Archive for the ‘Content’ Category

It Might Get Loud and a Little Random

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Inspiration comes in many forms. I was watching a documentary the other night on the electric guitar called It Might Get Loud. The film says it’s about the electric guitar, but it isn’t… It’s about leaving a mark. The film followed 3 guitar players and talked about their lives, inspiration and drive. You may have heard of these people – Jimmy Page, The Edge and Jack White.

As I was watching this film, I started thinking about where I am in my life. I started thinking about what I do for a living and what I am currently doing in my job. I started wonder how I’m leaving a mark or, more to the point, if I’m leaving a mark.

At one point in the film Jack White is talking about some of the guitars that he has and how they are a little bit warped or out of tune. He points out that he likes to leave them like that because he does his best work when it is a struggle; when he has to conquer the guitar to get what he is looking for out of it.

That really got to me. Too often, I feel like I am hoping that something will just comes to me. If I do the same thing over and over again something new and exciting will come out of that. Now, I am probably my toughest critic and I am probably over simplifying things, but there is still some truth to that.

It is really easy for me to get caught up in my daily routine and to let the little obstacles trip me up on a daily basis and zap some of my energy. It’s simple to just grind out the week focusing on one task at a time and not really pick up my head to look around at what is going on.

That, however, is not leaving a mark… that is just getting by.

I have done a bit of soul searching lately and I decided that I need to focus on things that I am good at and things I can conquer with a little bit of struggle. I need to get back to the things that charge my batteries. I have been distracted as of late and I miss doing things that matter to me; things that I can leave my mark on and things I can be proud of.

Greatness is in the eye of the beholder. I think all often people associate greatness with what everyone else thinks. I am not searching for fame or greatness in the eyes of others. I am looking to define greatness for me.

I found a place where I want to funnel some of this new found energy and drive – MKEUX. I will be talking a lot more about what this is going to be. I am very excited about the possibilities of this new idea and I am working with @michaelseidel; one of the best Information Architects (IAs) in Milwaukee. I am also looking forward to the rest of the Milwaukee UX community contributing to this.

We are working out the details of this and will have more to share soon.

Think you’re ready for a website?

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

There are a lot of small businesses out there that believe they need a website; or an internet presence. Unfortunately they have no idea what to do with it… they just know they need it.

So what do they do?

They contact a company like Hello Goat and ask what it costs to make a website. They have no idea what they are asking for, they just know that they need a website and it’s going to cost them money.

So what does Hello Goat do?

We send them a list of questions we want them to answer before we start talking about how much this website is going to cost. We do this to prepare them for the reality of owning a website. We do this to prepare them for having an online presence.

The list of questions and categories looks like this:

General

  • What are the objectives you want your users to complete on this site?
  • If information gathering is a goal, what would you like your users to do with the information gathered?
  • What is the most important message you want your gateway page (home page) to communicate?
  • What is the overall visual tone you are looking for?
  • Who is your competition? What distinguishes your business from them?
  • Are there any urls that you feel communicate in a similar fashion that you what this site to communicate?

Audience

  • Why is the site needed?
  • Who is the audience? What is the major demographic of potential site visitors?
  • How will this major demographic use this site?
  • What are the key reasons users may have for visiting the site?
  • What should visitors of the site come away with?
  • What knowledge level of your products and services do your users come in with? Novice? Intermediate? Expert?

Content

  • What content will be needed for the site?
  • What sections and features will need to be included?
  • What already exists and what needs to be developed?
  • Is the content on your site an overview/marketing level or is more of a research/wiki level?

Communication

  • What should the site communicate?
  • What are the primary objectives and goals (long and short term) for the site?
  • Are there any actionable messages on your site? If so, what do you want your users do with them?
  • What methods do you see your users contacting you?

You will notice that some of the questions are asked more than once… we do that because we are trying to get at different parts of the same question. The questions themselves fall into different categories and require slightly different answers depending on the category.

Let’s take the cover off these questions to understand why we ask them.

General Questions – these questions are used to get you in the proper mindset about your new website.

What are the objectives you want your users to complete on this site?

Plain and simple… we need to understand what your users are suppose to be doing on your site so we can get the information architecture right.

If information gathering is a goal, what would you like your users to do with the information gathered?
What is the most important message you want your gateway page (home page) to communicate?

These two questions go hand-in-hand. We are looking to see if you have put any thought into what tone you want to strike with your audience and what first impression you want to give visitors of your site.

What is the overall visual tone you are looking for?

This question tries to uncover any visual direction you may have in your mind. It also is meant to spur some investigation on your part. We want to you to look at any creative you have for your company like, brochures, logos, product packaging, etc. We also want you to think of your audience when it comes to this question – what visuals will be helpful and appeal to them.

Who is your competition? What distinguishes your business from them?
Are there any urls that you feel communicate in a similar fashion that you what this site to communicate?

These two questions are very important for a new website. They are meant to get you to think about your competition, look at their sites – not from a design standpoint, but from an information standpoint. You need to look at and understand the level of content and the messaging they are providing to connect with their audiences. You can learn from them – good or bad… what to do and what not to do.

Audience Questions – these questions are specifically meant to get you to think about your audience and how successful you want them to be on your site. You want to make sure your visitors can accomplish their goals on your site in a easy and efficient manner.

Why is the site needed?
Who is the audience? What is the major demographic of potential site visitors?
How will this major demographic use this site?
What are the key reasons users may have for visiting the site?
What should visitors of the site come away with?

What knowledge level of your products and services do your users come in with? Novice? Intermediate? Expert?

All of these questions are related. We are really trying to get into your head and see how you see your audience. We need to understand how you segment your potential clients and visitors to understand how the information architecture works on the site. We re-ask some questions like “What should visitors of the site come away with?” We do that to make sure you are thinking in context of your audience.

Content Questions – these questions may seem redundant, but are very necessary to answer. These questions get at the heart of the messaging for the site. These questions are so we can understand why someone would come to your site and use it.

What content will be needed for the site?
What sections and features will need to be included?

These questions may feel like you have answered them already, but they are really meant to get you thinking about the structure of your site and the information flow. How will your users move though the site to accomplish their goals?

What already exists and what needs to be developed?
Is the content on your site an overview/marketing level or is more of a research/wiki level?

These questions are to get a sense of what materials you have or have in mind that will help you communicate to your audience or what will you need to produce in order to make a successful website.

Communication Questions – these questions really wrap up the vision of what you want to accomplish with this new site. What would make this site successful for your business?

What should the site communicate?

This question is the final question on what you want your site to do for you. This should be answered in context of everything you have answered so far.

What are the primary objectives and goals (long and short term) for the site?

This question gets to the overall vision of the site… Are you launching a marketing site to educate new users who you are and what services you provide? Is there a long term vision you have to turn this site from and informational site to a transactional site?

Are there any actionable messages on your site? If so, what do you want your users do with them?
What methods do you see your users contacting you?

These two questions really sum up what you want your users to come away with from your site and what are the next steps to retain these people as customers.

As you can see, there are very few questions that talk about the design… The reason is we know how to design a site, we know how to put together creative ideas that will appeal to you and your audience. What we want to do is to give you more than just a pretty design, we want to give you a website that you can use to help you sell your goods and services, educate your users or inform them of your mission.

Jeffery Zeldman said it best when he said, “Content precedes design. Design in the absence of content is not design, it’s decoration.”

This is the tenant that Hello Goat lives by. You don’t just need a pretty design… you need a website that works.

Taking a Stand

Friday, January 8th, 2010

I’m addicted to RSS feeds. I read roughly 300 feeds a week from all realms of nerdom, design, online marketing, social media – you get the point.

Of all of these feeds, the one thing that really bothers me — to the point of un-following some feeds — is when a writer gives an opinion article a controversial title, but within the article itself takes no stance on the subjects at hand.

One example of this is the “Smart phone OS showdown: iPhone vs Android vs Palm Pre” article on CNet’s UK site. The title suggests that the writer is pitting these mobile operating systems against each other. I assumed that they’d give a thorough breakdown of which one is best and why. The author even ends the first page with two questions “But will there be a winner? Will one phone – and it’s OS – reign supreme?

As I read this first page, I thought… Ooh, I want to know which one is definitively better than the rest because I am in the market for a smart phone and want to make an educated choice; I trust CNet, so maybe they can help me with my decision.

Then what happens? I have to read though 11 individual pages of various amounts of tech, design, user experience and interface jargon which I have to wait for each individual page to load because who really wants to read a blog post all on one page (note sarcasm and… I’ll digress). Don’t get me wrong the article does offer up some very good insight on each of the devices and their respective OSs (Is that how you make that plural???). Page 12 is titled Conclusion — I see that title and I immediately think ok Mike, here comes the pay-off… This summary will lend itself to your decision making…

What do I see…? The first sentence says — “It’s truly hard to pick a ‘winner’ here.” What??? I just waded through 12 pages of article and ads to get to this???

Then there’s a milquetoast summary of the entire review and an apology – “We’re sorry to wimp out, be we can’t decide this for you.” – ???

I wanted to punch something.

I wasn’t looking for them to decide for me, but I was looking for their opinion. They’d done tons of research and I wanted the recommendation to validate or negate the direction I was leaning.

So, what’s my point…? My point is; take a stand. Let me say that again… TAKE A STAND. Seriously. It’s your job as a blogger to offer an opinion; provide your readers some value whether they agree with you or not. Let them challenge you in the comments if they don’t agree. Open up some dialog on the topics you are writing about. That’s far more interesting than writing a review on something that offers no insight or opinion and then letting the “fanboys” slug it out in the comments.

Trust me when I say this…you will gain a far better and larger following on your blog if you offer up your professional and personal opinions. You will start better and more engaging conversations about subjects that interest your followers. You will offer more value and gain credibility for taking a stand. (See how I wrapped that up with the title in the last line. Pretty clever huh?!?)

Ready, Fire, Aim!

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Recently, Hello Goat Designs (HGD)  has been working with quite a few new clients and most of them share a few things in common. They all want web sites, they want them now and they are completely unsure what that will do to their workload.

It is most excellent that these companies are entering the digital age and realizing that they need a web presence to help promote their businesses, be another sales lead generator and help gain brand recognition and credibility. The problem that these companies are running into is that they want a website, but have no idea what it takes to get one. They see what they like in other companies’ sites, but don’t connect the dots and see how those companies got where they are.

They don’t realize that design can only take you so far; that good content makes a good website. They come up with all these ideas about look and feel and even navigation without having any plans for content. They can picture in their minds how awesome their website is going to look. They are overly excited when they see the first mock-ups of their new home page; greeked text and all. They completely believe they are ready to launch and call daily for progress reports.

We call this the “Ready, Fire, Aim!” syndrome. The excitement level and the anticipation of their first web presence  gets the best of them. They want to see it live now! So, when they see their sites for the first time in an “Alpha Environment” they usually see something that doesn’t look exactly like they pictured. Their exuberance is shattered into a million tiny pieces. They have a hundred questions that all sound the same. “How come it looks blank?” “I gave you our mission statement, why doesn’t it take up more space?” “Why is there so much white space?” “Where is all the content?”

So, to avoid this first crushing blow to our new clients excitement level, we here at HGD have been working  dilligently with these new clients to prepare them for what comes with owning a website and keeping it up and running. We have been talking a lot about some scary phrases like “content plan”, “information architecture”,  “website maintenance” and “content management.” We have been consulting these businesses on what they need out of their web site, how they should use their new online presence and what information they should consider displaying on their site to fit their overall online goal.

These converations can be painful at times for any business just starting to dip their toe into the online pool. In the long run it is better to have them up front then to have the crushing reality of a well designed/poory executed/non-performing website.

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