1 times |
IA for Drupal
Vanessa TurkeSolution ArchitectImageX Media
what is IA?
Information Architecture (as defined by the IA Institute)
“The art and science of organizing and labeling web sites, intranets, online communities and software to support usability and findability.”
what is the value of IA?
★ The cost of finding information
★ The cost of not finding information
★ The cost of using information
★ The cost of building and managing information systems
★ The value of educating employees and customers
★ The value of creating knowledge networks
★ The value of strengthening brand
★ The value of fostering innovation
http://iainstitute.org/en/about/our_mission.php
Carolyn Chandler & Unger, Russ. Project Guide to UX Design, A: For user experience designers in the field or in the making: New Riders, the Voices That Matter series, 2009
IA components
1. Organization systems - How we categorize information
2. Labeling systems - How we represent information
3. Navigation systems - How we move through information
4. Searching systems - How we search information
Peter Morville, Louis Rosenfeld. Information Architecture for the World Wide Web O'Reilly, 2006
Carolyn Chandler & Unger, Russ. Project Guide to UX Design, A: For user experience designers in the field or in the making: New Riders, the Voices That Matter series, 2009
process overview
★ Identify the project needs
★ Conduct research
★ Create project strategy
★ Design navigation system
★ Organize, classify & label
★ Create wireframe
identify project needs
★ Type of Organization
★ Type of Website
★ Type of Audience
Carolyn Chandler & Unger, Russ. Project Guide to UX Design, A: For user experience designers in the field or in the making: New Riders, the Voices That Matter series, 2009
organization type
★ Company, Non-profit, etc.
★ Philosophy
★ Process
★ Role of website in their business plan
Carolyn Chandler & Unger, Russ. Project Guide to UX Design, A: For user experience designers in the field or in the making: New Riders, the Voices That Matter series, 2009
website type
1. Brand Presence
2. Marketing Campaign
3. Content Source
4. Task-based application
5. E-Commerce (combines 1-4)
6. E-Learning (combines 3 & 4)
7. Social Network (can combine 1,2,3 & 4)
Carolyn Chandler & Unger, Russ. Project Guide to UX Design, A: For user experience designers in the field or in the making: New Riders, the Voices That Matter series, 2009
audience
★ Customers/Clients/Members
★ Employees/Staff/Internal
★ Competitors
★ ??? (find out)
Carolyn Chandler & Unger, Russ. Project Guide to UX Design, A: For user experience designers in the field or in the making: New Riders, the Voices That Matter series, 2009
conducting research
★ Website Metrics / Analytics
★ Inventory of all site content
★ Stakeholder interviews
★ User testing
★ Environmental scan
http://www.slideshare.net/rhanna/preparing-for-successful-content-management
user profiles/personas
★Fictitious characters created to represent the different user types within a targeted demographic that might use a site or product.
★Personas need stories to make them complete
★Focus on storytelling, and don’t try to represent complete task analysis
http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/personas-and-thehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persona_%28marketing%29
stories for personas
★ Springboard stories: needs and goals
★ Points of pain' stories: barriers to overcome
★ Key scenarios: context for actions
★ Narrative scenarios: what happens and why
★ Design Maps: perceptions, actions and barriers
★ Flow diagrams: actions and decisions
★ Use cases: detailed sequences of actions
http://www.wqusability.com/articles/personas_storytelling.html
story goals
1.Establish a goal and context -Why is the persona using the product now. What will make this interaction successful?
2.Describe the interaction - Stay at a high level and avoid detailed descriptions of the interface.
3.End with the result - What happens as a result of this interaction? What made it a success?
http://www.wqusability.com/articles/personas_storytelling.html
creating a project strategy
“There’s more to it than wireframes, logos, sitemaps, or stationary systems. A good brand is resultant upon aligning an organization’s values realistically and building something around this that resonates and holds value for potential customers”
smashLAB's, Eric Karjaluoto
http://www.slideshare.net/rhanna/preparing-for-successful-content-management
creating a project strategy
1. What is the business goal of the website?
2. What is the mission critical task for a user to complete?
http://www.slideshare.net/rhanna/preparing-for-successful-content-management
information architecture approaches
★ Architecture mirroring real systems
★ Need recognition
★ Self selection
★ Multi-dimensional Architecture
http://webdesignfromscratch.com/website-architecture/information-architecture.php
designing navigational systems
★What is this page about?
★What site is this?
★What are the major sections of this site?
★What major section is this page in?
★What is "up" 1 level from here?
★How do I get to the home page of this site?
★How do I get to the top of this section of the site?
★What does each group of links represent?
http://instone.org/navstress
visitors information needs
★How do I get around this site?
★What’s important and unique about this organization?
★What’s available on this site?
★What’s happening there?
★Do they want my opinion about their site?
★How can I contact a human?
★Any mission critical information for primary users
Ash, Tim. Landing Page Optimization, The Definitive Guide to Testing and Tuning for Conversions: Sybex, Wiley Publishing, Inc. 2008
Peter Morville, Louis Rosenfeld. Information Architecture for the World Wide Web O'Reilly, 2006
assume nothing
“...Let me reassure you that way more of your website visitors just fundamentally don’t ‘get it’ than you’d ever suspect.”
Jeff Sexton, GrokDotCom
assume nothing
Not long ago, Google asked people in New York’s Times Square if they could describe what a ‘browser’ was...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4MwTvtyrUQ
eschew obfuscation (make navigation titles easy)
★Research industry terms
★Highlight every industry term, phrase, or concept in your site content
★Interview random people on the street about them
★Ask repeated ‘why’ questions regarding your industry terms and concepts
★Come up with answers a 10-year old would understand
http://www.grokdotcom.com/2009/08/07/im-not-an-idiot-but-i-play-one-on-online-and-so-should-you/
website navigation models
★ List of contents★ Breadcrumb trail★ Horizontal top bar★ Tabs★ 2-level top (bar or tabs)★ Top and side bars★ Buttons bar with revealed drop-down★ Multiple-level tree nav★ Paging
http://webdesignfromscratch.com/website-architecture/navigation-models.php
sitemaps
understanding ways users approach a task
★ Known-item
★ Exploratory
★ Don’t know what you need to know
★ Re-finding
http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/four_modes_of_seeking_information_and_how_to_design_for_them
known item
★ Searchbox
★ A-Z indexes of terms
★ Quick links
★ Navigation
exploratory
★ Navigation
★ Related information
★ Contextual links
★ Search
don’t know what you need to know
★ Straightforward answers
★ Summaries
★ Outlines of Services
★ List of latest news, articles, blogs
★ FAQs
★ Related/contextual links in content body
re-finding
★ Wishlists (amazon.com)
★ Bookmarking
★ Quick links
★ User-based
consulting analytics
organizing analytics information
http://www.alistapart.com/articles/taking-the-guesswork-out-of-design/
create attention map to prioritize page elements
http://webdesignfromscratch.com/web-design/attention-map.phphttp://www.alistapart.com/articles/taking-the-guesswork-out-of-design/
sketching out initial layout
http://37signals.com/svn/posts/466-sketching-with-a-sharpie
organizing, classifying & labeling
★ Identify content types
★ Identify attributes & values
★ Identify relationships
★ Identify terms & vocabulary
http://www.agiledata.org/essays/dataModeling101.html
(Presentation Slide Content Type)
title
Body
Resource
content types documented
roles and permissions documented
1. User Research*
2. Site Strategy*
3. Technology Strategy
4. Content Strategy*
5. Abstract Design*
6. Technology Implementation
7. Content Production
8. Concrete Design
9. Project Management
http://www.adaptivepath.com/ideas/essays/archives/000242.php
The Nine Pillars of Sucessful Web Teams
thank you!
Vanessa Turkehttp://www.imagexmedia.com/about/team/vanessa-turke
Presentation Resources:http://www.vanessaturke.net/ia-ux