doing a great job on the web

Post on 18-Oct-2014

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This is a talk I gave at Murdoch Uni. I wasn't sure what to call it, but it basically covers principles of good website work - user research, good IA, great content, setting priorities and maintaining good work

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...or, I couldn’t figure out what to call this

Smart, descriptive title goes here

...but I do know what I’m going to talk about

• What we are trying to do by putting stuff on the web• What we need to think about to do that well• Practical tricks to help do it well

• ...and how we can look after it

About me

• Freelance information architect/interaction designer 9 yrs Complex websites, intranets, business applications Design, strategy, mentoring

• Writer – articles, a book and a gazillion pages of web copy Writing a book about card sorting - due soon

• Teacher - workshops on IA, interaction design, web content, web stuff i.e. I talk too much

What I’ve been spending too much time on...

Why we do this...

• Helping people make decisions

• Helping them do tasks more efficiently

• Letting them do it in their own time

• Allowing them to do it their own way

People need to

1. Find 2. Understand 3. Take action

Finding

Finding

• What do people need to find?

User research

• Dot points

User research methods

Organise the content

Create paths to information

Understanding

The knowledge gap

http://www.uie.com/articles/design_intuitive/

Trick 1: Write to people, not about you

• Humans are mostly selfish• We don’t care how awesome you are• We don’t buy, hire or make decisions because you are

great• We make decisions based on what will make us feel great

Being noticed Being recognised for doing well Feeling like we have achieved something good Winning

Kathy Sierra said it best…

http://headrush.typepad.com/

Trick 1: Write to people, not about you

• Figure out what will make the reader feel great• Write that

• Simple?

• It’s harder than it sounds

• Why…who cares…so what

Trick 2: Use a real voice

• People are social, and pay attention to other people• If your content sounds like a person is really talking,

readers will listen• Voice gives your content personality

Getting content right

Lots of voice…Hello Donna I'm Little MOO - the bit of software that will be managing your order with us. I 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.

Please note, as your order will be shipped via First Class/Airmail, it should be with you in around 10 working days, but it won't have a tracking number.

Please note that different products are mailed separately so if your order contains a range of different products they will be packed separately and may not arrive together.

Remember, I'm just a bit of software. So, if you have any questions regarding your order please first read our Frequently Asked Questions at: http://www.moo.com/help/ and if you're still not sure, contact customer services (who are real people) at: http://www.moo.com/service/ Thanks, Little MOO

No voice…

Getting content right

And make it a single voice...

Getting content right

How to write with voice

• First draft - write how you speak• Imagine you are having a conversation

Anticipate questions Answer them succinctly

• Practice – start a blog or do something else to find your voice

• ‘Voicy’ writing doesn’t have to be cute, chatty or informal – it just needs to sound like a real human

Trick 3: Show and tell

• Content is more than just words• People have different learning styles – write for them• ‘Show’ your ideas with

Examples, case studies Images, graphics Things that stop and make the reader think

An obvious example• All of that area within Bass Strait, excluding any coastal waters* in relation to the State of

Victoria or the State of Tasmania, contained within and bounded as follows**: commencing at the point of latitude 39 degrees 6 minutes south, longitude 147

degrees 6 minutes east; then south-easterly along the geodesic to the point of latitude 39 degrees 22 minutes

south, longitude 147 degrees 28 minutes east; then south along the meridian of longitude 147 degrees 28 minutes east, to its

intersection with the parallel of latitude 39 degrees 36 minutes south; then west along the parallel of latitude 39 degrees 36 minutes south, to its intersection

with the meridian of longitude 146 degrees 34 minutes east; then north along the meridian of longitude 146 degrees 34 minutes east, to its

intersection with the outer limit of the coastal waters* of Victoria at approximate latitude 39 degrees 16 minutes 32 seconds south;

then easterly and generally northerly along the outer limit of the coastal waters* of Victoria to its intersection with the parallel of latitude 39 degrees 6 minutes south; and

then west along the parallel of latitude 39 degrees 6 minutes south to the point of commencement.

Getting content right

Making it happen

Committing to quality

• What does it matter?• How important is it really?• What is the risk if you get

it wrong? Impact on the users Money spent Profile

• If important, don’t get lowest-level staff to do the ‘web stuff’

How to decide

Personal blog

Conference website

E-commerce system

Big internal business app

Keeping it going

Maintaining it

Summary

Summary

• People need to find information, understand it, take action• We enable this by:

Understanding people Organising information & pathways that suit them Writing to them, not about us Writing with voice Showing & telling

• We need: A commitment to quality To determine what’s important

• Improve continuously

Questions & thanks

• http://maadmob.com.au/• 0409-778-693• donna@maadmob.net• Twitter etc: maadonna

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