crossing disciplines: content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

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Working with UX, design & development Crossing disciplines (for fun & profit)

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Page 1: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Working with UX, design & development

Crossing disciplines (for fun & profit)

Page 2: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Me.

Elizabeth McGuane @emcguane

Lead content strategist at LBi London Mappedblog.com

Page 3: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

What I’m talking about Working

with teams

Topic maps

Working better

The semantic

web

Documentation

Structured content

Classic movies

Content management

Horses

Page 4: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Working in a team

Page 5: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

So what does it mean to be ‘multidisciplinary’?

•  I've never worked on a team that wasn't

•  Everyone brings their strength to the table

•  Free exchange of ideas and information are good

Page 6: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

The project: a website redesign

•  Financial services

•  Cross-brand

•  6000+ content items audited

Page 7: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

And also

•  Brand identity changing

•  New CMS coming in

•  Split between ‘digital’ and ‘brochureware’

Page 8: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

What?

Page 9: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

My team: Three (3) user experience experts

•  Knowledge keepers, owners of the investigative work

•  Developed and owned the personas

•  Developed the experience concept

Their aim: a content-led website

Page 10: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

My team: Three (3) designers (in rotation)

•  Came in late

•  Moved around a lot

•  Working to changing design brief (cos the brand was changing)

Their design concept: Open, fresh and flexible

Page 11: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

My team: One (1) developer (as a consultant)

•  Came in late

•  Reluctant CMS authority

•  Reluctant liaison with client developers

•  Never really worked on a collaborative design before

Their development concerns: Accessible, accessible, accessible

Page 12: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Our story

Page 13: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

That audit: what we found

•  Content was being duplicated across the site

•  There was no central way to manage it

•  This, despite there being a ‘content management system’

Page 14: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Our task

•  Create a system that designed against duplication

•  And create a central repository for help & support content on the site

Page 15: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Our answer

•  Modular content

Page 16: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

The issues this raised

•  Content is no longer a ‘page’

•  Some of it is unique, some goes across a section, some is universal across the site

•  So how do we manage it while we’re creating it?

•  And how do we govern how it should be used in the future?

Page 17: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Dealing with humans

•  Our team was fluid – people joined and left as other tasks came up

•  We needed to communicate with other disciplines, some of whom weren’t working with us

•  We wanted an easy way to explain our modular content system to them over time

Page 18: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

So: content (me) and UX (another guy) had a big idea

•  As content was repeatable, we needed to map its instances

•  Our documentation had to encompass UX principles, design principles and content strategy

•  And we were launching the project in phases, so it had to be carefully documented in a usable way

Page 19: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Our big idea

Page 20: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Trying to find a movie to watch

Page 21: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Disambiguation: to remove uncertainty

Page 22: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

So there’s this:

Page 23: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Oh but then:

Page 24: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Um.

Page 25: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

We all need to be ���talking about the same thing���

and be sure we’re ���talking about the same thing

Page 26: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams
Page 27: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

When ambiguity is present, we need to organise information in a systematic, logical manner.

George Baker

George Baker

George Baker

(Horse) (Jockey) (Owner)

Page 28: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

What’s a topic?

•  A set of ideas that you want to say things about

–  (So, a ‘topic’ is about as meaningful as a ‘piece of content’)

Page 29: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

What’s a topic map?

•  A way of storing and relating those ideas

Page 30: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

So simple, right?

•  Sometimes simple ideas take a really long time to understand

•  Why does this matter?

Page 31: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Normal links don’t do this

•  Writing a ‘page’ in HTML, you can decide to link any two pieces of content together, regardless of topic

•  Topic maps demand clear topic-based relationships – they force you to codify what you’re talking about

Page 32: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Why this idea matters in a closed system (like a set of project documents)

•  Relationships between different ideas can be instantly accessed and understood

•  Concepts like authors, sentences and document ownership are irrelevant

•  The map can evolve over time without requiring rewriting or versioning

Page 33: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

So here’s what we set out to do

Page 34: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

We set up a topic map for our developing designs & content requirements

•  Designed to give all disciplines an equal grasp of the site’s design, content and functional elements

•  Built in Topincs, a web-based topic maps platform

Page 35: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

What’s the site made of?

Page 36: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Who’s working on it?

Page 37: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

What are our requirements?

Page 38: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

What’s in a module?

Page 39: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

When are we doing the work?

Page 40: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Reality is imperfect

Page 41: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Topic maps are kind of obscure

Page 42: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

And the technology itself still needs to mature

•  It’s difficult to explain and understand because current literature and systems were created by experts for experts

•  Sometimes we embrace complexity – we fear things that are too fluid and simple

Page 43: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

People + budgets = changing plans

Page 44: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

This whole process was a learning curve

•  We knew what we wanted to achieve, but had minimal technical support

•  We were dealing with a morphing project & changing timelines

•  So… we had to fall back on some traditional documentation to keep up

Page 45: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

What I've learned

Page 46: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

1. Documentation is about communication

•  And it should exist for a reason – to allow different groups to communicate without confusion

•  Cross-discipline documents are like the semantic web – they need to codify information so that it makes sense in any context

•  No document in the history of forever has achieved this

Page 47: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

2. Content needs to be free – and so do we

•  Our content was modular, and that meant we needed to record its repetition and variants

•  A spreadsheet is not the best solution for this (or for a lot of things)

•  We could use a system like this to free ourselves from Word-based content production

Page 48: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

3. We can work more elegantly

•  By collaborating in earnest, at the start of the project when it matters most

•  By using the tools available to us to distribute information, not create documentation-as-deliverable

•  By embracing other disciplines’ skills and focus, and sharing our own

Page 49: Crossing Disciplines: Content strategy, topic maps & multidisciplinary teams

Thank you!������

@emcguane���