3. What we will cover…
• What is Information Architecture?
• Core Tools & Techniques
• Applying these approaches
• Related Approaches/Methods
4. Information Architecture
• Definition – “The art and science of
organizing and labelling information spaces
(including web sites, intranets, mobile apps,
and software) to support findability and
usability.”
• Categorisation – the grouping / clumping of
content
• Labelling – how you label those categories
• Navigation – providing users with a set of
paths to help them find way through site, i.e.
cross-linking to allow users to easily find
information based on their own mental model
• Search – allow the entry of user-defined
query and present matching results, with
special results highlighted
5. IA: Where Does Fit in the Design Process?
Iterative process
Discovery
Definition/Conceptual
Design
IA Design
Visual Design
Handoff-Implementation
Integrated with content
development, interaction
design, graphic design, usability
The Elements of User Experience,
Jesse James Garrett, http://jjg.net
6. A User-Centred Design (UCD) process
Concept/Plan Design
• Contextual Analysis • Wireframing
• User Profiling/Persona • Prototyping
development • Co-Design Workshops
• User Needs Analysis • Competitive Design
• IA Analysis
Live Support Evaluate
• Customer Surveys • Usability Testing
• Analytics • Expert Evaluation
• A/B Testing • Eye-tracking
• Multi-variate Testing • Accessibility Audits
7. IA & Findability
• The ‘backbone’ of a website
• Critical for a good user experience
• Navigation labels can be seen as stepping
stones
Provide ‘Scent of Information’
• Clear ‘scent’ gives users continued confidence
• If not, they either search, give up, or assume
the information is not there…
Without a clearly labelled and meaningful IA, much of the work
on the presentation and aesthetics will be unsuccessful
8. How Users Look for Information 1
• Finding known items e.g. What is/who was…
Supported by: Search/A –Z
• Exploring – “It’s kind of like this…”
Supported by: Concise and meaningful trigger words/related links
• Refining and narrowing – “I want a recipe with smoked
salmon in it…”
Supported by: Filters/Faceted Navigation
• Comparing
Need a good understanding of what criteria are important and
decision making process – tipping point
9. How Users Look for Information 2
• The broad picture
Support: High level overviews
• In detail
Broad overview and then increasing detail – layers of information
• Discovering unknown things… “the unknown unknowns”
Things you didn’t know existed, but are interested in
Related to exploration, research and getting the broader picture
Serendipitous finding…
“You want X but need Y” or “You want X but need X, Y, Z and A, B and C too”
Support: Overviews, Related Links, Effective Trigger words/A-Z
10. Benefits
• Reduced search times/increased task success
• Reduced frustration and increased customer satisfaction
• Decreased maintenance costs and longer website lifespan
• Better alignment between your business goals and website
• Fewer calls to customer service
• Better search engine performance
• Improved brand value, loyalty and repeat business
• Enhanced competitive position
11. What we will cover…
• What is Information Architecture?
• Core Tools & Techniques
• Applying these approaches
• Related Approaches/Methods
12. Core Tools & Techniques
• Card Sorting
Bottom Up
Classification and similarity/proximity
Open vs. Closed
Exploratory
• Category Testing (Tree Testing)
Top Down
Browsing and recognition
More representative of users looking for information
Validation
• Expert Methods
Heuristic Evaluation
13. #1 Card Sorting - Offline
All epa gin l B ss ion
R ana ocia sne lus
H ua en ns a Ma nc ur
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M ti-s les l Inc
Eq esid tio and ena vio
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nv nd inte s
ub Ma D em ting nc
ie
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R oca irs g T eha
Fr IH P ing and olv let na
An ome cia
O lin Dow lica inte ers ent s
+++ Anti-social Behaviour
an
Fin
+++ Managing Tenancies
Syncaps/Excel Spreadsheets +++ Repairs and Maintenance
nc y
H
tio na it
+++ Allocations and lettings
e
iv
+++ Resident Involvement
tI
+++ Equality and Diversity
Fr IH R e O ook ad s
n
C us lity
+++ Housing Maintenance
C ee es rde sto s
+++ CIH Publications
C IH p Pol ear r F re
B nlo
C IH P oli icy ch orm
ns
+++ Free Downloads
o
tio
+++ Online Bookstore
ca
O ee
bli
+++ Offline Order Form
ffli e
Pu
n
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n
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Se onfe ult C tice
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ha ing Ap en s
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+++ News
Best use: Best approach if time and budget allow (Formative)
Advantages: Thorough, Detailed, Qualitative Feedback, Moderated
Disadvantages: Cost, Time (Collection and Analysis)
Caution - No Instant IA!
14. #2 – Card Sorting - Online
Websort/Optimal Sort/UserZoom
Best use: Smaller Studies, Limited time and Budget, Back up Offline Studies.
Advantages: Fast, cheap, online access, conducted remotely.
Disadvantages: limited screen space, understanding process, no verbal
feedback
15. Categorisation Exercise Proof
1. Select a specific item / destination
2. Offer set of categories where it may be located
3. Record success / failure in placing the item
4. Reasons for failure - Item name, group label/structure?
Level 2
Level 1
Level 3
Level 4
Can be tested in a number of ways:
- Online – Naviewapp
- Offline – Category Testing or through basic wireframes
16. #3 Tree/Category Testing - Offline
Best use: Best Approach if time and budget allow (Validation)
Advantages: Detailed Analysis for each level, Qualitative Feedback.
Disadvantages: Cost, Time (Set-up and Data Collection).
17. #4 Tree/Category Testing - Online
NaviewApp/Tree Jack/UserZoom
Best use: Quick testing with many users online (Best as backup to Offline).
Advantages: Fast, relatively cheap, online access, conducted remotely.
Disadvantages: Software restrictions, understanding process, no verbal
feedback.
18. #5 Heuristic Evaluations
Best use: Limited time and budget
Advantages: Fast, relatively cheap, expert method, useful for competitive
studies
Disadvantages: No user feedback
19. IA Best Practice Principles – Some Heuristics
• Collocation | Is similar content placed together? Is it easy for users to understand
how different areas are related?
• Differentiation | Is different content placed apart? Do the navigation labels
clearly indicate those differences?
• Information scent | Are the labels and headings sufficiently descriptive for
users– “What is this/Am I going in the right direction”?
• Scope | Can the user understand the breadth and depth of content on a topic? Can
users get a sense of how long their search for information may take?
• Multiple access paths | Users think about content in different ways – does
the IA support these different routes to the same content/related content?
• Appropriate structure | Is the organising principle of the site obvious and
useful ? Does it match user’s mental models? Does it support differences in information
seeking behaviours?
20. What we will cover…
• What is Information Architecture?
• Core Tools & Techniques
• Applying these approaches
• Related Approaches/Methods
21. The (Ideal) IA Design Process
User Research
Wireframing
Identify Users
Wireframes illustrating IA
Key User Journeys
and key journeys
User Needs
1 - Card Sorting Validated IA
3 - Category Testing
Offline Card Sort Refined Labels &
Validate IA Grouping
Online Card Sort
Key User Journeys
2 - IA Workshop Consolidated Interim
Interim IA Report & Discuss Card Sort IA
Results & Interim IA
Alignment with content and
domain experts
22. The Problem of Large Sites 1
• How to carry out analysis?
Potential Challenges
• Lots of content (000’s of lines/items)
• Deep hierarchies
• Constraints
Card Sort: 100 Cards in an hour/Less Offline
Category Testing: 20-25 Topics in 30 mins.
Project Time and Budget
23. The Problem of Large Sites 2
• Solutions
Limit Depth e.g. L1-L3
Limit Scope: Exclude lower priority areas and/or focus on
areas supporting user journeys
Priority Content and known problem areas
Multiple Card Sorts – Lower Levels First
Multiple user groups? Focus on content for each group
plus some general – overlap
• Topics selected should ideally be 50-60% of the
content at the levels selected for analysis
Increasing chance of spurious or invalid results if less.
24. What we will cover…
• What is Information Architecture?
• Core Tools & Techniques
• Applying these approaches
• Related Approaches/Methods
25. Some Related Concepts/Methods
• Content Inventory/Audit
• Controlled Vocabularies
• Faceted Navigation
Content Inventory/Audit
Essential groundwork
Can be significant
Depending on requirements best carried out by client
26. Controlled Vocabulary / Thesaurus
Communications industries
UF: Video recording industry
Broader term UF: Printing industry
Employing UF: Publishing industry
people UF: Sound recording industry
UF: Telecommunications industry
BT: Business sectors
Hierarchical
RT: Music
Variant RT: Advertising
Variant term Equivalence Preferred Equivalence
term RT: Media and the press
term
Employment RT: Visual arts
legislation Employment Work RT: e-Commerce
law regulations RT: Films and film making
RT: Electronics industry
Hierarchical RT: Information and communication
technology
Associative Associative RT: Internet
Narrower Terms RT: Postal services
Related Related RT: Telephone services
term Disability discrimination term RT: Printing and copying services
laws, dismissal & notice
Industrial Wage Board From IPSV
periods, employee UF = Used For
tribunals
rights, working hours, equal BT = Broader Term
opportunities … RT = Related Term
NT = Narrower Term
27. Faceted Navigation/Search 1
• Traditionally two search models
Navigational - based on hierarchical taxonomy
Direct search
• Faceted Search/Navigation
Elements classified on multiple dimensions
Access using multiple filters
Filter order flexible – not pre-determined
28. Faceted Navigation/Search 2
• Info sought has multiple different dimensions
Book – Author, Subject, Publisher
Now Common in Online Shops
• Simple Classifications
Ranganathan’s Colon: 5 facets – Personality, Matter,
Energy, Space & Time
Bliss Bibliographic: 13 Facets – including Entity, Property,
Material, Process, Operation, Product
32. How to make a Faceted IA – Quick Overview
• Domain Sampling - Collect a representative sample of all
entities e.g. Books.
• Entity Listing – Break down descriptions, sentences and
phrases into basic concepts.
• Facet Creation – Examine concepts and see what high level
categories appear across all entities e.g. Publishing Date,
Author, Publisher etc.
• Facet Arrangement – What is order (terms within facets)?
Test and decide CV.
• Primary Facet – Select.
• Revise, Test & Maintain – Terminology changes/New
terminology/Research.
33. Some Useful Resources
Web Resources:
• IA Institute - http://iainstitute.org/
• Boxes & arrows - http://www.boxesandarrows.com/
• Interaction Design Association - IXDA - http://www.ixda.org/
35. Thank You
Ross Philip
Principal User Experience Consultant
User Vision
55 North Castle Street
Edinburgh
EH2 3QA
T: 0131 225 0853
E: ross@uservision.co.uk
W: www.uservision.co.uk
Notes de l'éditeur
Just a list to start this section off – prob not required in the final presentation
Have updated images of these to put in from recent work – they look a bit more up to date – Look in Actuaries Category Testing folder