Crazy card sort
Posted: October 11, 2012 Filed under: card sorting, design, information architecture, UX, web design | Tags: digital marketing, Digital platforms, interaction design, redesign, ux, web project 1 CommentCard sorting is a great way to get a different angle on your site. All you need is some willing users, 30 minutes over lunch, and a bunch of index cards and post-its (oh, and I recommend recording it too on your phone -some of the juiciest insights come through people’s reactions while they’re discussing the sort)
For our first card sort I tested it out on some internal Nesta peeps to make sure the cards were easily sortable. But then I branched out and started sorting with our real users .
- Alice, Louise and Stian rebuilding Nesta’s brain
- Steph, Tom and Claire grapple with Nesta
- It looks quite neat from a distance
The results were really interesting. We know we’ve got a design problem with our site – it’s difficult to navigate because it’s been set up without users in min. But the scale of the problem is only coming to light now that card sorting is underway – we’ve had 5 sorts so far, and each one is throwing up really interesting and different.
As soon as the final data is in, I’ll share it with you.
But for now, here are some great off-the-cuff responses from our sorters to the problem they were trying to solve:
“It’s like a big soup!”
“People don’t care who’s in which team – they just want to know what’s happening”
“Nesta needs to talk more around a programme, rather than just after it”
“It’s all very jargony” (that was from a new Nesta staffer staring at the cards in front of her)
Useful tip:
I recommend reading Card Sorting by Donna Spencer (kindle edition is cheaper) – really practical instructions on how to run a sort. She’s also got a great spreadsheet for analysing the data afterwards. There’s nothing like hard evidence for persuading people they need to change what they do.
Top 5 content platforms
Posted: March 10, 2012 Filed under: Content, Cultural evolution, Knowledge transfer, Libraries, Open data, Platform, Uncategorized | Tags: Digital platforms, enlightenment, evolution, knowledge transfer, printing press, progress, revoltionary Leave a commentI want to tell you about the evolution of content platforms, from clay tablets to digital tablets.
Let me take you back to around 700 BC, to ancient Persia, and one of the greatest libraries ever built – the library of the scholar king Ashurbanipal.
In his library he had amassed over 40,000 separate works of knowledge, taken as prizes from the kingdoms he conquered. It was almost certainly only accessible to himself, his royal household, and perhaps a few select priests and scribes.
The works were stored on one of the simplest, yet most effective, platforms ever invented.
Clay.
This is the iPad of the Bronze Age.
A clay tablet was ingenious. It was cheap to produce, easily marked, and once hardened it was extremely resilient to compression and decay. The tablets could be stacked in columns or rows, allowing thousands to be crammed in to a small space.
But there was a big problem with this new technology. It had no network, and the content rights were closely guarded (quite literally – by big guards with heavy bronze swords and big taches).
King Ashurbanipal had succeeded in a huge act of coordinated theft, gathering together humanity’s communal knowledge under one roof and making sure he was the only reader.
Luckily, there was another platform that was around at the same time, which eventually superseded this first stage of platform evolution…



