Zooming in on Prezi: A Review

The Prezi Menu

The Prezi Menu

PowerPoint slide shows are like commercial jet aircraft– ubiquitous in business life, but with technology that hasn’t seemed to budge in decades.   As a communication medium, PowerPoint is one of the great corrupting influences for those of us who trade in the office arts.  It’s the junky sit-com of authoring environments, with it’s crammed toolbars full of lazy visualizations and transitions, text distorters, prix fixe layouts and color schemes, royalty free clip-art hokum and assorted other information-free nonsense.   Its worst trait of all is more fundamental – that it constrains our ideas to the slide as the uniformly sized chunk of information.  Once we commit to dealing in slides, we take an immediate hit on our mental agility and the level of focus we bring to the simple act of conveying our ideas.

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Crafting Simple, Effective User Surveys

Photo Credit: dgilder

Photo Credit: dgilder

Without a doubt, online surveys are the cheapest, easiest way to reach out to a large number of a website’s customers to gauge their opinion- but if not crafted correctly, they can result in misleading information.  You do not need to be a research expert to field a successful survey, but knowing the limitations of each option in your research toolkit is the only way to get accurate, impactful, and persuasive results. There are many issues to cover within this topic, but let’s begin with the basics by crafting a survey that successfully answers three key questions:

- Who is using the site?
- What do they think of it?
- Are they accomplishing what they want to?

If we can get accurate answers to these questions, then we can deduce what needs to change about the site in order to become a greater success.

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IA Primer: Landing, List, & Detail Pages

From an information architecture point of view, it’s convenient to think of most website structures as a collection of three primary types of pages – landing pages, list pages, and detail pages. Everyone has seen plenty of examples of each of these, and the first two are often combined – making the issue somewhat blurred. A landing page is the type of page you typically see when you are either on the home page or a main category page of a site. It tends to be a page you pass through to get to a site’s full organization of content or products, which are organized as a series of list pages (screens designed to browse multiple choices with limited information about each one) and detail pages (screens devoted to a single product, article, etc.)  Sort of like billboards, landing pages are typically plastered with feature boxes touting services, featured content or products, or smaller curated lists of links based on some attribute a designer thinks a user cares about (such as “most emailed”, “best selling,” “new,” etc.) Their layout is invariably some variation on the tiled or stacked boxes approach – a design choice made when the primary goal is to provide a layout where the designer has a lot of flexibility in assigning different visual importance to various elements.  List and detail pages, on the other hand, are exactly as they sound – a framework to systematically display and organize items on a website.

A Typical Landing>List>Detail Page Progression at www.BestBuy.com


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Choosing a Wordpress Theme: Part 2 – Blog, Magazine, or Portfolio Design Pattern?

There are literally hundreds of Wordpress themes available, a number which seems to be growing faster than anyone can keep up with.  Fortunately, most of them fall into a few basic interaction design patterns.  An understanding of what these patterns are and how they differ will make it easier to identify the right theme to begin a project with.   To distinguish this from other Wordpress theme categorization schemes out there, I’m grouping all themes into three major categories based on the way an information architect might think about it.  It is important not to get too distracted by the visual design(e.g. colors and graphics) or content-type specialty (e.g. text, video, photo) of a pre-built theme – at least, at first.  The look of things and the messaging and positioning of a theme  is much easier to change than the basic flow between elements, how the navigation, pages and sidebars are laid out, which features are deployed and in what way.

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Tim Ferriss Gives Solid State Blogging Tips

Author of  The 4 Hour Work Week – and therefore a deserving hero to us all – Tim Ferriss gives a very useful presentation full of practical tips for successful blogging.  I was most impressed by the advice on establishing an efficient writing and editing process, which let’s face it – is the most time consuming aspect of blogging and where most of us fall over. Tim also demonstrates committment to a very Solid State UX principle – which is to always test your assumptions, then make small tweaks until you optimize your user’s experience. He shares some fascinating click stream data and insights collected from his own blog.  From San Francisco WordCamp 2009: Approx. 50 min

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Choosing a Wordpress Theme: Part 1 – Premium, Custom, or Free?

Photo Credit:  Eric Flexyourhead

Photo Credit: Eric Flexyourhead

Wordpress can be used to pull off just about any type of website these days, and clearly the magic of this platform lies in the vast proliferation of pre-designed themes, plug-ins, & widgets.   Choosing a theme – which is the single largest determinant of a site’s look, feel, and organization – can be a confusing process.  If you’re hacking together a site yourself, don’t overemphasis the way the theme looks – at least on the surface.   After all, you can always tweak the basic feel  of things, swapping out your own graphics, colors, and images with just a little hunting and pecking around the theme’s file structure and a  few basic style-sheet tweaks.   Far more important are the basic  information architecture and functionality choices the theme designer made – because let’s face it – you’ll be locked into these unless you really know your way around the code.  Most Wordpress theme choosing advice is focused on practical tips – e.g. Is it Widget Ready? But let’s step back and focus on the overall quality of the design, assuming we can tweak the little things we don’t like about it later.  To help make sense of it all, I’m proposing a simple taxonomy of types of Wordpress themes to help with the decision-making process.

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