Brand-driven content strategy complements user-centred design to use prioritised communication goals to focus new features, content types, and the workflow to create and maintain them. In this workshop, you’ll get up to speed on the philosophy, questions, tools, and exercises to implement brand-driven content strategy. We’ll use BrandSort™ to conduct a hands-on exercise to prioritise communication goals and develop a message architecture—ideal whether you maintain content for the web, mobile apps, social media, offline experiences, or any imagined output of your CMS. Eager for more efficient engagements? You’ll discover how a brand attributes card sort can help you identify potential pitfalls and points of disagreement while you improve organisational alignment. Then we’ll discuss the content opportunities a gap analysis can reveal when we use the message architecture as a metric of quality in a content audit.
Join this workshop to build out your content strategy toolkit:
Learn how—and why—to establish a hierarchy of communication goals in a message architecture with the hands-on BrandSort exercise.
Discuss the right questions to ask—and how to ask them—to minimise distracting, off-brand features, like the blog no one has time to update.
Gain additional tools to keep your projects on track, on time, and on budget
Presented at UX London in London, #UXLondon, on May 24, 2017.
Labour Day Celebrating Workers and Their Contributions.pptx
Driving Your Product's Content Strategy with a Message Architecture at UX London 2017
1. 1 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
DRIVING YOUR PRODUCT’S
CONTENT STRATEGY WITH
A MESSAGE ARCHITECTURE
UX London | May 24, 2017 | #UXLondon
Margot Bloomstein
@mbloomstein
2. 2 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Volume and variety are the enemies
of focus—at least in the first release.
2 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8. If we want progress, we need
boundaries, expectations, and
guidelines.
12. 12 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Because we all want the same thing,
but content keeps getting in the way.
(CC) http://www.flickr.com/photos/slworking
Content requires time
16. 16 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Content strategy lives
in the tradeoffs.
17. 17 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
What is content strategy?
Planning for the creation,
aggregation, and governance of
content that’s useful, usable,
and appropriate to an experience.
18. 18 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Message
architecture
Content
audit
Content
types
Content
model
Editorial style
guidelines
and calendar
22. 22 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
More like Apple’s message architecture
Confident but approachable; accessible
Simple
• Minimal detail
• Streamlined and anticipatory
Inviting, friendly
• Supportive but not fawning
23. 23 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Message architecture
Cheeky
• Witty and fun
• Young without being childish
Customer oriented and responsive
• Approachable, friendly, and empowering
Helpful
• Accessible
26. 26 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
From: Little MOO | Print Robot <noreply@moo.com>
Subject: MOO | Order 0629312615 | Confirmed
Hello
I'm Little MOO - the bit of software that will be managing your order with
moo.com. It will shortly be sent to Big MOO, our print machine who will print it
for you in the next few days. I'll let you know when it's done and on its way to
you.
Remember, I'm just a bit of software. So, if you have any questions regarding
your order please first read our Frequently Asked Questions or contact customer
services (who are real people!)
Thanks,
Little MOO, Print Robot
27. 27 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Cheeky
• Witty and fun
• Young without being childish
Customer-oriented, responsive
• Approachable and friendly
• Empowering
Helpful
• Accessible
Message architecture vs. brand values
Design
Innovation
Community
Excellence
28. 28 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
What’s a message architecture?
A hierarchy of communication goals
that reflects a common vocabulary
29. 29 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
What’s a message architecture?
A hierarchy of communication goals
that reflects a common vocabulary—
versus brand values, which are the
ethics a company espouses
30. 30 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
First things first.
Why add video testimonials, develop
help content, continue blogging, conduct
a content audit, or email customers…
if you don’t know what’s most important
to communicate?
31. If you don’t know
what to communicate,
how will you know if
you succeed?
33. 33 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Serious, technical, and rigorous?
• Annual reports
• Articles on your site
• Articles on other sites
• Blogs
• Books
• Branded tools
• Case studies
• Digital magazines
• eBooks
• Email newsletters
• Facebook posts
• Games
• In-person events
• Infographics
• Licensed/syndicated
content
• LinkedIn posts
• Microsites
• Mobile apps
• Online presentations
• Podcasts
• Print magazines
• Print newsletters
• Research reports
• Twitter
• Videos
• Virtual conferences
• Webinars/webcasts
• Whitepapers
Excerpted from Content Marketing Institute & MarketingProfs Content Marketing Survey
Not all channels fit all goals.
34. 34 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Engaged, fun, and relevant?
• Annual reports
• Articles on your site
• Articles on other sites
• Blogs
• Books
• Branded tools
• Case studies
• Digital magazines
• eBooks
• Email newsletters
• Facebook posts
• Games
• In-person events
• Infographics
• Licensed/syndicated
content
• LinkedIn posts
• Microsites
• Mobile apps
• Online presentations
• Podcasts
• Print magazines
• Print newsletters
• Research reports
• Twitter
• Videos
• Virtual conferences
• Webinars/webcasts
• Whitepapers
Excerpted from Content Marketing Institute & MarketingProfs Content Marketing Survey
Not all channels fit all goals.
35. What do you want to communicate?
What channels do that best?
What channels do you use now?
36. How could we prove this is a car not
like anything else out there? It’s a small
car, but it’s premium. You get a Porsche
911 ride for a fifth of the cost. It’s got
history… but in Europe.
You need to give people content to give
them history.”
37. 37 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
A little thing with big impact.
38. 38 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
A little thing with big impact.
39. 39 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Message architecture
Premium technology
• Assertive; ready to perform as a driver’s car
• Proactive and supportive of spontaneity
Classic design
• Experienced and savvy
Cheekiness
• Smart, “punny,” hip
• Fun, gleeful
43. 43 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
If these emails are boring you
and you don’t mind missing out
on all the lip-smackin’ stuff
we’ll be sending in the future,
simply send a message to owner-
unsubscribe@insiders.miniusa.com
and include “Unsubscribe” and
your favorite fruit in the
subject field.
47. 47 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
What’s a message architecture?
A hierarchy of communication goals
that reflects a common vocabulary
48. 48 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
What’s a message architecture?
A hierarchy of communication goals
that reflects a common vocabulary—
concrete, shared terminology,
not abstract concepts
55. • Engage in a tangible way
• Encourage conversation
“What do you mean?
“Are these concepts synonymous?”
• Identify pain points and debate:
“How can we be innovative and traditional?”
• Force prioritization
• Encourage ownership
• Prevent seagulling
56. 56 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
• Who we are
• Who we’re not
• Who we’d like to be
Go with your gut!
Step 1: categorize
57. 57 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Who we are Who we’d like to be
Be aspirational. What needs to change?
Step 2: filter
58. 58 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
• Form groups: what goes together?
• Prioritize the goals or groups
• Tell the story of those aspirations
Step 3: group and prioritize
59. 59 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
• Follow up on hesitation and grimaces
• Let participants resolve their own questions
• Expose nuances in meaning & connotation
“So ‘traditional’ but not ‘conservative’—why?”
“You hesitated adding ‘modern.’ How come?”
“Are ‘strategic’ and ‘tactical’ opposites?”
Dig in to ensure clarity
60. • Choose content types to manifest the
message architecture
• Gain standards for a qualitative audit
• Prioritize CMS changes and metadata to
support content types
• Reallocate budget and resources across
channels
62. 62 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Premium
• Lindt embodies quality, in product, marketing, & company interactions
• Approachable: Quality indulgences are more accessible
• Trusted in brand and quality
Empowering
• Entrepreneurial: Innovating, championing individuals and successes
• Market driving: strategic and proactive
• Professional and consistent through experience and being responsive
Community-minded
• Engaged with the Lindt family
• Customer-oriented
• Socially conscious
Message architecture
63. 63 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Elegant layout and typography
• Spread-to-spread sightlines and flow
• Wider borders
• Layered background images
• Italic titles with initial drop caps
64. 64 #UXLondon | @mbloomstein
Imagery of individual impact
• People engaged with product and service—
not just product or just results of service
• Diversity of role, gender, ethnicity, and age