Strategy


21
May 10

Usability doesn’t matter if your content isn’t useful

Useful junk image by W9NED

Usability testing is very task focused. You tell the user to find something. The user completes the task. You then move on to the next task, looking for errors and difficulties along the way.

What if the interface is great, but the content isn’t very helpful?

In some cases (e.g. transactional scenarios), this task-focused testing alone may work just fine, assuming you allow the user to complete the task all the way through. But at the same time, there’s something very artificial about it. For example, in a usability test:

You say to the user: “I want you to purchase a blue shirt.”

The user, who is not really buying a blue shirt, performs a search, picks the first blue shirt he sees, adds it to the cart and checks out.

Success! Task complete.

When was the last time you haphazardly made a purchase online without making a decision about your purchase at the same time? Do you typically just pick the first item that matches your search and buy it?

This test didn’t necessarily evaluate whether the content (shirt descriptions, sizing information, images) was helpful in making the purchase decision.

In the real world, the task isn’t complete until you walk away with what you needed.

I’ve done testing on a number of academic library websites and seen this same problem. Users are in such a hurry to find an article (to complete the task) that they pay little attention to which one they pick.

If you’re writing a real paper on a real deadline and need a very specific article to support your work, the results of your search and all of the content within become much more important. Not only do you have to find the right article, you need all of the instructions to tell you exactly how to get your hands on a copy of it, now.

Usability vs. Utility

There is a difference between usability (the site is easy to use) and utility (the site provides what the user needs). Both are very important, but for some reason usability gets all of the attention.

It doesn’t matter if you have the best content in the world if nobody can find it. On the flip side, it doesn’t matter that your site is extremely easy to use if your content is not useful.

Your website has to be BOTH usable AND useful.

A little more conversation, a little less action

I agree with those who say that focus groups and interviews are not usability testing. That’s true. But they are an important precursor to usability testing and give great insight into the utility of a site. How do you create realistic usability scenarios or measure the usefulness of content without first talking to your users about what they need from your site?

Talk is cheap—we come pre-installed with the tools to do that. So find some real users of your site and spend some time understanding their real content needs by talking to them. Use what you learn to develop better testing scenarios—or better yet, observe real users doing real tasks in their native environments.

When testing, balance the usability with the utility

  • If the user skips your big introductory paragraph, don’t just document it. Ask why. Is it a formatting issue? Or might it be that the user doesn’t care about your welcome message? Get them to tell you in their own words.
  • Don’t just ask users to find the program or service they’re interested in and stop there. Ask them to evaluate your offerings based on what they find on your website. Would they choose you over a competitor for that service? Are you providing what they need to make that decision?

Are you testing the usefulness of content?

If so, we’d love to hear what’s working for you. Share your tips in the comments.

>>>

J. Todd Bennett is the co-founder and managing partner of decimal152, providing website [pre]design for do-good organizations.


Image credit: Flickr user W9NED


11
May 10

iTunes, mixtapes and content management

I recently came across Clinton Forry’s inaugural post at the Brain Traffic blog, Content strategy, or, Let’s make a mix tape.   I LOVED it (and wish I had thought of it myself. ) You should go read it.

Here’s the gist… Clinton had been digging through his box of cassette tapes (odd behavior for a content strategist—why weren’t they neatly organized in tidy Case Logic containers like mine?) when he had an epiphany.  Content strategy and mix tapes are “shockingly” similar!

OK, you younger kids out there who grew up in the high tech world of CDs and MP3s are probably wondering what a mix tape is. Here’s how Clinton defined it. A mix tape:

  • Is a compilation of songs (just as websites are collections of content)
  • Created for a specific someone (consider your audience)
  • Communicates a specific message (in service of business objectives)
  • Should elicit a particular response (meet user needs/assist in task completion)

I immediately thought of this brilliant number from the hit Broadway puppet show, Avenue Q.  Have a listen to experience how a simple compilation of songs created for someone sends a specific message, eliciting a particular response:

I recall that making a mix tape was hard: thinking of just the right songs; calling the radio station to request them and waiting for hours with your finger on the record button; dubbing them on the dual-cassette deck; making the hand-decorated case insert.

Goodbye mix tape, hello iTunes

Today, instead of mix tapes, we have iTunes genius mixes. No effort is required. You can find any song you want on-demand and download it. If there’s enough information about each of the songs in your library, iTunes will magically make a mix for you. Just like Amazon always recommends the perfect books… sorta. It’s not quite the same as a real person’s personal touch.

Content in Motion

About five years ago I was inspired by an article written by Piet Niederhausen at Georgetown University, Content in Motion: What iTunes Can Teach Us About Managing Web Content. In the article, Piet described how iTunes allowed music listeners to “liberate” their music from the confines of an album, allowing for countless playlists. He then related this idea to web content:

“An increasing number of Web sites are liberating their content from the confines of the Web page. We are creating structured content, tagging it with metadata, and letting each piece of content roam. We are sorting and grouping our content and creating containers where relevant content appears automatically. (Many of those containers are dynamic Web pages, but others include RSS feeds and Web services). Our content, abstracted from its presentation and encoded according to standards, is portable to different devices and can be shared between applications. We can adapt our content to create the experiences we want our users to have. Our content is in motion.”

I’ve since used this analogy countless times in presentations and with clients to move them away from their static, print-focused content mentality and better understand concepts of content reuse and syndication. It was a pretty effective tactic, but often set-up a false expectation that their new CMS technology would magically make this happen.

The technology is not the problem

Looking back, I realize too many of my clients weren’t ready for that yet. They were still wrestling with how to create useful and thoughtful content, regardless of what their CMS could do. I was so enthusiastic about the possibilities that I missed the clients’ limitations.

But even in those cases where they were ready for such an endeavor and could successfully implement and manage a complex system of content structures, relationships and tags, the end result was a dynamic site of loosely related mediocre content that collectively failed to tell the organization’s story.

Why was that? Had I known then what I know now, I might have recognized that this failure arose from a lack of content strategy. What they created was more genius playlist and less mix tape. There was no thought behind it. And that’s the KEY.

Remember, a mix tape was thoughtful. It was created for someone with an objective in mind. The songs were carefully chosen to send a particular message. You wouldn’t just create a tape of random songs and drop them off in any old locker at school hoping that somebody might be inspired by your musical prowess, would you?

The intersection of iTunes and mix tape

Imagine making an old-school mix tape (or a mix disk) with all of the current tools available to you. If you could remove all of the time-consuming technical barriers to making one, you could focus solely on the thoughtful part. The same can be true on your website.

Content management systems are, in fact, good tools and their ability to free your content to be reused and repurposed is amazing. Contrary to what some people think, the technology can make your job easier. It just won’t do your job for you.

A lot of folks these days are talking about content curation— the culling of carefully chosen pieces of content from across your domain to tell a story or reinforce your brand. Content curation is just like making a mix tape. If you want your audiences to know your organization is great at something, you can’t just say it. You have to build the case by presenting the evidence. Plan your strategy, gather the evidence, present your case, and let your website visitors be the judge.  A better strategy with better evidence presents a better case.

This won’t happen by itself. And it won’t happen if you don’t have good content to curate. And good content, the right content, all starts with a content strategy. You have to know who you’re creating content for and why, before you create it. It’s the thought that counts… and what differentiates a mix tape from a playlist.

J. Todd Bennett is the co-founder and managing partner of decimal152, providing website [pre]design for do-good organizations.


23
Feb 10

The Incidental Publisher

A web CMS: a system that manages web content. It sounded like a dream come true. But what they failed to mention is that the system simply facilitates the management of the content, not its creation. You solved a technical problem and created a human one– real people with little or no experience are now creating official institutional content on your behalf. Yikes!

Maybe that wasn’t such a great decision after all. You could, as Jeff Cram of the CMS Myth suggests, stop letting people use your CMS .

In his article, Jeff wrote:

“You have dozens of users in CMS tool 101 training sessions with no idea why they are there, no familiarity with the publishing model and no incentive to learn how to keep their piece of content up to date which rarely needs to be updated anyway. This never ends well.”

He also references another great article by Seth Gottlieb that makes a case for scaling back on distributed web authorship. Does this make any sense? The reason you bought a content management system (CMS) in the first place was to distribute the management of content to lots of people!

Jeff and Seth say that the promises of a website made better with a CMS are never quite realized because of “occasional users” — people who have little incentive or ownership of the site. I believe there is a great deal of truth to this, but feel the problems run even deeper. I see a lot of highly motivated CMS users churning out huge volumes of web garbage.

You have now created an organization full of incidental publishers.

Merriam Webster defines incidental as:

1 : being likely to ensue as a chance or minor consequence
2 : occurring merely by chance or without intention or calculation

How did you become a publisher?

Without intention? You didn’t intend to become a publisher, did you?

Perhaps it happened by chance (low woman/man on the totem pole, newest employee in the department, you have an iPhone).

And of course it’s a minor consequence (the last item on your job description calls this “other duties as assigned”).

It used to be so much easier. There was a webmaster. That person was, well, the master of the whole website—a jack-of-all-trades. Websites were smaller and the chief function was to create a place online to put all of the great stuff you created for some other purpose offline. It’s a bit larger and more complicated now, isn’t it?

Your Organization Needs Content Creators

Most of the organizations I’ve worked with consider themselves fortunate if they have 1 or 2 full-time employees devoted to web content.

Imagine a large research university with an operating budget in the hundreds of millions of dollars, thousands of employees and students on campus facilities that rival many medium-sized towns, trying to sell a $160,000 intangible product to a middle-income family– and just one full-time web content person. Phew!

Without completely restructuring the operation, the widely distributed management of a website is the only way they can manage it. Unfortunately, the way many of them distribute responsibility is incidental and haphazard. Change a few  job descriptions to include “doing the web”, train people on how to use the tool and *voilà* the website runs like a charm. HARDLY.

For the purposes of this conversation, let’s assume that most organizations have some sort of back-end technical support function for their sites (an IT department, a vendor, a web host, etc). There’s typically a budget for that. Leadership understands the need for it (and doesn’t understand how to do it so they’d gladly pay someone else).

That said, I want to focus on the other side—creating and maintaining useful content.

Who Creates Content?

Who does this stuff? While many people think it’s the role of a single webmaster (or a distributed group of departmental webmasters), the reality is that there are many roles that contribute to making content for the web.

Kristina Halvorson, in her book Content Strategy for the Web (p.73), identifies six types of people involved in content creation (with my take in parentheses):

  • Requesters submit requests for web content to be created, updated, or removed (These are the bosses who tell you to “get this up on the web”.)
  • Providers are subject matter experts who own and manage source content—or have the necessary information in their heads—that will be used by creators to develop web content (These are people closest to your product, service or audience who will likely run for the hills when you ask them to contribute website content!)
  • Creators are responsible for actually developing the content (This is anybody and everybody and rarely includes someone with professional communications training.)
  • Reviewers/ approvers must be consulted about some or all of the content prior to its publication online (These are usually the bosses who probably requested it in the first place. More likely than not, there is no reviewer at all. The untrained creator has total authority to do whatever she wants. It would be nice, however, if this function was served by a real editor with the authority to edit.)
  • Publishers get the content online, via coding, a content management system, a wiki, a blog, or other technical wizardry (These are the people with access to the CMS who are probably the creators, too. This is the one function that the organization usually provides some training and support for.)
  • Community Managers may be responsible for participating in online conversations via social media (You likely have far more of these than you know.)

And you thought all you needed to do was train your webmasters on the CMS!

Making Change

To really affect change in your organization and on your website, you have to involve a lot of people at all levels.

It may sound cliché—but it all starts with leadership. The leaders, whether they’re vice presidents or department directors, are also the requesters and the approvers. They don’t need to understand how you do what you do, but they do need to get why you do it so they will stop asking you to do stupid things! The incidental publisher is rarely in a position to defy the boss when told to get something up on the web.

So how can you really help those who create content for your website?

First of all, stop throwing out vague instructions like “keep your content fresh” and “promote interactivity”. People don’t know what that means and they’ll just waste time trying to do that.

And do not start and end your education with a “writing for the web” presentation or workshop. There’s nothing wrong with these (I have done many myself), but if it’s all you plan to do you might as well just call it “reformatting your garbage so it’s easier to scan”.

Here are a few things you should do:

  • Begin by aligning and educating people at all levels of the organization. If you want people to change their behavior, you have to teach them. Don’t assume they all read the same blogs and books that you do. Introduce the basics. Make the knowledge real and applicable to their specific sites.
  • Don’t stop with one presentation, but provide ongoing professional development. Many of you share your knowledge and experience with others at conferences, but rarely share that knowledge internally. Your incidental publishers may not have the opportunity to attend professional conferences and when they do, it’s likely in their functional area, not web-related.
  • Be sure to cover the basics and details of your overall brand and messaging strategy, content strategy and editorial strategy
  • Help them develop their own content and editorial strategies that align with the larger institutional strategies. If you don’t yet have an institutional strategy, do that first. You have to know where you’re going before you can direct others on how to get there.
  • Make sure people know your organization’s business objectives and audiences and help them determine how their department’s objectives and audiences fit in the big picture.
  • Teach them how to conduct simple audience research (i.e. talking to people) to find out what they need and want from your websites.
  • Help jump start efforts one site at a time. Provide assistance with a content inventory (including the weeding and pruning of content), improve the architecture and rewrite some of their content. Basically, show them how it’s done.
  • Help them understand the role of measurement and build-in simple, understandable ways to measure the effectiveness of their sites. Small, targeted measurements are much better than vague hit and page visit counts. Tie these measurements to their strategies.

None of this has to be done overnight. Baby steps in the right direction is progress. It will take a long time to change the culture—years perhaps. If people within the organization say this is too much work, is too hard or they don’t have enough time then perhaps they shouldn’t have their own websites at all.

I’m not saying this is easy. In fact, it may be very, very hard.  Your website IS your organization. In many cases a page deep within your site is the first and only contact people have with you.

You put your best foot forward in the products you develop, the courses you teach, the research you conduct and the services you provide, don’t you? Your expectations are high for your students, your employees, your faculty and your grantees, right? Why would your website, a reflection of all of that, be any different?

Your website is not an incidental responsibility—it is what you do and who you are. Its priority must reflect that.


12
Feb 10

Your website needs a [pre]design

Have you ever visited a redesigned website that looks nice, but is no more usable than before (or worse)? Did your organization implement a new content management system only to find your content never got any better? Were you disappointed when the new portal failed to revolutionize the way you work?

What are the first things many people think to do when their website has problems?

“Hire someone to redesign it! Get some new technology!”

Why? Because that’s what they always do. That’s what their competitors do. And quite frankly, they just don’t have the time or expertise to think about it. It’s a vicious cycle– a website gets redesigned, a tool gets implemented and people are happy with it for a little while. But old problems resurface, frustration mounts and it’s time to redesign again.
You blame the tool, blame the vendor, blame the people who work for you, but never blame the process.

Einstein defined insanity as “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”

By this definition, the organizations we work with are ALL insane. So are we, and we admit it.

It’s so easy to fall into old patterns and behaviors. Trying to keep up with competitors, trends and the mounting pile of work in front of you leaves little time to think. You just do what you know. We have spent time on both sides of the table– the client side and the vendor side. In former roles, we redesigned hundreds of enterprise and small scale sites in response to a pre-determined scope of work spelled out in a complicated RFP. The projects usually addressed surface-level issues that resulted in nominal improvements in the look and usability of the site.

We have made our fair share of mistakes, but now we are learning from them. We had the tremendous benefit of a fresh start and new perspective that comes from creating a new company. We now find ourselves questioning everything we do and constantly asking “why?”

Here’s a sample from a Skype chat we had a shortly after starting decimal152 at the end of 2008:

Todd: [they] redesigned their website and it still sucks
Adam: that’s blunt
Adam: why does it still suck?
Todd: maybe the design or the cms was never the problem to begin with
Adam: or maybe it was, but it wasn’t done right
Todd: or maybe it was only part of the problem
Adam: or they got railroaded by a committee or a vendor
Todd: ahh, yes. like us.
Todd: in a past life :-)
Adam: people define scope for a redesign RFP without doing the predesign work to determine scope in the first place
Todd: we need to start with good research that leads to good strategy before tackling solutions
Adam: and educate the entire organization along the way

Let’s stop the redesign insanity! Ask questions. Think before copying what another organization is doing. What works for them may not work for you. Besides, how do you know if it even works for THEM? (Chances are they don’t know if it’s working either). Redesigning a website to fix a problem you haven’t fully diagnosed is like putting a band-aid on a tumor.

It’s time to focus on pre-design the research, strategy and planning that takes place BEFORE you decide to redesign your website.

We’re looking forward to an honest conversation… and lots of questions. We hope you’ll join us.

Side note: This is our very first blog post! We’re so glad you found it. If you care about your organization’s communications and the people responsible for getting them done, we hope you will subscribe to our blog. You can get updates on future posts by subscribing to our RSS feed, email updates, Facebook fan page, LinkedIn or Twitter. One last favor– help us get the word out and share this  with a friend! Thanks– Todd.