Grouping Content
As we explained in Chapter
3, grouping content into the top-level categories of an information
hierarchy is typically the most important and challenging process you will
face. How should the content be organized? By audience or format or function?
How do users currently navigate this information? How do the clients want users
to navigate? Which content items should be included in which major categories?
The design of information architectures should
be determined by research involving members of the team and representatives
from each of the major audiences. Fortunately, you don't need the latest
technology to conduct this research. Index cards, the 3 x 5-inch kind you can
fit in your pocket and find in any stationery store, will help you get the job
done. For lack of a better name, we call this index card-based approach content chunking. To try content
chunking, buy a few packages of index cards and follow these steps:
1. Invite the team to generate a content wish
list for the web site on a set of index cards.
2. Instruct them to write down one content item
per card.
3. Ask each member of the group or the group as a
whole to organize the cards into piles of related content items and assign
labels to each pile.
4. Record the results of each, and then move on
to the next.
5. Repeat this exercise with representative
members and groups of the organization and intended audiences.
6. Compare and contrast the results of each.
7. Analysis of the results should influence the
information architecture of the web site.
This card-based content chunking process can
be performed collaboratively where people must reach consensus on the
organization of information. Alternatively, individuals can sort the cards
alone and record the results.
The biggest problem with shuffling index cards
is that it can be time consuming. Involving clients, colleagues, and future
users in the exercise and analyzing the sometimes confusing results takes time.
Some of this content chunking can be accomplished through the wish list process
as noted earlier. However, the major burden of content chunking responsibility
often falls to the information architect in the conceptual design phase.
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