We help clients engage with their
customers, employees and members
Content is king when it comes to developing websites. However, a site filled with poorly structured and hard to find content makes you the king of, well...a mess. With lots of content we need a way to structure the information — information architecture. Information architecture is the labeling of headings, subheadings, page titles and links. It determines how your navigation will look and function, how your audience will find information and where and how information will be grouped. It also determines whether or not any search feature will be needed and how those search results will appear.
A good information architect will look to balance the needs and wants of the organization with the wants and needs of the intended target audience of the website. They will also ensure that the site’s structure will accommodate for growth and change over time.
Here are five things to keep in mind about information architecture:
An example of corporate lingo being used as a link label:
“HIPAA Regulations”
A more universally understood and more usable link label:
“Privacy Policy”
Site visitors will be better able to find information on their privacy if it is appropriately labeled using terminology they understand.
An inconsistent labeling schema for global navigation:
“About Our Company, What can we do for you?, General Info & Links,
Locations/Find Us.”
A consistent labeling schema for global navigation:
“About, Services, Resources, Directions, Home”