Understanding Information Architecture
What do Information Architects do?:
- Information Architecture - the practice of deciding how to arrange the parts of something to be understandable.
- A little too broad and covers too many jobs.
- More focused definition:
- Information architects use the principles of information science to help organizations present their data to users, in a way that best helps them to complete their tasks.
- This information is normally presented in data systems, websites, and apps. It is used in other fields and even on paper.
- For example, information architects build data structures that are best suited to the people that are using them.
- Focused on:
- Making the information easy to find.
- Making the data easy to read and scan.
- Making a framework that accounts for future additions.
- Making commands that are easy to remember and use.
- Uses:
- Navigation Menus
- “Breadcrumbs”
- Layout and Hierarchy of page types
- Type and location of information
- How files are organized in a file tree.
- How help files are organized.
- Focused on:
- Information Architects have many different titles.
- Often work in interaction design, user research, or content creation.
- The role is normally fallen into.
- Day-To-Day Work:
- Determine the business goals of the site.
- Ex: Awareness, Driving to a Purchase
- Metrics
- What is happening
- User Research
- Why it is happening
- Content Analysis
- How is the content layed out? Is it similar to the rest of the site?
- Work with content creators and designers to build and test alternatives.
- May also work with developers, researchers, or people from the business and marketing areas.
- Ensuring that the customer's experience is as simple and easy as possible.
- Strategic work:
- Communication Standards
- Designing Data Structures
- Must be able to have the top down and bottom up picture in their minds.
- Need to have a strong knowledge of the organizational structure.
- Determine the business goals of the site.
Where Does IA Fit in an Organization?:
- IA always work with multiple teams:
- Developers
- Marketing/Communications Teams
- Designers
- User Researchers
- Quantitative Analysts
- Need to understand the data and how it is stored.
- Knowledgeable about the lingo used by the different teams.
- Understand the business and the brand goals.
- Information layout also affects the brand:
- Tone of voice
- Terminology
- How formal or informal phrasing should be.
- Communicate the changes made to the plan to the different teams.
- Communicate changes to the website’s content and layout to the customers or client.
- Collect user-feedback and distribute it.
- IA’s normally take guidance from the project managers in which they work with.
- The central manager would be responsible for HR and career development.
- Becomes difficult to make all of the project managers happy.
Tools and Terminology:
- Card Sort - used to get an understanding of how users group content on a site.
- Output:
- Dendrograms and Cluster Analysis: Visual outputs of the card sort analysis.
- Output:
- Tree Test - Participants are asked to place each card where they expect it to sit in the hierarchy.
- Multiple things are created to ensure that the architecture elements work:
- User task flows and scenarios
- Story Boards based on user personas
- Interface mock-ups
- Prototypes of the final interface
- Waypoints, signposts, and placemaking
- Elements of interface design that help users work out where they are and where they need to go next.
- Ex: Breadcrumbs, Navigation Menus, Mega menus, the footer area, the site map, and any recommendation engine or related item type content.
- Elements of interface design that help users work out where they are and where they need to go next.
- Note that information architecture is different from the navigation architecture.
- Content providers follow the content strategie’s rules and policies to create.
- The rules are in the publishing system that sits underneath the site or the product.
Software and Real-World Tools:
- Does exist outside of software:
- Index Cards, Sticky Notes, White Board Diagrams, and interface sketches.
- Does provide a different level of information due to the interactivity.
- Still run face-to-face sessions, usability tests, and surveys.
- Still need spreadsheets, word processors, video conferencing, and screen sharing capabilities.
- Web-based tools for research
- Types: Card Sorts and Reverse Sorts (Tree testing)
- Examples: Optimalworkshop, Provenbyusers, Websort, and Userzoom
- Software Tools for Card Sorting:
- xSort for Mac, UXSort for Windows.
- Need access to analytics: web metrics, search query history, and tools that visualize common and uncommon paths throughout the website.
- Normally in place by the company.
Recruiting Information Architects:
- Normally do not have an academic qualification related to their work (No real major in university).
- Normally found in the graduate degree programs under different names.
- Interaction design, information architecture, information science, and knowledge management.
- May be good to look for user experience and interactive design degrees.
- IA should demonstrate structured thinking, organizational skills, and the ability to carry concepts from a strategic perspective through a detailed view. They should also have good communication skills.
- Some skills:
- Quantitative and Qualitative data analysis.
- Experience with card sorting software.
- Should be able to talk about the financial impact of their role.
Managing Information Architects:
- Goals can be set around specific work items.
- Goals can also be made that specify the IA’s impact on a project.
- Goals to conduct broad or open-ended research.
- Can set specific milestones and deliverables.
- It is important to coach and teach IA’s new skills by providing multiple opportunities.
- Conference attendance can be incredibly helpful.
- Work can be tracked by measuring efficiency, bounce rate, reduction of pages people visit in error, and user satisfaction.
Where is IA Heading?:
- Making applications and websites more interactive and increasing activation.
- Maintain the connection between the different channels of information: phone, laptop, etc.
- How do we organize information and user experience on new types of technology?