techniques for helping the public serve themselves instructor: cheryl gould [email protected] an...

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Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould [email protected] An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

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Page 1: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves

Instructor:

Cheryl [email protected]

An Infopeople WorkshopWinter-Spring 2008

Page 2: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

This Workshop Is Brought to You By the Infopeople Project

Infopeople is a federally-funded grant project supported by the California State Library. It provides a wide variety of training to California libraries. Infopeople workshops are offered around the state and are open registration on a first-come, first-served basis.

For a complete list of workshops, and for other information about the project, go to the Infopeople website at infopeople.org.

Page 3: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Today’s Topics

• Train your customers to self serve

• Criteria for usable help on paper

• Audio as a self-serve tool

• Video as a self-serve tool

Page 4: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

We Automatically Parse Visual Hierarchies

• Good designs get preprocessed before thinking

• What have we learned from– Newspapers– Books– Magazines

• When the conventions aren’t followed it’s tiring for the user

Page 5: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

We Train Our Users

• Not to read

• Not to trust

• No reliable written help

• You build confidence if things work well and aren’t confusing.

Page 6: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Design Guidelines for Visual Aids

• Easy to see

• Easy to navigate

• Quick to scan

• Accurate

• Relevant

• Clear

• Complete (in relation to task)

Page 7: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Usability in General

• Make it look simple– Short

• Self-explanatory– Clear and specific title big, bold and centered at the top

of the page

• Make the important stuff prominent– Size, weight, location, box or icon

• Be consistent• Contrast brings attention – use wisely

From Don’t Make Me Think by Steve Krug

Page 8: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Content and Design Depends On…

• Your audience

• The purpose

• Method of delivery

• How important the info is and what alternatives the user has

There is no one solution that will work for everyone!

Page 9: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Save the Time of the User

• No jargon• Titles large and specific• Use headings for easy scanning• Chunk to show logical tasks• Consistency• Watch for temptation to add• Omit unnecessary words

Jobs or Employment Opportunities or Job-o-rama

Page 10: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Writing in Bullets

• Number things done in sequence• Bullet related items• List length three to six entries• OK to leave off punctuation• Parallel construction

Written by Kim Long

Page 11: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

The fact that you know how to find information means that you're systematically prevented from

thinking about information the way your users do.

Mary Ellen Bates

web.utk.edu/~wrobinso/531_lec_interview.html

Youtube video on learning to use a book -youtube.com/watch?v=4pyjRj3UMRM&feature=related

Page 12: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Graphics for Emphasis or Clarity

• Draw arrows and boxes

• Images

• Screen shots– Prnt Scrn– Alt + Prnt Scrn

Page 13: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Who’s Your Audience

• Know your purpose

• Design for end user

• Test with non-library person

Page 14: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Exercise #2

1. Look over a piece of instructional material– you brought – one of the samples – look at your own library’s website for examples

of instructions of any kind

2. On paper, improve it based on the concepts so far.

Page 15: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Common Mistakes

• Don’t bold and underline

• ALL CAPS SLOWS THE READER

• Use Title Case for Titles

• Use sentence case for headings– use lowercase for sub-bullets– to show relationship

• Be consistent with punctuation!

• Poor chunking

Page 16: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Theming Your Help Material

• Consistency– Color– Size– Graphics

• Placement

• Test it with users

Page 17: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Use Tabs

• When there might be multiple things a user needs help with:– Internet– Printing– Catalog– Database

• Like current web browsers

Page 18: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Why Use Audio and Video Now?

• Devices are small

• Devices are inexpensive

• No technical abilities required

• Can get decent quality

• They are easy to use

• Customers have devices for playback

Page 19: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Ways to Make Audio and Video Available to Users

– On a device for in-library use– At a self-serve kiosk – Download from website to portable players– On a computer

• from your library website• from a blog or podcast or media (youtube) site

Page 20: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

$86.58•MP3, WMA playback•Plug-and-play data storage with direct USB•Easy-to-read black and white LCD display•Built-in voice recorder •Digital FM radio with 10 station presets•Includes batteries and earbuds

Phillips1GB Flash Audio Player with Direct USB

Page 21: Techniques for Helping the Public Serve Themselves Instructor: Cheryl Gould gouldc@infopeople.org An Infopeople Workshop Winter-Spring 2008

Common Audio and Video Formats

• Audio– wav

– mp3

– wma

• Video– avi– mpg– wmv– mov