April 11, 2008: Discount to attend An Event Apart
After months of intense negotiation, Louis Rosenfeld LLC's legal department
has just completed an agreement with the good folks at An Event Apart to
provide you, loyal Bloug readers, with a very nice discount for this year's
conferences. These are fabulously-produced events, with excellent speakers
(including Rosenfeld Media authors like *Luke Wroblewski* and even, um, me)
in three great locations (Boston, San Francisco, and Chicago). I really
enjoyed my experience at An Event Apart, and I hope you will too:
*AN EVENT APART PRESENTS THE BLOUG DISCOUNT*
An Event Apart <http://www.aneventapart.com/>, the design conference "for
people who make websites," announces a special discount exclusively for
attendees of Louis Rosenfeld's workshops—or anyone smart enough to get on
this mailing list, whether you've attended a workshop or not.
Save $200 off An Event Apart's Boston, San Francisco, or Chicago shows with
discount code *AEASKLR*.
With its focus on web standards, best practices, and design inspiration, An
Event Apart is the perfect complement to Lou's IA workshops.
In 14 sessions over two 9.5 hour days, you'll learn directly from the
leaders in modern web design. Each monster, two-day An Event Apart learning
session features 12 of your favorite web design authors. It's like bringing
your bookshelf to life.
*SAVE THE DATE! BOSTON, SF, AND CHICAGO*
The discount applies to three An Event Apart conferences this year:
- Boston: June 23/24
- San Francisco: August 18/19
- Chicago: October 13/14
A conference pass, including admission to all sessions, snacks and lunch on
both days, access to all social events, and a bag of swag, is regularly
$995.
But with special discount code *AEASKLR,* it's just $795 when you register
before the early bird expires. (If you register for any show *after* the
early bird discount expires, you still save $100—just $895.)
Registration is now open at https://store.aneventapart.com/ and seating is
limited, first-come, first-served.
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/04/discount_to_attend_an_event\
_ap.html
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March 23, 2008: Spring 2008 talks (Philadelphia, Boston,
Urbana-Champaign, Sunnyvale, Chicago)
On April 2, I'll be speaking at PhillyCHI on site search analytics.
Todd Warfel's Messagefirst [1] is hosting the event; here are the
details (including RSVP info):
Time: 6 - 8PM (social time from 6 - 6:30PM)
Location: Messagefirst
51 N 3rd St. Suite 315
(215) 825-7423
Map: tinyurl.com/yqsvqv [2]
RSVP: phillychi@...
Then I'll hop the Acela for Boston, where I'll be teaching my
first-ever full-day workshop [3] on site search analytics (on April
4). There are lots of seats open; I'd love to see you there.
Another stop on the site search analytics workshop tour [4] takes
place in Sunnyvale, California, April 22, sponsored by Involution
Studios Master Academy. [5] This was originally scheduled for last
week, but frankly, I was sick as a dog.
On April 30, I'll be keynoting the UIUC Webmaster Forum. [6] Given
that the event's theme is web redesign, I've saucily titled my keynote
"Redesign Must Die". I'll then do a short session on (you guessed it)
site search analytics.
Finally, on May 15, I'll teach my last site search analytics workshop
[7] of the spring in Chicago. Then I'll head home to refurbish the
nest for baby #2...
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/03/spring_2008_talks_philadelp\
hia.html
LINKS
[1] http://www.messagefirst.com/
[2] http://tinyurl.com/yqsvqv
[3, 4, 7] http://louisrosenfeld.com/ssa
[5] http://involutionstudios.com/?p=111&cat=8
[6] http://www.webmasters.uiuc.edu/forum/2008/index.htm
CRASS AND COMMERCIAL
Amazon reviews for Indi Young's "Mental Models" are all (so far) 5
stars! Time to pick up a copy? Here's an incentive: use code
BLOUG01MM for a 10% discount only at the Rosenfeld Media site:
http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/
March 5, 2008: Good looking pre-conference seminar at the IA Summit
I like the looks of this: "Becoming a leader—from IA to business and
beyond" [1]:
"Information Architecture is maturing as a profession, and IAs
are increasingly being called on to leadership positions within their
organizations. This seminar will be a daylong workshop that will
explore the relationship between Information Architecture and
Leadership. We will examine this relationship from two perspectives:
* How IAs can become effective leaders in their organizations
(and in society as a whole).
* How IA skills and processes can make managers and
organizations—of any type—more effective.?
You can't go wrong spending the day with instructors like these:
Christopher Fahey, Margaret Hanley, Harry Max, Karen McGrane, Josh
Rubin, and Jorge Arango.
Yikes. Miami [2] is just around the corner...
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/03/good_looking_preconference_\
sem.html
LINKS
[1] http://www.iasummit.org/proceedings/2008/becoming_a_leader_from_ia_to_b
[2] http://www.iasummit.org/2008/
CRASS AND COMMERCIAL
I'll be teaching my new workshop, Site Search Analytics for a Better
User Experience, this spring in Sunnyvale, Boston, and Chicago:
http://louisrosenfeld.com/ssa
February 28, 2008: Site Search Analytics workshop outline
Here's the outline of what I plan to cover in my new workshop. [1]
Does this sound like what you'd expect to be covered in a workshop
about using site search analytics to improve UX design? Anything
missing? Anything seem extraneous?
To entice you to give it some thought, I'll send a copy of Indi
Young's new Mental Models book [2] or a signed polar bear v3 [3] to
the three most helpful commenters who post feedback before Monday,
March 3.
OK, here 'tis...
1) What is Site Search Analytics (SSA)?
A brief primer on what the data is and what we can learn from
it. Cover search log anatomy, introduce samples of common reports.
Explore Zipf distribution (long tail, short head, middle torso).
2) The Point of SSA
Overview of methods for determining what users want, and how SSA
is different from and complementary with traditional methods.
Demonstrate the value of data-driven analysis for designers.
3) SSA Demonstration
Introduce generic questions that can be asked of any data set.
Live demonstration of basic analytics to indicate sessions, patterns,
and failures.
4) Technical Stuff: the nuts and bolts of SSA
The three ways queries are captured. Comparison of reports from
a variety of tools (search engine, web analytics).
5) Exercise/Discussion: Pattern Analysis
Hands-on analysis to determine frequent queries, query
categories, metadata values and attributes, and content types. Plumb
the impact of seasonality/time.
6) Improving Navigation and Metadata
Using SSA to generate metadata attributes and types, determine
synonyms, popular terms, major categories. Improve contextual
navigation.
7) Exercise/Discussion: Failure Analysis
Analyze failures (e.g., common failed queries, navigational
failures) to diagnose problems, suggest possible fixes or follow-up
research.
8) Improving Content
Tuning content and titling to improve findability. Identify and
plug content gaps. Determine common content types.
9) Exercise/Discussion: Session Analysis
Identifying and sampling sessions. Looking for patterns within
sessions, and learning from the changes that commonly take place
during sessions.
10 Improving Search
Interface design improvements to query entry UI, search results
presentation, and search refinement UI.
11) SSA and UX methodology
How SSA fills a quantitative hole within typically qualitative
UX methodologies. Show how SSA can improve task analysis, personas,
and other traditional UX methods.
12) Advanced Topics/Discussion
As time permits, discuss SSA's impact on business strategy, when
and how to sample the Long Tail, and how to get SSA embedded within
your organization.
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/02/site_search_analytics_works\
hop.html
LINKS
[1] http://louisrosenfeld.com/ssa
[2] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/mental-models/
[3] http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/infoarch3/index.html
INTERESTED? COME TO THE WORKSHOP!
Dates/locations/registration here: http://louisrosenfeld.com/ssa
February 21, 2008: Digital book design
Since going live with Rosenfeld Media's first book [1], we've been
getting some love for our digital edition's design. This edition
isn't just the PDF of what we sent to the printer; it was designed
specially for on-screen use. Large typeface, easy to scroll through,
good use of the PDF reader software's capabilities, and a bunch more
features... While it's not perfect, we did a fair bit of testing on
it, so we're happy to hear mostly positive feedback.
Even when we don't deserve credit. Jorge Arango blogged [2] that our
digital design was formatted perfectly for his Sony Reader. I'm not
sure I've ever seen a real live Sony Reader (although I did check out
a Kindle recently). But lucky us, here is Indi's book nestled snugly
on Jorge's Reader:
(you email Bloug readers can check out the image at Jorge's site:
http://www.jarango.com/en/blog/2008/02/17/rosenfeld-media-mental-models/)
Eureka!
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/02/digital_book_design.html
LINKS
[1] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/mental-models/
[2] http://www.jarango.com/en/blog/2008/02/17/rosenfeld-media-mental-models/
February 20, 2008: Findability at the intersection of user experience
and web analytics
I guess I still do occasionally write about information architecture.
:-) Here's [1] an article that was just published in Adobe's Think
Tank. It starts out on the left bank of findability, swerves through
the foothills of user experience, and ends up squarely on web
analytics' turf. Thanks to David Womack for his fantastic editorial
help.
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/02/findability_at_the_intersec\
tio.html
LINKS
[1] http://www.adobe.com/designcenter/thinktank/rosenfeld.html
CRASS AND COMMERCIAL
So far Rosenfeld Media's first book, Indi Young's "Mental Models," is
selling really well. Check it out for yourself; take 10% your
purchase by using discount code #BLOUG01MM here:
http://rosenfeldmedia.com/books/mental-models/
February 14, 2008: My new workshop: "Site Search Analytics for a
Better User Experience"
You'll note from the title that I'm planning to make the case that
site search analytics—understanding what users search within your site
(as opposed to SEO)—is a critically important user research method. I
also believe that, for various reasons, it's under-valued by the user
experience community. With this workshop [1] and with the book, [2] I
aim to change that.
I'm hoping to get your feedback on what you'd like to learn in a
day-long workshop on site search analytics; I'll blog about this soon.
But for now, here are the details:
* SUNNYVALE, CA (March 18, 2008): I'm teaching this first one
through the Involution Master Academy. [3] The price is lower ($699)
and it's limited to nine attendees. You can register on the Involution
site. [4]
* BOSTON, MA (April 4, 2008) and CHICAGO, IL (May 15, 2008): these
run $895 per workshop ($795 for early registration). Steve Krug will
be teaching his new workshop on do-it-yourself usability in the same
venues, and you can attend both days (they're consecutive) at a
discount. Register via my site. [1]
All the information about the workshop, including the description, is here. [1]
It's exciting—and, honestly, a bit intimidating—for me to start a new
workshop after 5+ years of teaching my enterprise information
architecture seminar. So if nothing else, sign up just to witness and
laugh at me as I try to function in my most nervous and broken-down
state. ;-)
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/02/my_new_workshop_site_search\
_an.html
LINKS
[1] http://louisrosenfeld.com/presentations/seminars/site_search_analytics/
[2] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/searchanalytics/
[3] http://involutionstudios.com/?cat=8
[4] http://involutionstudios.com/?p=111&cat=8
February 13, 2008: Spend the day with me in Sunnyvale
Let me take a break from publishing news [1] to let you know that I'll
be teaching a new day-long workshop on site search analytics, the
topic of the book [2] I'm (still) working on. The inaugural edition of
"Site Search Analytics for a Better User Experience" [3] is being
hosted by my friends at Involution Studios [4] in Sunnyvale,
California on March 18 (10am-6pm).
Involution's Master Academy [5] takes an interesting approach with its
seminars, limiting attendance to nine participants. I've heard great
buzz about the quality of Involution's seminars, and they've got some
excellent speakers on their spring agenda (Luke Wroblewski, Steve
Portigal, Dirk Knemeyer, and Andre Herasimchuk). So you might consider
their other offerings as well.
I'll be announcing two more dates for later in the spring shortly, but
the Sunnyvale date will be the smallest and the only one on the west
coast. More on this new workshop soon; hope to see you this spring!
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/02/spend_the_day_with_me_in_su\
nny.html
LINKS
[1] http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/02/finally.html
[2] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/searchanalytics/
[3] http://involutionstudios.com/?p=111&cat=8
[4] http://involutionstudios.com/
[5] http://involutionstudios.com/?cat=8
CRASS AND COMMERCIAL
Purchase Rosenfeld Media's first book (Indi Young's "Mental Models")
at a 10% discount; use code BLOUG01MM on the Rosenfeld Media site:
http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/mental-models/ )
February 9, 2008: Finally!
After two long years, Rosenfeld Media [1] is a real, bona fide publisher.
More importantly, as a loyal Bloug reader, you can purchase our first book,
*Mental Models: Aligning design strategy with human behavior,*[2] by Indi
Young, with a 10% discount from the Rosenfeld Media site (use code
BLOUG01MM). You'll receive Indi's excellent book, illustrated and
beautifully printed in full color on high quality paper with a sewn binding.
But that's not all! You'll also receive a digital version, optimized for
on-screen use. Now a searchable and readable version will go where your
laptop goes.
But that's not all! We're providing loads of complimentary content on Indi's
book site. [2]
But that's not all! Both print and digital books have been tested by real
live users, supervised by real live UX experts. (We'll be sharing our
results this spring in one of your favorite UX magazines.) So we're putting
our money where are mouth is.
But that's still not all! If you purchase directly from the Rosenfeld Media
site, [2] you'll help us make more money. (You can purchase it from Amazon,
but it'll take longer to arrive, you won't receive the digital version of
the book, nor will you be able to take advantage of the discount code, so
why would you want to do that?) Why should you care if we make more money?
Well, you'll help the only publisher dedicated to UX thrive, survive, and
bring you more books. [3] And you'll also help us pay for the UX Zeitgeist
service [4], ready to formally open its doors next month.
We're thrilled to have made it this far. And we hope you'll give us, and
Indi's book, a try. (Did I mention the 30-day, 100% money-back guarantee?)
There are plenty of bugs left to iron out, and I hope you'll ask questions
and let us know what needs to be fixed on our customer forum. [5]
Thanks for reading and thanks for your support!
PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2008/02/finally.html
LINKS
[1] http://rosenfeldmedia.com/
[2] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/mental-models/
[3] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/publications/
[4] http://uxzeitgeist.com
[5] http://getsatisfaction.com/rosenfeldmedia
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November 28, 2007: User Experience Network picks up steam
We've relaunched the UXnet web site, [1] with some major improvements.
We've made it far easier for our dozens of UXnet "local ambassadors" to
profile the UX activities and landscape in their local areas [2].
Subsequently, the events calendar [3] has grown substantially. The site's
news area [4] has been going strong for a while now through the efforts of
Mark Vanderbeeken and Whitney Quesenbery. Thanks to the new design, the
site's content and overall activity have really taken a great leap forward.
And we're not done yet; more good changes are on the way.
So, if you've had a "wait-and-see" attitude about UXnet (and I wouldn't
blame you if you did), this is a good time to take another look. And if
you're interested in participating as an "ambassador" for your area, we want
you [5].
This is a great time to acknowledge the hard work of many volunteers,
especially Keith Instone, who squeezed much of the relaunch into his tight
schedule. Keith is an incredible team player and hard worker who, in his
positive and low-key way, successfully collaborates with a diverse
collection of backgrounds and egos. Keith really is the model of what a
user experience professional should be. So it's not surprising that UXnet
has named its volunteer award [6] after him. Thank you, Keith!
BLOUG PERMALINK
http://tinyurl.com/33olc6
LINKS
[1] http://uxnet.org/
[2] http://uxnet.org/locales
[3] http://uxnet.org/calendar
[4] http://uxnet.org/news
[5] http://uxnet.org/locales/joinus
[6] http://uxnet.org/about/awards
November 7, 2007: Publishing house as open platform?
Another inspiration courtesy of DUX [1]...
Adam Greenfield, author of Everyware [2], gave yesterday's excellent
afternoon keynote. Adam used the term "ecology" quite liberally, suggesting
that designers of all sorts move away from designing products and services
and think more holistically, designing comprehensive ecologies, platforms
(and, dare I say it, experiences).
I love talks like Adam's. For one reason, I already agree--in fact, I
consider myself to be something of an "infrastructuralist" [3]--and I see
the things I've helped build--Argus Associates, the IA Institute [4], and
now Rosenfeld Media [5], as essentially infrastructures or platforms for
smart people to use to shape, sell, and share their ideas and expertise.
But Adam makes this case for holistic platform design so much better than I
ever could hope to. He also uses great visual examples, an ability that,
sadly, will be forever beyond my grasp.
Adam's best example of systematic design is Nike+ [6]. Nike combines
running shoes with an accompanying web site and your iPod to flesh out an
elegantly-designed ecology for its keystone species (and target audience),
runners.
But, as Adam points out, the design is flawed: Nike+ is a closed platform,
its continued existence subject to the whims of the company's future
business decisions. It would be much more likely to survive and improve if
it was opened up to other players (e.g., Facebook, the Roomba, and recently
Apple with its iPhone).
In all my mumbo-jumbo about being an infrastructuralist, it never occurred
to me to consider opening up the Rosenfeld Media publishing platform. Maybe
I've been too down in the weeds (hey, we're hoping to get our first book [7]
to the printer next week!), but that's no excuse. But what exactly would it
mean for a publishing house to work as an open platform?
It's arguable that vanity presses already are open platforms. We could say
the same thing about print-on-demand service provider LuLu.com. [8] We
could even claim that the Internet is an open publishing platform. But none
of those examples do what traditional publishers do: offer the added value
of true editorial services, such as review and selection.
Is there an example of a traditional publisher that offers an open platform
which includes the editorial component? If not, can you imagine one?
I think this could be fun...
BLOUG PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/11/publishing_house_as_ope
n_platf.html
LINKS
[1] http://www.dux2007.org
[2] http://www.studies-observations.com/everyware/
[3] http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/03/selftag.html
[4] http://iainstitute.org
[5] http://rosenfeldmedia.com
[6] http://nikeplus.nike.com/nikeplus/
[7] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/mental-models/
[8] http://www.lulu.com/
November 6, 2007: Geni.com and Griots
I'm at DUX,[1] and spent part of the morning talking with Kevin Brooks,[2] a
story-teller who works for Motorola, and Suzanne Currie, a design researcher
at Medtronic. Kevin was telling us about the concept of the griot [3]:
West African story-tellers who maintain oral traditions for, among other
things, families. It got me thinking about how we tell family stories
today, and Geni.com [4] immediately sprang to mind.
Geni is a fantastic tool. You can use it to enter and visually manage your
family tree information. And if you enter your family members' email
addresses, they receive invitations to add their own family trees.
Naturally, the trees are connected, which is where things get really
interesting.
For example, I've added 50 people to my tree, and those relatives have in
turn added another 108. It's really quite fun to meander through my family
tree map and learn something about those 108 people who I'm somehow related
to but didn't know about: (view page at [5])
The index of last names also is fascinating, if nothing else for its ethnic
richness: (view page at [6])
But here's where story-telling could really help. Geni is almost like an
analytics application: it tells us the story's *what*, but not *why*. Why
did this family tree come to be shaped this way? Geni gets us part of the
way there--quite admirably--but it doesn't really tell us a family's story.
What could Geni do to support the telling of family stories in a more
narrative fashion? Could the support a griot toolset? Or partner with
modern day griots?
Once again, DUX--or at least the conversations between sessions--really got
me thinking...
BLOUG PERMALINK
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/11/genicom_and_griots_1.ht
ml
LINKS
[1] http://dux2007.org/
[2] http://www.media.mit.edu/~brooks
[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griot
[4] http://www.geni.com
[5] http://www.geni.com/tree/index/31408
[6] http://www.geni.com/tree/names/31408
October 2, 2007: Come to CanUX
I'll be speaking next month at CanUX, [1] the Canadian User Experience event
(Banff, November 25-27) organized by my pals from nForm. [2] I've been
promised that it's intimate, useful, reasonably priced, and incredibly
enjoyable. And you'd be hard-pressed to find a reason to dislike Banff.
Here are the details; note the discount code for, well, a nice discount:
"CanUX is not your typical conference. It's small (limited to 70
participants), it's in a beautiful retreat-like setting at the Banff Centre,
and the program is designed to encourage creativity, exploration and group
participation alongside hands-on UX learning. This year our speakers
include Lou Rosenfeld, Brad Nemer, Kes and Sue Sampanthar, Derek
Featherstone and Jess McMullin. The Banff Leadership Arts Ensemble will
also join us (their sessions have been the highlight of previous years).
"It'd be great if you could come--you'll get a $50 discount on
registration by using the promo code CANUXBLOG. You can register online at
canux2007.com/registration. Note that the registration costs include
accommodations and meals... quelle bargain!"
BLOUG PERMALINK & COMMENTS
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/10/come_to_canux.html
LINKS
[1] http://canux2007.com/
[2] http://nform.ca/
[3] http://canux2007.com/registration
September 28, 2007: Bad beard diaries
This is what I get for doing a video interview while on vacation.
Bud Gibson of Eastern Michigan University interviewed me for his Michigan
Innovators series [1] while we were on a short vacation in Ann Arbor last
month. (That sounds weird: "vacation in Ann Arbor". But it was great.)
Bud was quite effective in getting me to spill my guts about Rosenfeld
Media's plans to dominate the world of publishing. Or, at least, UX book
publishing. It's all here [2] (the third of three parts hasn't come out
just yet).
Next time someone interviews me, I'll remember to trim the beard first. And
maybe put on a nice shirt.
BLOUG PERMALINK & COMMENTS
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/09/bad_beard_diaries.html
LINKS
[1] http://michiganinnovators.org
[2] http://michiganinnovators.org/home/companies/rosenfeld_media/
September 27, 2007: Two nourishing new sites
Dan Willis, one of the planet's most delightfully cranky UX people, has
launched a new blog named, naturally, UX Crank [1]. Practical tips,
lovingly illustrated, with a hint of vinegar of the most expensive balsamic
variety.
Khoi Vinh and Liz Danzico's new venture, A Brief Message [2], provides a
weekly dose of design advice from some heavy hitters. Stop by for a sip of
the impressive, deceivingly simple design, stay for 200 or fewer nourishing
words, and leave a comment as a tip. Most everyone else does!
BLOUG PERMALINK & COMMENTS
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/09/two_nourishing_new_site
s.html
LINKS
[1] http://www.dswillis.com/uxcrank/
[2] http://abriefmessage.com
CRASS AND COMMERCIAL
Last two enterprise IA seminars ever! Seattle, DC:
http://www.louisrosenfeld.com/eia
September 18, 2007: Three talks in Chicago this week (one free)
I'm headed to Chicago Thursday morning for three talks in three days:
* Thursday: Assuming my flight isn't late, I'll be facilitating a noon
brown bag discussion on what makes a good UX book, and you're invited (this
one is free). The IIT's Institute of Design is kind enough to host us; come
by the Nathan Room, on the 6th floor at 350 North LaSalle. We'll do some
show-and-tell: bring your favorite and not-so-favorite books you use for
your work, and be prepared to discuss what you like, what you don't, and
why. I've run a few such brown bags so far, and I'll describe a bit of what
I've learned, as well as giving a short demo of UX Zeitgeist [1].
* Friday: My last Chicago enterprise information architecture seminar
[2]. Still some seats available!
* Saturday: I'll be speaking at IIT's Design Research Conference [3]
(formerly About, With, and For). I'll be presenting [4] on how I've used,
and occasionally misused, design thinking to build Rosenfeld Media [5].
Hope to see you this week in Chicago!
BLOUG PERMALINK & COMMENTS
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/09/three_talks_in_chicago_
this_we.html
LINKS
[1] http://uxzeitgeist.com/
[2] http://www.louisrosenfeld.com/eia
[3] http://trex.id.iit.edu/events/drc/2007/index.html
[4] http://trex.id.iit.edu/events/drc/2007/speakerbio/lourosenfeld.html
[5] http://rosenfeldmedia.com/
August 23, 2007: Lou: EIA adieu
Hmmm, the vowels really ganged up on the consonants in that title...
I'm now 95% certain that this fall will be the last time I'll be offering my
enterprise information architecture seminar [1]. It's not that I think
we've figured out all of the challenges in fixing large organizations'
information architectures. Not in the least; EIA, along with multi-lingual,
multi-regional, multi-cultural IA [2], are the largest remaining IA
frontiers. If anything, enterprise challenges are going to continue to grow
as our information grows and ROTs (becomes Redundant, Outdated, and
Trivial).
My reasons for discontinuing the seminar are purely personal; over the past
five years I've taught it about 35 times, and while that degree of practice
can put one in a really comfortable place, I'd like a new challenge. I've
found that challenge with internal search analytics--which, BTW, could be
the enterprise information architect's best friend--and I plan on teaching a
search analytics seminar during the first part of 2008 (which should time
nicely with the book's publication [3]).
Steve Krug and I will continue touring together, and he already has changed
his seminar; starting this September, he'll be teaching low-cost/no-cost
do-it-yourself usability testing [4]. I'd be very sad if I didn't get to
spend time with Steve five or six times a year.
Speaking of our upcoming schedule [5], the first deadline for an early bird
discount is around the corner (September 5). Here are all the dates and
locations:
* Chicago, IL: September 21 (early registration by September 5)
* Seattle, WA: October 21 (early registration by September 28)
* Washington, DC: November 21 (early registration by October 19)
So if you've always wanted to attend my EIA seminar, this is likely your
last chance. And yes, because it's a good seminar and because Iris
occasionally needs a new pair of shoes, I'll continue teaching in-house EIA
seminars on request.
PS While we're on the subject of EIA, here's some really good reading [6,
7] from Boxes and Arrows.
BLOUG PERMALINK & COMMENTS
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/08/lou_eia_adieu.html
LINKS
[1] http://louisrosenfeld.com/presentations/seminars/eia/
[2] http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/000246.html
[3] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/searchanalytics/
[4] http://www.sensible.com/workshops.html
[5] http://louisrosenfeld.com/presentations/seminars/eia/
[6] http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/enterprise
[7] http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/enterprise-ia
August 9, 2007: UX consciousness among the analysts
just posted an item on the Rosenfeld Media site that you might find worth a
quick read. I'm trying to gauge how conscious of user experience (and all
of its component fields) the Forresters and Gartners of the world are. I
think I came up with some interesting data, and maybe my conclusions aren't
half bad either. Anyway, would love feedback; please check it out.
BLOUG PERMALINK & COMMENTS
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/08/ux_consciousness_among_
the_ana.html
LINK
[1]
http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/announcements/2007/08/user_experience_and_the_
analys.php
July 9, 2007: Usability of search: research?
Avi Rappoport, search guru, maintainer of SearchTools.com, [1] and Friend of
Lou, asks:
"I'm putting together a talk on "Good Practices for Search UI" for the
Enterprise Search Summit West [2] (November 6-7 in San Jose), and am having
a hard time finding any actual search usability research. Have you done any
work on the topic lately? Do you know who might be in this field and
available to participate?
"I'm looking for really practical work, such as whether users get
disconcerted by very large results numbers, how long the match words in
context should be, how to display zone-limited search and whether to revert
to universal search after a zone, how to display Search Suggestions (Best
Bets) separate from or included with organic search results, and so on."
It's a great question. Any ideas for Avi?
BLOUG PERMALINK & COMMENTS
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/07/usability_of_search_res
earch.html
LINKS
[1] http://searchtools.com/
[2] http://www.enterprisesearchsummit.com/
June 22, 2007: Fall seminar dates and locations
For some reason, Steve Krug and I got a jump start on planning our fall
seminar schedule. Steve will be teaching a new seminar: an entire day
dedicated "to low-cost/no-cost do-it-yourself usability testing". (The
description is coming to his site [1] "real soon now".) If the description
isn't yet certain, the quality and value will be; you should never, ever
pass up a chance to be in the same classroom with Steve.
Rosenfeld spelled backward is "Dlefnesor," which just happened to be the
name of a large, lumbering dinosaur known for patiently awaiting its
favorite meal, pine sap. (No, they didn't survive for long.) OK, so maybe
I am a dinosaur, but I am going to continue teaching my enterprise IA
seminar [2] for one more season. I'll probably teach something new (like,
um, this search analytics stuff [3]) in the spring, but I'm not quite ready
to teach a new class, and besides: the enterprise IA attendees seem to
really like the seminar. So there.
OK, the dates and locations:
* Chicago: September 20 (Steve) / September 21 (Lou)
* Seattle: October 25 (Lou) / October 26 (Steve)
* Washington, DC: November 15 (Lou) / November 16 (Steve)
Prices, early registration dates, discounts, and other details are available
here. [4] My seminar's web-based registration system is up and running, but
I don't have a PDF registration form yet. Soon.
And hope to see you soon in one of those fine cities.
BLOUG PERMALINK & COMMENTS
http://louisrosenfeld.com/home/bloug_archive/2007/06/fall_seminar_dates_and_
locatio.html
LINKS
[1] http://www.sensible.com/workshops.html
[2] http://louisrosenfeld.com/eia/
[3] http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/searchanalytics/
[4] http://louisrosenfeld.com/eia/