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A short discussion about Information Architecture

A short discussion about Information Architecture. What we will cover. Organization Navigation Labeling Searching and Browsing Conceptual Design. Organizing Information. how we organize our information tells the world about who we are, what we are, what we stand for

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A short discussion about Information Architecture

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  1. 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  2. A short discussion about Information Architecture 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  3. What we will cover • Organization • Navigation • Labeling • Searching and Browsing • Conceptual Design 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  4. Organizing Information • how we organize our information tells the world about who we are, what we are, what we stand for • challenge of ever-growing WWW: more freedom to publish information, greater responsibility in organizing information 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  5. Organizing Information • classification systems are built on language which is often ambiguous (not clear) • challenge of putting together information in different formats: text, graphics, sound, etc. • as information providers our view of how information should be organized may differ with those of the users 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  6. Organizational Schemes • alphabetical • chronological • geographical • topical • task-oriented • audience-specific • metaphor-driven • hybrid schemes 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  7. Organizational Structures • heirarchy: top-down approach • relational database model: bottom-up approach 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  8. Designing Navigation Systems Provide Context • it should be clear to users that they are in your site • indicate to user here location within the heirarchy of the site Provide Flexibility • allow user to jump across branches (lateral navigation), or • between multiple levels (vertical navigation) 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  9. Types of Navigation Systems • Heirarchical • Global • Local • Adhoc 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  10. Navigation Elements • navigation bars • frames • pull down menus • remote navigation elements like: table of contents, index, site map, guided tour 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  11. Labeling • labels are needed to represent large groups of information effectively and efficiently without taking up too much of a page’s vertical space • can be textual (use words) or iconic (use graphics) • used as links to information in other pages • used as headings that break up and identify groups of information on the same page ( 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  12. Example of labels • Main, Main Page, Home, Home Page • Search, Find, Browse, Search/Browse, Site Map, Contents, Table of Contents, Index • Contact, Conctact Us, Contact Webmaster, Feedback • Help, FAQ, Frequently Asked Questions • News, What’s New • About, About Us, About <organization’s name>, Who We Are 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  13. Why use labels? • users’ time is precious • we want our users to feel that we are reliable • we want the site’s labels to speak the same language as our users (this is real challenge in Asia!) 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  14. A good labeling systems should be planned. 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  15. Some Tips • make your labels descriptive and differentiated from one another (example global vis-à-vis international) • use the same label consistently across your the site • scope notes can be helpful • study how other sites use labels • consult existing thesauri • consult intended users 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  16. Searching or Browsing? • Users need to find information in our site more easily • Confusion over searchability and findability • Some many users want to search a site, others just want to browse 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  17. Users have different needs • some users don’t have time to browse • some users serach when they don’t necessarily need know what they are looking for 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  18. Users search for information differently • known-item searching: they know exactly what they are looking for • existence searching: they know what they want but don’t know how to describe it • explanatory searching: they know how to phrase their question but don’t know exactly what they are hoping to find, they are just exploring • research: they want everything that’s available on a given topic 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  19. Not all users are looking for the same thing. Anticipate the most common types of needs and ensure that these needs are met. 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  20. Search Engines, when to build them • when the site has grown in volume of informaton and in complexity of organization • if the site contains highly dynamic content, e.g. updated on a daily basis • when you are ready with the responsibility of designing, configuring and maintaining a search engine 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  21. Searching and Browsing • users often alternate between searching and browsing • users often don’t know if they need to search or to browse 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  22. Conceptual Design Designing our Web site involves answering the following: • How should the information be organized? • How does the heirarchy look like? • How will the information be labeled at the highest level of heirarchy? • Are we implementing searching or browsing or both? 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

  23. Collaborative Methods for Designing • Using White Boards and Flip Charts to illustrate the architecture • Using metaphors to communicating complex ideas and generating enthusiasm • Using scenarios • Using Architecture Blueprints • Using Architectural Page Mockups • Using design Sketches • Using Web-based Prototypes 1999 Asian Women's Network Training Workshop

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