Showing posts with label web strategy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web strategy. Show all posts

Monday, May 19, 2008

Before Business Requirments you need a Vision statement

This past week I sat down with a co-worker who took over an hour to describe a feature of an application we are building. After the download I was really impressed, this feature was the "killer app" and a high priority item in a product we were building. But I realized something was missing. We needed a way to distill his 40+ page document (filled with loose business requirements and wish list items) and his required 1 hour explanation to something more easily digested. What was missing was the Vision! I've talked about this process in the past and used the term "Definition statement". I was first turned onto this approach at Apple Tech Talk conference that discussed building applications for the iPhone.

The process was at times frustrating but it really forces you to step back and think about what you want to build, which features are important and where you need to make compromises. Our end game was to develop a one page definition or elevator speech that described our feature to the project team. The vision would guide development of this feature and serve as a mission statement or something to hold ourselves accountable to. Interestingly I just finished reading a blog around user experience, which referenced this approach was employed by the team developing Google Calendar (see screenshot above). Creating a Vision statement can be painful, but overall it is a really rewarding process that helps to get everyone on the same page.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Taxonomy Strategy Part 1

It seems that when most websites are built these days at least some consideration is given to traffic building by using any number of strategy’s: SEO, SEM and Online PR / Seeding. However that is all about getting users to your website.

So what consideration is being given to keep users their once they arrive? It would appear that if Web 2.0 is all about creating a more interactive user experience. Web 3.0 is all about providing users the right information they want on-demand. The answer? A Taxonomy strategy.

So what is Taxonomy? Simply put taxonomy is categorization of content that doesn't suffer the traditional limitations of content tagging such as metadata. It allows you to create simply or complex content relationships that grow with your website as content is added and categorized with multiple categories.

Why is this useful? With the amount of data being added to a modern dynamic website via a Content Management System, E-commerce engine, Blog or any number of tools we are seeing traditional website navigation has hit the limits of its effectiveness. The simplest example I can offer is when you buy an item on Amazon.com you are told "Customer who bought this also bought this". Behind this kind of web application intelligence is taxonomy creating those content relationships.

It provides developers another way to interact with site content and provide more intuitive and intelligent navigation that allows refinement and drilldown to the nth degree if needed.

Creating a sound Taxonomy strategy is not an easy task. First you need to make sure you select software for your web application that includes this as a feature, most don't. To learn more about taxonomy check out the following link on Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxonomy#Applications

More to come on taxonomy strategy at a later date! :)