Showing posts with label web channel strategy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web channel strategy. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Setting objectives for your web channel strategy

Your website objectives should be based on your business or organizational needs because identifying these needs will help determine content priorities, user tasks, even your information architecture/navigation.

Review the following list of objectives and check off those that apply or that will help your business or organization:

• provide general information?
• educate your clients?
• provide reference information and documents?
• support decision makers?
• handle transactions?
• interact with the broader community?
• have information that only specific audiences should be able to access?
• comply with disclosure and legal requirements?
• gain a competitive advantage?
• develop or improve consultation?
• provide a private work area or space for groups of employees?
• provide a private work space for internal project teams?
• provide a secure work space for external client or partner teams?
• manage information?
• provide institutional information?
• publish institutional information?
• promote the institution's image?
• integrate the wide range of information available across the institution?

Friday, March 14, 2008

How do users find information on your website?

There are three primary methods for accessing, finding and exploring information on a website and each method must be optimized for usability standards so that they are easy and intuitive to use:

  1. Access: The website’s first and second level information architecture;
  2. Find: Search and information access through search engines
  3. Explore: Guided navigation using content indexes to drill down to explore, find and access desired knowledge and information.