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Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

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Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens Joe Pairman
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Page 1: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Joe Pairman

Page 2: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Who am I?

Was~ DITA for user education:

– business case– information model, – CCMS implementation– Training

~ Mobile content delivery platform

~ Localization / web delivery

~ Internal knowledge management

Now~ Structured content

consulting and coaching~ Requirements gathering

& solution design~ Pilots &

proofs of concept~ Taxonomy

implementations

Page 3: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

What this session’s for~ If you already have a taxonomy, how it

could work harder for you

~ If starting to develop a taxonomy, why to look deeper than simple labelling

~ If interested in developing a taxonomy, some pitfalls to avoid

Page 4: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Typical taxonomy project

Page 5: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

CIPD’s DITA content

Page 6: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

CIPD needed to use metadata effectively~ For customers:

– better website navigation– discovery of relevant research and resources– searches, external & internal

~ For authors and editors:– reuse– consistent message– standardized terminology

Page 7: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Abstract metadata framework

Page 8: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Applied metadata framework

Page 9: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy

Page 10: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Using taxonomy values to populate metadata for a map

Page 11: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Patrick Lambe’s definition of taxonomy

~ A classification system [grouping related items]

~ Semantic[readable terms]

~ A knowledge map [reflects the domain]

Page 12: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

And what they’re good atTaxonomy structures

Page 13: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

The simplest controlled vocabulary: a list

Appfacebookflashlightfm_radiofootprintsfriend_streamphotosgmail...

Page 14: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

App taxonomy —started from a simple list~ Drove content management

Page 15: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

App taxonomy —started from a simple list~ Drove content management~ Powered content improvement

– categorize search queries and support calls into the relevant apps

– compare the subject balance from customers with the effort spent on content development per app

Page 16: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Hierarchical-type structures: the backbone of many sites

Page 17: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Hierarchical-type structures: the backbone of many sites

Page 18: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A hierarchy, in the strict sense

Page 19: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A hierarchy, in the strict sense

Page 20: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A strict hierarchyprobably isn’twhat you need

A kind of wall plug

Not a kind of England

Page 21: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A tree works well if the relationshipsare clear

Kind of (generic > specific)

Part of (larger > smaller)

Page 22: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A thesaurus accommodates different terms

Page 23: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A thesaurus accommodates different terms

Page 24: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A thesaurus accommodates different terms

Page 25: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A thesaurus accommodates different terms- and specifies normative forms

Page 26: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A thesaurus accommodates different terms- and specifies normative forms

Page 27: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A thesaurus can guide content

Page 28: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A thesaurus can guide content

Page 29: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

A thesaurus also allows associative relationships

Page 30: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Terms aren’t the only points of disagreement

Page 31: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Tree structures invite debate

Is capacity or RPM more important? Etc…

Page 32: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Facets stop the arguments?

Page 33: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Focusing and shaping content

When taxonomy exposes a mess

Page 34: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Possible drawbacks of facets~ Content not consistent (so gaps)~ May overlap~ Can reveal a lack of focus

Page 35: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Resist the urge to build complex organizational structures (straightaway)

Page 36: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Find the backbone of meaning~ What’s actually important?~ Do your groupings work for users?

Page 37: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Find the backbone of meaning~ What’s actually important?~ Do your groupings work for users?

Page 38: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Find the backbone of meaning~ What’s actually important?~ Do your groupings work for users?

~ Real-life utility is more important than structural purity

Page 39: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy to create the right content in the first place~ Extension of HTC app taxonomy to make

contextual-ish support more relevant

Page 40: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy to create the right content in the first place~ Too many results

Page 41: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Matrix to create the right content in the first place~ Extension of app taxonomy to make

contextual support more relevantApp Has hub topic?calendar yescamera nofacebook yesflashlight yesfm_radio no...

Page 42: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Matrix to create the right content in the first place~ Extension of app taxonomy to make

contextual support more relevantApp Has hub topic?calendar yescamera nofacebook yesflashlight yesfm_radio no...

Page 43: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Matrix to create the right content in the first place~ Extension of app taxonomy to make

contextual support more relevantHub topic

Page 44: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Matrices often bring clarity— e.g. taxonomy of info needs

~ VeryrelevantwhenthinkingaboutDITAtopictypesandstructuralspecialization

Page 45: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy to shape the entire content set~ Medical device manufacturer’s taxonomy

dictated level of granularity– Couldn’t stop at high-level concepts, but– individual components

(e.g. on a PCB) too detailed– assemblies & sub-assemblies

were correct level of detail

Page 46: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Knowledge maps —not just for novices~ Every new product or fresh idea

is an unfamiliar domain

Page 47: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy is a knowledge map~ For each chunk:

– For (purpose/audience)– Type (overview, troubleshooting, tutorial…)– Subject matter– You need it because… (you have x component)– The risks of not doing it include… (hazard)

Page 48: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy is a knowledge map~ For each chunk:

– For (purpose/audience)– Type (overview, troubleshooting, tutorial…)– Subject matter– You need it because… (you have x component)– The risks of not doing it include… (hazard)

~ Rule of thumb: if you can’t tag it, either:– It shouldn’t be a separate chunk, or– It shouldn’t be there at all

Page 49: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy is a knowledge map~ For each chunk:

– For (purpose/audience)– Type (overview, troubleshooting, tutorial…)– Subject matter– You need it because… (you have x component)– The risks of not doing it include… (hazard)

~ Rule of thumb: if you can’t tag it, either:– It shouldn’t be a separate chunk, or– It shouldn’t be there at all

~ Tagging the same as the parent chunk (e.g. a map) doesn’t count!

Page 50: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy is a knowledge map~ For each chunk:

– For (purpose/audience)– Type (overview, troubleshooting, tutorial…)– Subject matter– You need it because… (you have x component)– The risks of not doing it include… (hazard)

~ Rule of thumb: if you can’t tag it, either:– It shouldn’t be a separate chunk, or– It shouldn’t be there at all

~ Tagging the same as the parent chunk (e.g. a map) doesn’t count! Avoid duplicating

any inferable info!

Page 51: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Tools and taxonomy

Page 52: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy exposes the limits of our tools too~ Excel can only get you so far~ Simple CMS taxonomy support may be:

– Lists– Global trees, without distinguishing info type

or metadata field

Page 53: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy management tools~ Essential for thesaurus structures and any

relationships beyond broader < > narrower– enforce rules– accommodate related terms, non-preferred

terms, scope notes

~ Pretty handy for simple trees too

Page 54: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

CCMS: ingest or integrate?~ How faithfully can CCMS store relationships?

– SKOS, OWL, are good words to hear…– “Subject Scheme” can mean many things

~ How easy is it for authors to pick the right terms and apply them correctly?– display scope notes?– enforce appropriate controlled vocabularies, e.g.

for separate facets or lists?

~ Or, how easy is it to fully integrate an external tool?

Page 55: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Automatic tag suggestions– save effort for authors– also categorize search queries and call logs– check coverage

Page 56: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Not to forget delivering your reshaped content nicely…

Page 57: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

And looking ahead to the next phase of web delivery~ Source DITA ~ Semantic Web

markup

Page 58: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

And looking ahead to the next phase of web delivery —applications built across sites

Page 59: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Conclusion

Page 60: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Taxonomy’s harsh lens must shape content for the better

Users need Users may benefit from… Content is improved by…Groupings that make sense

DIY groupings (facets) • Correctly prioritizing subject areas

• Avoiding contradictionsA search featurethat works

A search feature that educates on preferred (or preferable) terms

• Using terminology consistently, but also…

• …including a range of familiar terms

A coherent overall structure

A structure that reflects the domain (a knowledge map)

• Filling in gaps in coverage• Making sense of the domain

Page 61: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Thoughts? Questions?Get in touch:@[email protected]

Page 62: Taxonomy: a powerful magnifier with a harsh lens

Thank You!Remember to register for the IDEAS Conference


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