Archive for the ‘information architecture’ Category

Multi-site audience grid design

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Multi-site audience grid

This diagram might not make a great deal of sense without the context of what the sites are about or what the audience types are but I don’t think I’ve seen a diagram showing audiences in this way before so I wanted to share it.

Problem:

In an effort to clarify the requirements for a group of sites, I’ve created this diagram to address an assumed need to completely cater for a large number of audiences on numerous sites and therefore the replication of vast amounts of content on each property.

Solution:

I reviewed the audiences to understand their objectives and discovered there were in fact distinct needs on each site for different audience types. While audiences required detailed information for specific tasks on each site, content overviews would be sufficient for other site sections. I considered that through external links or search engines a person might find themselves on a site with overview, rather than detailed, information about their topic of interest so clear links will be provided so they can fulfil their goals at the site best suited to their task.

This grid allows me to:

  • define a solution to provide content to audiences in the most appropriate setting;
  • clearly see which personas and user journeys to focus on for each individual site as well as the movement between sites;
  • see a simplified content structure for each site;
  • reduce the amount of time spent on content maintenance (minor changes will happen on the primary audience sites only, major changes require a small adjustment across a number of sites + larger changes on the primary audience sites).

Although this example diagram shows 5 primary audiences for a single site, I hope you agree that that’s much more comfortable than 10+!

(The diagram was created using Konigi’s free wireframe stencils for OmniGraffle)

Recent reads – using data

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

The Birth (And Death) of Market Research: Why Design Research Will Prevail (Sam Ladner)

This article suggests that summary statistics relied on by market research companies are no longer relevant and qualitative research of the long tail is where the money’s at:

  • “Design research uncovers how long-tail niches develop and what differentiates them.”
  • “…design research is about knowing what to build as well as evaluating the prototype.”

When Data Gets Up Close and Personal (Stephen Anderson)

A good contemplative piece about tracking performance and creating feedback cycles. As an example, Stephen has considered how you could make a “game” out of email by considering motivating factors and presentation of progress.

  • “What we’re really talking about is setting up systems whereby individuals can (1) see in a tangible way (2) reflect on, and (3) learn from their past behaviors.”
  • “Get creative with how you represent the data– our brains will thank you for that with extra attention.”

The 4 Big Myths of Profile Pictures (OkTrends – Christian)

Well… the post is about dating site profile pictures, but I think that it’s a good showcase for data analysis. They’ve done extensive research and they’re using it to give advice to their users = users get more successful results from the site = spreading the word to friends = more money for the business.

The 2 in 100 who might matter most – your core web audience (Seb Chan)

Seb Chan from Sydney’s Powerhouse Museum provides an example of how he looks deeper in to the museum’s site traffic data to realise that 2% of people are visiting the site 10 or more times in a quarter.

  • “Whilst we all like the big figures of casual visitors we get to our websites many institutions, having flirted with social media, we are beginning to realise that casual visitors, much like casual visitors through the door of a museum, aren’t so useful for building sustained co-creative relationships with.”
  • “This 2.10% is one that needs a lot more analysis as does the ‘5 or more’ category. How do they arrive at our site? What are they looking for? What do they spend most time looking at?”

Analysis Ninjas: Move Beyond The Top Ten. Find Love (/Insights) (Avinash Kaushik)

  • “You know what is the one thing stopping you from finding truly actionable insights from your web data? Web analytics gems lie deep in the data and we spend our lives looking at the top ten rows of data.”

This article encourages investigation of the long tails in site traffic data to pin-point opportunities and shows how to make sense of what at first might seem like data overload. Avinash provides examples of how to apply advanced table filtering in Google Analytics, generate tag clouds (I’ve given this a try with a client’s search keyword data and it sprouted some very useful visuals), and how to set up keyword trees with Juice Analytics.

Back to Basics: Tip for exporting rows (Google Analytics blog)

This is a brief tutorial to show that while Google Analytics allows you to export up to 500 rows of data normally,   to export more (eg. all your search keyword terms) you can add &limit=xxxx (where xxxx is a number more than the total number of results) to the URL and then download the CSV to retrieve all the data.

Charting the Beatles (Michael Deal)

Beautiful infographics [swoon] !

Recent reads – accessibility

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Web accessibility myths (Ian Pouncey)

“…open content that is inaccessible to 50% of people is better than content that is never published. Ideally it is published with a license that allows others to take it and convert it to different forms which may be accessible, but this isn’t possible if it only exists in a file on someone’s desktop.”

Testing for Accessibility (The Pennsylvania State University)

Suggested protocols and tools for testing web sites for accessibility.

[Draft] Contacting Organizations about Inaccessible Websites (W3C)

Advice from the W3C Web Accessibility Initiative on how to approach companies with inaccessible web sites and the type of information those companies may need in order to help them make their web sites more accessible.