the presentation slides - Sara Wachter
Transcription
the presentation slides - Sara Wachter
workshop: GETTING MORE WITH CONTENT MODELING sara wachter-boettcher philly content strategy sarawb.com/modeling @sara_ann_marie let’s talk about content. By Eva-Lotta Lamm ‘‘ Being everywhere is challenging. We want people to feel like they experience the same news stories everywhere. — Marisa Gallagher Creative Director, CNN Digital our content is stuck. flickr.com/photos/wordridden/6125516150 CONTENT GOES HERE. www.flickr.com/photos/76029035@N02/6829344565 CONTENT GOES HERE. www.flickr.com/photos/76029035@N02/6829344565 CONTENT GOES HERE. ‘‘ [Responsive design] was really a contentfocus exercise. Let’s just say we have this page that we’re just going to make work in smaller sizes. Is the content relevant? And is this in an order that makes sense? — Livia Labate, Sr. Director, UXD, Marriott ‘‘ At a time when nearly 60 percent of our readers access us via mobile devices, we are missing an opportunity to serve up content that’s relevant to their locations because we are not tagging stories with geographic coordinates. — New York Times Innovation Report We have... • • • • big blobs of text lack of hierarchy wysiwyg horrors siloed pages We need... • • • • modular chunks purposeful messages repeatable patterns interconnected systems Content modeling will help us get there. ‘‘ It’s not a site map depicting a top-down view... It’s not a navigational scheme... A content model is a representation of the types of content and their interrelationships. — Cleve Gibbon CTO, Cognified It’s a structural model that matches your users’ mental model. it’s about finding the right shape. By Eva-Lotta Lamm then building connection. By Eva-Lotta Lamm The result: flexible, reusable, content that can go anywhere. Kin Lane, http://apievangelist.com TITLE INTRO It makes responsive design work better. SPEC 1 SPEC 2 DESCRIPTION FEATURES CTA It allows us to design on the Z-axis. Image from Wren Lanier on A List Apart It can feed algorithms and mashups. It knows... • Starting city • Ending city • Arrival and departure dates What if... • Time zone difference alert • Upcoming weather • City info It lets us use chunks wherever we need them. What skills does this take? structural editorial organizational structural editorial organizational Data modeling is nothing new. From Web Database Applications with PHP & MySQL by Hugh E. Williams and David Lane (O’Reilly, 2003) What’s different about content modeling? content is more human, squishy. www.flickr.com/photos/mujitra/4868415523 Structure may be less formal, more conceptual. structural editorial organizational An editorial eye helps us see our content clearly. Editorial means... • messaging • prioritization • narrative forms • reader needs structural editorial organizational Changes affect... • authors • editors • developers • cms teams • translation teams Not just: “What is the ideal structure for this content?” But also: “What’s actually viable and sustainable? let’s get to work: WHERE DO WE START? First, assess what you’re working with. Not just topics, not just formats, but content types. A content type is a repeatable pattern for how content works. Each type should be doing something specific for the organization—and the user. • recipes • project ideas • collections • feature articles • blog posts • how-tos and tips • products What are each type’s defining characteristics? Categories Pub date Title Body Slideshow Comments Text Your turn: break a content type into its components. next step: CONNECTING THE PIECES Content modeling also gives you options. From the NYT Innovation Report We do this by connecting our content types. Bio Article Song Album Artist Author Collection Theme Recipe Collection Ingredient Recipe Collection Dish Recipe This is how we get to a content system. Q&A @sara_ann_marie sarawb.com/modeling Flickr images used via Creative Commons Attribution license unless otherwise noted. Illustrations by Eva-Lotta Lamm. Used with permission.