steve krug asis&t 2002 ia summit baltimore march 16, 2002 confessions of a sigia-l lurker: a...

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Steve Krug

asis&t 2002 IA SummitBaltimore

March 16, 2002

Confessions of a SIGIA-L Lurker: A Pinhead's View of Information Architecture

All contents © 2002 Steve Krug

For the benefit of Mr. Kite

9:00 - 10:00 As advertised, Mr. K. will attempt to… “Squeeze the entire field of IA through the wringer of

common sense and take a look at what comes out the other side”

“Touch on topics like the difference between IA and usability (slippery slope, or just a complex Venn diagram?)”

“Enumerate the top [ten] five things Information Architects love to talk about (and why they can't stop talking about them)”

“Explore the art of selling luxury services (like IA and usability) in a franks-and-beans economy”

Repeat five somersets on solid ground (time permitting)

For the benefit of Mr. Kite

10:00 - 10:30 Questions from our studio audience

10:30 – 11:30 Raked over coals by irate--and distinguished--panel

By the way…

What is this thing?

Who is this guy, anyway

Steve Krug (steev kroog) (noun) 1. Resident of Brookline, MA 2. Usability consultant 3. Husband, father

Advanced Common Sense Me and a few well-placed mirrors Corporate motto: “It’s not rocket surgery™”

What I do all day

Expert usability reviews Teach workshops Occasional testing

Mostly “neighbor testing”

How did I get here?

Odd data point You can discount me entirely

Typesetting > Computers Computers > Tech writing

Kurzweil Reading Machine > Xerox Star I’m old “You had a cardboard box to sleep in?”

Tech Writing > Software usability Software Usability > Web Usability Web Usability > Book

I’m not an Information Architect

Don’t even play one on TV “I don’t know what you know, I haven’t

seen what you’ve seen” (Hear My Song) I know how to do “Lou and Peter” IA

Hierachies/organization (broad sense) Navigation Labeling Search

Don’t have specialized skills Couldn’t create a thesaurus if…

…or detailed insights gained by experience

Scott McCloud proves beauty, creativity, and good IA aren’t incompatible

Towards a taxonomy of keynotes

Was going to create one: Lofty appeal to principles

Taking the audience to task

Inspiring call to action/New Directions

Taking stock/retrospective

Taking stock/looking forward

Thinly veiled marketing

Audience-serving vs. self-serving

Has content vs. doesn’t

So what’s this one?

A pinhead’s view An interested outsider

A picaresque novel

Fastest recorded connection speed in the history of the Marriott Baltimore Waterfront

Show of hands?

Who reads SIGIA-l? Digest or full-flow? Contributed in the last month? Why I lurk on the digest

Reduces in-box clutter Reduces temptation to do “something else”

(reading incoming messages, instead of whatever I should be doing)

Reduces temptation to reply (if you wait a little while, somebody else will answer that question)

I confess. The octopus was mine. (But it’s a friendly octopus.)

My original speech

Been thinking about it since November Was all set to go, then… How did Jesse get his hands on it?

See IA/Recon at http://www.jjg.net/ia/recon/

Waiting on the dock for the next installment

Advanced Common SenseTM seal of approval

Top five list

“Things Information Architects Can’t Stop Talking About”

#5: Tools Visio, Inspiration, Denim, etc. My platform’s better than yours The mythical tool in development Frustrating for me Tool would advance the profession (but

market needs to be broader) Include spidering > diagram feature, please

Top five list

#4: Defining things

Top five list

#2: “Big IA” vs. “Little IA” Or “Big IA” and “Little IA” I always forget the difference I know it matters, but not to me Talk amongst yourselves

Top five list

#3: Research findings “X is better than Y”

© 2000 Steve Krug

Top five list

#2: Research findings Does anybody have research that shows that

“X is better than Y” “Would a big league glove give you

confidence?” Same as certification and standards

discussions I have found very little research that helps

me practice my profession If you can prove it, it’s probably obvious You need to make sense to people You need to be able to apply principles to

specific cases

Top five list

#1: Proof of ROI Gee, why isn’t there any [much]? Holy Grail (or stigmata) Would help convince some people, but I

suspect an intelligible explanation of what you do would go further

My book gets bought to hand to other people Lou, Peter? September 2002?

What is to be done?

Not proof of ROI Not grabbing for turf

What is to be done

Jakob’s overshadowed speech at UPA There’s too much work Most people who need an IA can’t even afford

to rent one Real task: educate and generate best

practices Personally, I don’t feel bad if current project

is less than optimal

Usability Tasks: Everybody

Simple user testing (debugging a design) Applying guidelines to design Simple heuristic evaluation (debugging a

design) Field studies

Source: Jakob (UPA 2001)

Usability Tasks: Professionals

Enforcing standards compliance Measurement studies User tests of new technologies Comparative usability studies Evangelizing usability inside company

Source: Jakob (UPA 2001)

Usability Tasks: Senior Pros

International user testing Strategic heuristic evaluation

(setting directions) Developing/refining methodology Identifying guidelines Defining design standards Evangelizing usability to the world

Source: Jakob (UPA 2001)

Many pieces to this puzzle

Affective Cognitive Organizational Technological Economic Interpersonal

My definition of “legacy data”

How do you get respectability?

Not by grabbing for turf See Nathan Shedroff

“The making of a discipline: the making of a title”

http://www.boxesandarrows.com/archives/002328.php

Any questions?

Anonymous flames go to…

Email: skrug@sensible.com

www.sensible.com

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