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From Discovery to Design 5 crucial steps for planning your website @Astute_Anna [email protected]
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Discovery to Design

Feb 13, 2017

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Anna Stout
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Page 1: Discovery to Design

From Discovery to Design

5 crucial steps for planning your website

@Astute_Anna [email protected]

Page 2: Discovery to Design

Process

[pros-es; especially British proh-ses]noun, plural processes

1. A systematic series of actions directed to some end: to devise a process for homogenizing milk.creating a website.

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Common Agency and Freelancer Process

1 ) Kickoff Meeting/Conversation

2 ) HERE ARE YOUR DESIGNS!!!!

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THIS IS NOT A

PROCESS

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What Can a Process Do For Me?

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Superior Product

Better Experience

Improved Results

What a Process Can Do

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Site Map/User Flow1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

Customer Acquisition Funnel

Content Development

Wireframing/Site Architecture

Visual Design

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What is best for your users is best for your business

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JUST START TALKING.

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Guidelines for Planning

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Try to assemble a small team for input

Establish goals for the site

Complete an audit of the existing website

Host white boarding sessions for brainstormingRefine goals: Identify 1-3 top priorities for the website.

Guidelines for Planning

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Sitemapping and User Flow

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The sitemap is a basic outline of the content and hierarchy of the

site.

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The user flow diagram visualizes

the different paths a user may take

through a website.

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Customer AcquisitionFunnel

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FOCUS.

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Design that does not drive results is not good

design

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In preparing for battle, I always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.

- Dwight D Eisenhower

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Content

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THE #1 THING THAT HOLDS UP A WEBSITE PROJECT

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- Identify pages based on your sitemap.- Break your pages down according to what type of content you expect to live on each page.

HOW DO WE GENERATE CONTENT?

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Homepage:

Subpages:

6th Grade

8th Grade

Million dollar words don’t earn points here. They lose users.

IDEAL READING LEVELFOR WEBSITE CONTENT

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Earnest Hemingway’s

The Old Man and the Sea registers at a reading level of

Grade 4.

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TEST YOUR COPY

http://www.readabilityformulas.com/free-readability-formula-tests.php

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Use smaller paragraphs and include icons and images to break up content and make it

infinitely more readable. Simplify and make your content easy to skim.

EASILY “DIGESTABLE” CONTENT

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TRIM THE FAT

The “freshness” of your content should therefore be a by-product of the consistent intent to deliver value to your visitors in a manner that is enjoyable for them to consume.

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http://www.usability.gov/how-to-and-tools/methods/writing-for-the-web.html

RESOURCE FOR WRITING ON THE WEB

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“It seems that perfection is attained not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing more to remove.” Antoine de Saint Exupery

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IF YOU’RE NOT A COPYWRITER, HIRE ONE.

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Wireframing and SiteArchitecture

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Responsive web design has necessitated that wireframes, along with

every other step in our process, become less

concrete–A little more flexible.

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• Plan an order for the presentation of information.

- Look at the content that has already been compiled. Is there a clear hierarchy that is inherent to that information?

• Ask, “What is the main point of this page.” Start there and plan around it, ensuring that you aren’t stealing focus from the main point.

SO HOW DO WE DO IT?

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Wireframes are the bridge from content to design.

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DESIGN

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Mobile FirstWe start with the lowest, smallest common demoninator and build up, “progressively enhancing” our websites – adding features and functions as we go.

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Atomic Web Design

“We can break entire interfaces down into fundamental building blocks and work up from there”

- Brad Frost

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PAGE DESIGNS

STYLE GUIDES/PATTERN LIBRARIES

+

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Site Map/User Flow

Customer Acquisition Funnel

Content Development

Wireframing/Site Architecture

Visual Design