Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010
Macaulay, C., D. Benyon & A. Crerar. 2000. Ethnography, theory and systems design: from intuition to insight. Human-Computer Studies. 53: 35-60.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT)
-       “Would design not benefit more from training better ethnographers than from burdening them with such a complex set of theoretical concepts and debates as CHAT?â€
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Explicit use of theoretical frameworks encourages reflexivity
-       Suchman: systems designers are disadvantaged as a result of the distance between them and the subjects/objects of their design.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â How to help inexperienced design ethnographers makes the transition from intuition to design insight
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â User-centered design is beginning to expand the requirements of workflows to include knowing the social user as well as individual – Is it also not encouraging ethnography?
-       Ethnomethodological terms: issues here is not so much “context a resource†but “context as topicâ€- so should we focus on how to use contextual information or on what we mean by contextual info?
-       “Suchman proposed that that since tools reify underlying models of the activity they are designed to support, developing an underlying conceptions is a crucial part of the design.â€
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Ethnography set of methods, not theory
-       Tension between “traditional†ethnographer, whose object is to simply describe and interpret cultures (?!) and the design ethnographer whose aim is toe describe and interpret cultures for the purpose of design a tool that will change the culture
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Relationship between ethnography and design dialogue btwn attitude, validity and practicality
-       Attitude of computer professionals to qualitative “soft†data
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Openness about theoretical decision in the field may establish greater validity
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Ethnographer presented different by engineers and anthropologists
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Design ethnographers have own quick and dirty approach to ethnography
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Ethnomethodologists claim to have broken with sociologist in that description is not a precursor to analysis, but a means by which to know
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Theory can enlighten and provide insight into arising problems or confusion
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Information gathering in design world can come down to stricter deadlines
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â We can only understand the mind with reference to the interaction with the material world that produces the contents of the mind.
-       “Implications for designâ€
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Can theoretical frameworks improve the client-designer relationship?
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Or does it become authoritative?
Check out:
Anderson, A &Alty, J.L. 1995. Everyday theories, cognitive anthropology and user-centered systems design…
Bauman, Z. 1999. Culture as Praxis…
Berg, M. 1998. The politics of technology…
Brown, B. 1998. Working notes:how computers used for collaborative work…
Marcus, G. 1986. Contemporary problems of ethnography in the modern world system….
Tags: Anthrodesign, design ethnography, designer views, expert model, participant observation, relationship technology user, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Anthropology, Article notes, research methods | 38 Comments »
Sunday, June 20th, 2010
I generally try and adopt an agile approach to most projects, but generally it is a mix of different processes depending on how the people within the team work best. I try and use the most relevant tools from all practises when relevant. It also depends on the team size. When I’m working on my own, having a large process doesn’t seem so useful!
Yes, I love how quickly you can get a WP install up and running. I think in many instances, its helpful to just get something out there, and then build on top of it as needs arise. Half the time, you’ll realise you didn’t need all those extra things you were planning on building, and the basic approach is working just as well. I think Wordpress being an easy tool to implement often makes me think ‘how would this apply to wordpress’, and thing around the concepts of posts and pages. The new functionality in WP3 will be fantastic, as it will allow for more discreet page types, and get even closer to working as a CMS. I have experience working with a wide range of CMS tools, bespoke and off the shelf.
Many clients are already used to using a blogging platform, or even Wordpress, so it helps in having to explain how sites may be managed. When you push WP to its limit in managing content, though, sometimes, the client has to work a little harder in creating and editing content, using custom fields, rather than something which clearly explains the process they’re taking. The simplicity can be its downfall at times.
I’m not sure it matters whether it is a nonprofit or profit project, but the first phase of the project is the most critical to really understand what a client needs. Generally the client will not know what they want, only an idea of the problem they want solving. I generally try and spend some real time with my client to understand their problems, and work out which approach is best for them. Just getting a brief and delivering code against it isn’t fun or effective. There is often a gap between the client’s requirements, and the agency who is building a piece of work for the client – which is when pro-bono relationships go sour. Most marketing clients cannot write a good brief, so it isn’t surprising that a charity may not be able to. It creates resentment on the agency side for having to keep changing the work, and disapointment on the client side that they are not being understood. There is also, often, too much focus on the aims of the organisation, and not on the user – which can lead to a site which may do exactly what the client wants, but is not engaging or providing value to the end user. Again, it is important to try and get real users involved in the design process. Sometimes this is not possible, due to cost or timings, but eliciting real feedback after launch is important – and if you can launch earlier and smaller, and then revise based upon feedback, that is only a good thing.
I guess suggesting technology which has a strong existing user-base, both front-end and developer users, means that should I, as a supplier, no longer work for the non-profit, they’re not going to struggle finding someone else to help out. The same goes for sensible development practises. When it comes to the organisation spending time with their own site and continuing to manage it, again this comes down to requirements. If you realise at the start they’re going to have little time to add new content, try and create something which is easy to update with little effort, ie. adding feeds of content from other sources, or encouraging user content.
I try and use face to face training to take them through the WP system, and how it works.
Securing time to dedicate to the projects is the biggest challenge, as I still need to pay the bills, and if i need to take a paying client over a pro-bono project, it quite often gets pushed back. I think the most important element is helping to create a sustainable team, so rather than being a dedicated developer on something, I try and build up a little team of people who can help out, and work together to make sure the project gets the attention it deserves.
I don’t think you can define a ‘non-profit’ as having standard attributes, as non-profit is too wide a label. I run a couple of non-profit projects, but they’re not charities. I work with a couple of non-profit organisation which have budgets of over £5m so it isn’t about lack of money either. I think tools which are defined for tasks within sectors, like fundraising or CRM, would clearly have some generalised aspects. Any generic tool will always have its drawbacks, but so do bespoke tools. The most important element is the support structure which off the shelf tools come with, because if you’re going that route, you perhaps don’t have a developer onboard, and someone still needs to understand the implications of the technology. CRM is especially important, as once you start using a package, you’re going to invest a great deal of time doing data entry and setting up a process, which you don’t want to throw out in 12 months if you’re not getting the most from it.
Having run a commercial agency which has done a couple of pro-bono projects, I can understand why they’re pushed through the studio with the least amount of time spent, as they’re a loss to the company, and if they don’t get done quickly, its likely that other projects will impact upon the delivery of the project. So, templates and out of the box solutions help that. It depends on the requirements of the NFP on whether that is detrimental or not. If its about getting something online quickly, then thats fine. If they need more thought and investment into how the project should work, what the big idea is, the strategic thinking etc, that is generally something which should happen way before development starts anyway, and then finding the best technical solution comes later, templates or not.
I think both social media and social responsibility are two great ways of engaging your audience, and hopefully if it is genuine, everyone benefits. My clients are increasingly aware of CSR activity and how it can benefit their brand, so are generally open to the ideas which deliver on both commercial and ethical fronts. I hope its not just a trend!
It depends on how classically you’re describing ethnography. I haven’t lived in any of my clients’ houses for any period of time, but I have done plenty of workshops and spent time in work places and with end users to understand their needs and requirements. it is always useful to talk to end users and clients in their own context, and spend some real time with people to develop a relationship over a longer period, as you get to understand more subtle elements of their needs through observation, rather than explicit questionning. so many things are overlooked when you’re trying to gather requirements as the person you’re asking just assumes the basics will be taken into account.
Tags: cms, design ethnography, designer views, Nonprofit, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Nonprofit | 56 Comments »
Saturday, June 12th, 2010
Date of Event: June 9, 2010
What: Informal Interview
What happened:
Had a quick chat with a web developer/entrepreneur who works fully in the business sector. The goal was to gain a comparison to those who work with nonprofits and double check a few of my “buzzword†definitions.
It became apparent that a lot of the questions I asked were either not directed clearly at the business world (more research definitely would have been helpful) or were not open ended enough. I believe it is the latter. For the questions I have created have come from my own experiences working with nonprofits and Wordpress, thus people with similar experiences and skill-sets will have an answer. How does this bias my research? It appears this also points out the benefits of participant observation, where one is not figuring out a specific question to ask, but experiencing the field of study as a whole. However, my performance as a web designer is an integral part of my study as is meant to help direct the types of questions I ask. I suppose then, how does a study that is a continuation of previous experiences not within the timeline of current research, impact one’s work? To what level am I to be accountable for this knowledge?
Few points:
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Bringing up the question of how the business world deals with choosing software, he stated in most instances larger corporations, with income allocated for technology can either hire someone to make the open source software do what they please, or create a proprietary software that fulfills their aims. Thus, the decision really comes down to ideals or functionality requirements, rather than cost-effectiveness.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â The collaborative nature of technology appears to be more widely accepted by people working in the tech world and is slowly being understood by the greater public. However, he used the term responsive, which I think makes more sense for non-tech savvy people. While they may not use the internet as a collaborative tool, they maybe can view technology as working to be more responsive to their needs. Collaboration requiring the user to participate online, while greater responsiveness being the job of technology to provide for the user.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Agile development is not necessarily user-centered, but about the iterative process.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Why use Wordpress? Easy to set up and lightweight, and of course it is free.
Tags: designer views, relationship technology user, web design, wordpress
Posted in Meetups | 9 Comments »
Monday, June 7th, 2010
Date of Event: June 3, 2010
What: Apps for Good London by CDI Europe: Monthly Networking Drinks
Who: Apps for Good : http://appsforgood.org/
Where: Las Iguanas – Spitalfields Market
What happened:
Tonight I attended the Meetup Group: Apps for Good. An amazing organization that does this:
Apps for Good is the new programme by CDI Europe where young people learn to create apps that change their world. During April/ May 2010 we will be running the first prototype course at the High Trees Development Trust in Tulse Hill/South London and envision to expand to four other locations in the UK by the end of the year. And Rodrigo Baggio, CDI’s founder, wants to see 50 CDI Community Centres in the UK by the end of 2011…
Quite impressive I must say, with a great following of people helping to get the project off the ground.
Received quite a bit of good information, apologies for the disjointed thought process, but going to note point by point:
-       Language: A small conversation began surrounding the fact that: “Language is impreciseâ€. Often, for successful interdisciplinary communication, or in this case client-designer communication, participants either need to use language that resides in one of the opposing systems or to find a point of convergence that allows for more fluid understanding. To what level then are web designers responsible for educating their clients?
-       Terminology: The term “emerging markets†was used at some point in the evening and appears to be quite popular in the web industry. I realize that the world is yet to find a term that not relative to the USA, Britain etc… but better suited would be a term that does not directly imply a move toward the capitalist market system.  I am certainly not against the use of technology in populations where there is less exposure, but it would be preferred that technology be developed as a result of research done for a specific location and need rather than imposed.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Agile Definition: Another definition of Agile development for comparison: reducing risk for a project and letting client and others know that changes are allow. Reducing stress as a whole. Setting priority at certain junctions, but being flexible.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Nonprofit Web Designer: Spoke to my first female web designer! And she was fantastic. A large portion of what was spoken about had to do accessibility and a comparison between her work with larger corporations and nonprofits. For larger corporations would not make their site accessible until they knew that the time put into such a task would also increase their revenue. Therefore, until this was assured and had moved through the hierarchy to be approved by all the correct individuals, nothing could be done by her as the web designer. And of course in the end, greater accessibility does mean great revenue. Nonprofits on the other hand, do not usually have the same hierarchy that would limit web designers from making the site accessible, they normally want an accessible site because it fits with their ideals (Digital Inclusion) and generally there is just greater need to reach as many people as possible. It was also for this reason that working with nonprofits was a positive experience for her. Being allowed more freedom, but being driven by the ideals of the nonprofit makes the process of web design more pleasant. Not to mention, that when working with a nonprofit often times any labor time that you can donate is appreciated whether or not you able to create exactly what planned.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Wordpress and Nonprofits: This web designer stated she also uses Wordpress because it is just best looking and easiest thing to get up and running. A common statement for sure among web designers. Following, CMSs are useful because themes are built to be compliant, again allowing an organization to reach more people across platforms. She stated without following set standards, communication eventually does break down.
-       Documentation: For particular nonprofit sites, she did go through some processes of wireframing, but alterations in templates are relatively easy to make as well. Previous web designers have also stated that they bypass a lot of documentation because Wordpress’ basic installation allows one to organize content easily before implementing the theme.
-       Nonprofits + Agencies: She has seen nonprofits go to agencies for websites and what is given to them is a cookie-cutter site that is fast and easy for the agency, but lacks commitment to the nonprofit’s cause or needs.
-       New App: Also found out that there has been an app developed that automatically makes websites accessible and works with variety of screen readers etc… thus relieving lazy web designers of the work it takes to make the site accessible. Link anyone?
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Open Source: I also asked at this Meetup whether they agreed that a lot of corporations distrust free software and there was blanket disagreement. This is in opposition to the answer I received previously. Both groups of people were developers and designers. The group agreeing were individuals involved in the creation of an open source CMS, the group disagreeing were quite mixed. Not sure.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Value Chain: One member of the Meetup also brought up an interesting point about where people and data fall in the value chain. It is not until someone is able to make use of data, to build an app etc., that the data actually becomes valuable. It has then been given a use-value that can be exchanged at an entirely different level and possible even for something it was not intended for. *Would be interesting delve deeper into the movement of data through the market.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Sustainability of technology: The same member also stated he is facing the issue of how to make technology sustainable and accessible in order to allow continued use of the data gathered by his organization. If funding is cut, then technology must be easy to use and maintainable by the greater community. Â In replacing community with nonprofit, the same value applies. How can web designers implement a sustainable technology that allows nonprofits to maintain their website (their data and information) cheaply and easily? To provide ownership?
-       CDI: The goal of CDI is was my initial goal when attempting to figure out my research project. To find an issue and then use technology to solve it. In the end, my current project was more feasible, as I do not have the technological expertise to build the necessary app., plug-in, software etc. In my master’s next year in Human Centered Design and Engineering I will have a chance to work in a group where everyone has a different skill set to bring to the table. Making such a project possible.
Points I am not sure what to do with quite yet:
-       One of the participants stated that, “technologists simply learn to fix problems that they create themselvesâ€. I realize this cannot be taken at face value, but does remind us that user needs, while currently often in the forefront, are not the only factor driving innovation.
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Work acceptance? The meaning of this is on the tip of my tongue. I know it was explained. Anybody help me out? Roles of client and designer? Is it relating to scope creep?
Links to check out:
CDI – http://cdieurope.eu/
Our mission is to transform lives and strengthen low-income communities by empowering people with information and communication technology.
http://www.itforcharities.co.uk/
IT resource guide for charities.
To be “The UK organisation that has the most impact on how Civil Society organisations can exploit the technology resources they need to improve their effectiveness, achieve their aims and, in turn, improve the lives of the people they serveâ€.
http://mulqueeny.wordpress.com/
Bio Co-Founder Rewired State & government-y type person. Sadly passionate about: Transformational Govnt, Smarter Govnt, Data, Power of information, Geeks.
Rewired State runs hackdays where developers show government what is possible, and government shows developers what is needed.
http://www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/oswebsite/
Ordnance Survey is Great Britain’s national mapping agency, providing the most accurate and up-to-date geographic data, relied on by government, business and individuals.
CMS/website publishing software
Tags: cms, designer views, expert model, Nonprofit, ownership, relationship technology user, ucd, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Meetups | 165 Comments »
Sunday, June 6th, 2010
Interviewee: Toon – audio file too large to upload. Need to edit.
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Duration: 50 minutes
Date: May 17th, 2010
*Okay to put audio and transcription and name online.
Job title area of expertise?
Normally web designer
How many years have you been in the industry?
Since 2000, about 10 years
Do you work mainly as a free-lancer or in-house?
In-house
How if at all would you label your workflow in reference to your current position?
We don’t use any formalize workflow system, so I guess you would classify that at waterfall, with some agile projects depending on the team. But it varies.
What % of your web design projects, either personal or professional use Wordpress?
Um, you mean like completely new projects or projects that are underway, because as an in-house designer a lot of my projects involved updating and adding new stuff to existing sites. When you are talking about new websites, it is probably 80-90%, when you are talking about everything its more like 50/50 of even less.
And for those projects, is there a type of client you use Wordpress with more often or are you mainly dealing with your in-house position right now?
*should have asked about past projects
I am mainly dealing with my in-house position now, but we have a varied field of websites, so we lean toward Wordpress for most new work now, unless it is very different from something remotely resembling a blog. Which I mean you put articles online and they have a date and images and they are in categories and tags, so for example for a product catalogue or something I would maybe not use it, for a calendar system I would not use it, if it just the calendar system. If there are really a lot of users, like 10,000’s of them, we have noticed that Wordpress is not the ideal solution. That might be a concern there.
Could you tell me the name of the government organization that you work for and the type of work that they do?
Well. The entity I work for directly is called Klasse, and that is an educational magazine that is controlled completely by the Flemish ministry of education. It is regionalized in Belgium so there are two ministries of education, which is my employer.
And what is the goal of having the website?
The goal of the website has to be framed in the general goal of the project. Which is to promote active citizenship and to do that via teachers and students and pupils and parents. Â Sort of a combined approach there. There are magazines and the website are also an aspect of that.
How did you become involved?
Well, I applied for the job really.
Now, you built the entire site correct? Or with your developer that is?
Well there are two of us, me the designer and the other being the developer. So there are two people technically building the site. In a technical sense. Um there is one website that is also part our entity which is still hosted and managed externally, but most of the sites we build internally, and of course everything content wise and putting stuff online and strategy is sort of a shared responsibility between us and technical experts and ? as halfway between technical and content and strategy expert.
So I would to hear about the workflow from your perspective on whatever part of the site you would like to concentrate on. Â Or the entire project if that is easier for you. If you feel comfortable speaking fluidly about the process from start to finish you can do that. Or I can also provide markers for you or interject whenever I feel the need.
I will use our website for parents which we are redeveloping. Well I will start out with a bit of history. When I started with Klasse, before that there was no in house technical web development or design team. It was all done by an external company with whom the relationship was rather not on the best terms at the end. So they decided to in-source that activity and that is why I a started there. And in the beginning it was very difficult for everybody there to go from a model where you brief an external agency and two weeks later they come back with a solution and working in a constant state of flux where sort of everything is up for debate all the time. And now with the redevelopment of the parents website we have taken well the first started there my main battle with was with that ancient culture of briefing and then forgetting about it. For 2 months and then coming back with remarks now we are really really developing it in a dialogue with the editors of the magazine and with all sorts of people who are responsible for the content. And what the site should be and who it should be and what it should not be. And so not it much more organic process, and it is also um because we are using Wordpress now and we were not using Wordpress the first time around we can now so to speak we can now put up a test version of the website in about 5 minutes with the default template. We can just whip up some categories and add a plug-in or two and have something that resembles a website. And then they can start experimenting with it and give us feedback bout the things they like and the things they do not like or don’t understand. Whereas previously, much more mockup based process, where I would create mockups very conceptual wireframe wise or more graphically to explain a lot, like this is going to work like this or that, whereas now the graphical fidelity of the website is established later on, um but the functional aspect of it can be tested much earlier. So they can get a feel of how content interacts with each other and get a feel for how you can link stuff via categories or tags and how certain systems and plug-ins work because it is much easier to test this time around than it was when we had to develop everything in house. We developed our backend interface, that was something that the developer took from his earlier jobs, so some old cms system that we adapted throughout the years, um but that meant we had to , well we were flying blind, um we established some parameters and some functionality requirements and then the developer would start developing till it was finished and that was it. There is now because we use Wordpress we can focus much much more on the details of the functionality and the process is well we skip a few steps, so to speak, whereas is in the previous workflow, we built a website, and then we sort of saw what was right and wrong about it, but we were stuck with it because it was finished. Now we can adapt it much more. Also because Wordpress is of course is a flexible system because it is built that way. So things like categories and navigation stuff like that and widgets and sidebars it’s all built in, where previously that was all hard coded and much much more difficult to adapt it.
Um that is the difference, but basically the workflow still starts with a briefing with the editing staff, so the chief editor, and anyone else who is responsible for the website, something like that, and then um we basically what I do, is I create a graphic design for the look and feel of the site, and alongside of that I create a wireframe mockup, of the functionality and sort of a layout there the different content areas are going to be. How much space everything is getting, how if there is going to be a header image or not if there is a search or login forms, or subscribe forms and the whole page or somewhere else, 2 or 3 sidebars and columns that sort of thing, that is all in the wireframes, and I also do a very detailed graphic design very early on, just to make it real for them, just otherwise they get stuck in this sort of abstraction and they don’t really understand it because they are not graphic designers. So they, I use Ah, I don’t know if you know Balsamic? The mockup tool , yeah it’s a fairly simply air based mockup tool. And um they output looks very sketchy, it looks like it is sketched. And this is an advantage because then they know the site is not going to be shades of gray, and it just a design. But still they have trouble visualizing how it is going to look. So I find that it helps to define a visual style alongside of that. IF it is going to be more playing or more cool and clear or you know. That sort of thing. And that is sort of the workflow that I have established throughout the years I have been there. It seems to work, because people find every project.
Did you complete any research for this projects in terms of what the organization wanted to do?
Yes, but not to the extent that I wanted to. Um, well first of all there was a very big study done by the ministry of education about all the communication channels that they used. And ours were among those. But that was with a marketing focus, with focus groups and things like that. So a lot about the magazine, so it was really not about the functionality or usability of the products but more about sort of the grand experience if you want to call it that. And then we early on did some card sorting tests
*need to look up card sorting mentioned in a lot of interviews, for more indepth understanding.
Because we noticed that the information architecture of the site was not really ideal.  It is also very much a mixed bag of things. It is not a simple purpose site, it is all very complex, not like it is a shopping site, but it’s a mix of all that. And I would have liked to follow those up with testing mockup and stuff like that. And someone there was wasn’t really time and there wasn’t really, well it ended up being on my sole responsibility and the editors and content people didn’t really care because they just wanted their stuff on the website. So that sort of got sidelined. Now I am probably going to test the finished visual version of the website with Usable, I don’t know if you know that, tool, online usability testing tool, very basic , it basically means you upload an image using a screenshot of the website, and you can link a number of questions to it. Like where would you click for information about bullying and then people could click on certain areas of the website and people can add their comments. And then the result is a report with basically a heat map of where people have clicked, but also where there mouse cursor has been. So that is pretty useful. It is not as useful as proper testing in the lab with cameras and eye tracking and everything but ah but the priorities in the organization are not that they are going to do that. So that ?? but generally, I am going to say I am pretty happy about how Klasse engages with readers and users um, a lot of people are in classrooms all the time. I am talking with parents all the time, I am in contact with teachers, it’s not like we are an ivory tower, we have a lot of contact with our target audience, we track statistics, we are fanatically about that, so we have some extra information and feeback that I would like on a really technically and usability level, or information architecture or whatever, that we are not getting, well it is just me, I can’t really pull that weight all by myself. Just doing what I can.
How did the organization decide on what would be the first round of content for the site?
Do you mean the site I am developing now, yes the parent’s website.
What do you mean?
All the articles and things like that. You said that editors contribute, but how did they decide what they would be writing about etc…?
Well the site currently exists, so it is basically the content that is on there right now. Minus a few things that are not achieving the result that was hoped. They are basically going to focus on a few areas but it means they are eliminating content from the old site. Not creating, well of course they are creating new content, but not creating new types of content or new categories or something like that.
Then can I ask how they decided on the content for the old site as well?
Ah statistics and priorities. So for example there was an area there on the website where parents could post their own examples of how they as parents participated in the school of their children. So by organizing bicycles pools or organizing fundraisers, things like that. There was an area with those practical, good practice examples things and a form to submit their own. And they noticed that A. It wasn’t really used that much and B. it was also the quality of content submitted was not that fabulous. So they considered completely removing that whole platform, because that is what they called it from the website, and they are keeping examples of good practice but now just providing an email link to submit your own and they are integrating it into the rest of the content as news articles or as something like that. And that is based on the quality and the quantity of the input. There was also a section on the site about all sort of education offers for parents, but really a basic things like dealing with anger management or dealing with adolescents, that sort of thing. And they are also removing that completely from the site because they offers weren’t as many offers for those sort of course, and they couldn’t check the quality of it. So by putting it on the website it sort of implied that it had a government stamp of approval and that is not always the case. So they decided not to do that anymore. And it is sort of not a priority to do it.
You also touched on this a little bit, but at what points in your process of your new site, did you seek approval for major decisions, and who were you seeking approval from?
Well I asked very early on for a single contact, that is bit extreme, but a single point of contact. From the magazine people, or the content people, because in my previous experience the past 3 or 4 years. Um it became apparent, if you have 2 or 3 people who can decide then they either have to agree all the time or you get conflicting signals and it is very time consuming to go back and forth between decisions and the whole argument thing, so they appointed one editor who was responsible for the website basically and how it looks and feels. And she is the one who approves my designs and my solutions for issues. And at more or less regular intervals we have meetings where we show her the progress and show or sort of explain, and because we are working with Wordpress of course we try to use as many things that are already in the community, in terms of plugins and well not themes, but readymade stuff that we can use. And we try to limit and avoid hacking the core, and we also try to limit developing our own plugins and content. Because we want to minimize that. So for example they have polls on the website and sort of like personality tests, and there are plugins for that but they are not 100% the style of the thing that was on the old website. We sort of install a plug-in for her and ask, is this okay? Do you really want it exactly like it was and you know 9/10 it an okay it is fine. Because we are on the same, we have this sort of landscape office, we can constantly discuss ideas and make things go back and forth, it is not a problem, we formalized these sort of regular meetings to show the progress, but you know, there is not really a regular schedule we have a lot of stuff done, would you like use to show it to you, and you know okay, it will just talk half hour for the meeting and that would be it. Um what generally didn’t do was mail stuff and then get feedback form them It was always face to face and that seems to be the preferred approach for everybody concerned.
Actually is there anything else about your relationship in the office that makes things go more or less smoothly in addition to working in house together?
We have a lot of autonomy in terms of the technologies that we choose, we are actually in the buildings of the ministry of education, but um in terms of organization we are separated, we have our own um terms on conditions, so we have separate status as a separate entity, but I have a lot of meetings from the mininstry of ? Sources and sort of stuff? What I notice is what they get is, they have a lot of hierarchy and in the hierarchy they decide you are going to use expression web or site point or asp or you know any sort of technology and then they have to work with that. We as developers or designers, basically we get a briefing for building the website and then we build that website. We even buy our own, or rent our own dedicated servers and that sort of stuff, we are completely autonomous and that well on the one hand that is its very time consuming, like when you have you deal with the hosting contract do all that sort of government procurement and administration things, the whole bureaucracy, whereas the people upstairs, as we like to call them, don’t have to do that, they just get a server with very limited access, we know they just get it, they don’t have to go through the whole process of ordering and building it themselves, um on the whole I think it’s a real advantage to be autonomous like we are. And I have a lot of personal experience with Wordpress and I have brought that to my professional position and I also think that is a plus that I can do that for, it could have been the case that that was simply not possible, because the person responsible for deciding the platform was someone maybe never even spoke to or never got to see, which is the case for a lot of people in the ministry.
Sort of following from that, are there any other aspects of your workflow that are specific to the fact you are working in a government or nonprofit type of organization?
Mainly the financial side of things and the human resources side of things. We can’t just order anything or buy anything , well you can’t do that in a private context either, but in a public context , you have got a company, a budget and you can basically spend it how you want to as a company, whereas we are a separate entity, but still have to abide by government rules for everything. Like for example web hosting, we have to write down the specs very specifically before hand, for this sort of server and type of hosting contract we want. There are rules about the type of services that we can buy. For example it’s a problem to buy stuff overseas, mainly the USA, I don’t know if you know mail chimp, the mailing lists or emailing company, they are basically, or they have a website where you can post your mailing list system, and then you can send your email out to 10’s of thousands of people. You get statistics, like click rates and open rates and things like that. And then it costs a certain amount per email sent. American companies where everything is in dollars, we seem to can’t buy from them. I guess technically we can, but it would be a pure credit nightmare to do it. So that is a limitation. We also cannot just hire and fire people like private companies could. We have got most people there are um civil servants, so they are, it’s not like in a private company where they if business goes up, they can hire more people, very good example of that is that we have a service, an international teacher’s card that every Flemish teacher gets that is about 200,000 people, and this card gives them discounts and they get educational advantages in museums and they can get in free, sometime even. And in the beginning , 10 years ago, I wasn’t there back then, there were maybe 10 museums and maybe 50 shops that offered discounts, and now it’s, they publish a brochure every year, and the brochure has turned into a book by now, and hundreds and hundreds of companies, but the amount of people working on that system, is still only 3 or 4 people, and that can’t change because we are not a commercial company, where every extra customer, or every extra partner brings in more business or more money, it does not work like that. We get a budget for making that card, and that is it. If it is successful, then in some ways it is bad for us. And its like that for everything, even for the websites. We’ve started putting a lot of video on the website, video that we create ourselves. And the more successful it is, the more money it costs us, and but there is no money coming in. so it basically means we have to save on other things, because we are paying for bandwidth. That is sort of a sweet/sour situation, and I think that is very specific for government and also nonprofit in some contexts where you can victimize your own success, if you success is not monetized directly, like it is for commercial company.
How if at all do you offer instruction on using Wordpress to other people in the organization?
Well one of the advantages of Wordpress is that there fairly little need for that. For people to get started. What I do give sort of hands on explanation right next to them at the desk, so I don’t write out a manual, because nobody reads it. When you write a manual people maybe read the first paragraph or the first page, then the log in and start hacking away. So I prefer to be accessible for advice and questions and just give them a few tips and pointers and let them figure out things themselves.  But that basically how I do it. But that I one of the advantages of Wp is that you don’t have explain that you have to upload an image into library and then you have to copy the ID or something like that. It is very simple, you get the basics, there are a few quirks, a few things that you have to know, but its very limited.
There are any other features of Wordpress that specifically affect you workflow? *talked about above
Um, the fact that you can get a site up and running very fast, the fact that it is free, there are a lot of plugins, a lot of high quality plugins’ even. I think that is something that is underestimate in that inside the back is very user friendly right outside of the box. You don’t have to install any Wsiwig plugins, or helpers for people to create their own content. Non technical people can get to grips with it very easily. And of course if they want to start embedding youtube videos and stuff like that there is an extra learning curve involved, but its no way the level of complexity that for example Drupal has, which I have also used, but that is much more complicated. And way more powerful I guess, but who cares if your editors can’t update their own content.
Are any of those factors specifically good for nonprofits in your opinion?
Well since nonprofits and that sort of organization, you get a lot of one man band situations where someone is responsible for absolutely everything. And it makes their life easier if they can use a backoffice that is easy to use and they can put online quality content that is accessible and usable and looks great. Without much effort as the system does a lot of that for them. And I think that is very helpful, that you don’t need a technical IT support department to simply use the backoffice. I think that is one of the even updating the website or updating the core to the latest version is a one click thing, so as long as you give someone admin rights, they can do it themselves. They can even download and install plugins if they know FTP, it’s a fairly simple process, it gives people a lot of power to manage their own presence on the web.
As a side question, are you familiar with user-centered design or design ethnography?
I am familiar with user-center centered design, but not in a formal academic way. And design ethnography, no, does not ring bells.
As far as user-centered design then, do you have an opinion about its use in web design?
Umm hmmm. Well Opinion that it is essential. If by user-centered design, you mean that you should start from the user in the design, process, is that what you mean?
Yep.
Yeah I think that yeah, it is increasing becoming apparent that it is the only way to build anything, not just websites but anything. And websites are a bit late to the game on that. So it’s been a factor in the design of cars or lawn mowers or anything like that, but websites for a long time have been approached a bit like magazines or books, well that is a wrong approach and I think that statistics show, sort of show the growing importance of the usability field and have taught everyone that it is essential. That as website is as user-friendly as almost any tool, websites I many cases are tools, as much as a magazine, and I also we also have our print designers in house and they sit right across from me, and I noticed that they approach things different because they design for print medium, which is much less interactive and much less used as a machine interface, but more like a consumed medium. And that they focus on much more on the purely aesthetic of the whole thing, and I focus more on the functional aspect of everything. I used to do that like everyone else, designing a pixel perfect thing designing in Photoshop and making html out of it without ever speaking or thinking about an actual user. Um I think everybody did that 5-10 years ago, well not everybody, but a lot of them. Whereas now, I read something online a few weeks ago, that when you are designing a website you should basically start by coding the html and writing a structure for the page of the site. I think that is a bit extreme, but that is generally the way you should do it. It should semantically, it should be about the structure, the functionality, should be about the content and making sure it is relevant. There is a lot of this in Photoshop type website that uses filler text for everything. Even titles. And then you get websites, even earlier today, I saw a website that was for a publishing house that publishes books, and the original idea for the website was that people would be able to buy their books on the websites, but also books from other publishers, they happened to see in their physical bookstores. But in the end that turned out it was too complicated, so you can only buy their own book on the website, and the result of that is that they have this whole part of the homepage with recent releases like 5 or 6 most recent titles, and the final three of those are more than a year old. Whereas if they had started the right way, and said okay we are only going to sell our own books and we publish about one book every 3 -6 months, so we only have to put on recently release on the home page. That sort of reasoning, that is completely absent from someone who designs a website and says just give me the content later and I’ll build you a template. I think it is also a problem with a lot of the default Wordpress templates that you find online, are only usable for very run of the mill blog type sites. And as Wordpress is moving towards a CMS type system that is going to be an issue.
Are you seeing movement in the Wordpress community towards building designs that are not so directed toward the blog platform?
I don’t really monitor that aspect of the Wordpress myself; because I am a web designer I rarely use templates. I have one or 2 times when I was basically advising other people about their website, but generally I prefer to build my own templates, because it is always more flexible more close to what the site needs to be.
What do you think about the idea that web designers have more responsibility to nonprofit clients in terms of understanding their end goals and users?
You mean more responsibility vs. a more commercial client?
I don’t think the case per say but I do think that is the case in the practical sense because nonprofits are usually strapped for cash, and are usually smaller or more like a small scale organization, and they don’t have tend not to have a marketing department or business development department and sort of commercial organization that claims the whole customer focused side of things. Whereas in a nonprofit situation in end, that becomes the web designers responsibility to a large extent, with the interests of the user. Where in a commercial company the interests of the user are not guarded by the company, so they can loose money with the website and they tend to pay more attention to that themselves in a good or bad way.
…interviews about me getting an idea of what people are thinking…
What is end result of my research…give explanation here…
……actually that is one of the reason why I work where I do right now, I used to work for an advertising company and you get a very detached client relationships there, it’s you build a website that is all very formalized, whereas now first of all I am in sourced, so it is different, but also every now and then I find myself , writing content for the website or newsletter and find myself participating more in the whole project, like recently we went to a music festival as Klasse, and I also as volunteer I was there to talk to people who visit us, answer their questions and ask them a few questions about how they felt about the magazine and website. And actually that has grown on me, and you get drawn into, I think it is unavoidable. It’s more, whereas if you are building a site for a soft drink company you don’t really care about the soft drink usually, and now it’s more personal.  And some people hate that because in a sense they just want to make really great design and they don’t really care who it is for, and I think that is a talent, I think to make something that is good, and functional and answers the client needs. About really caring about it. Whereas I like what I do now better, but understand how a lot of people think that it is because you are really putting the user first it’s not always the most cutting edge design, it is not the sort of flash site of the day kinda stuff. But I like it more, and I understand what you are trying to do.
Tags: cms, commercial, designer views, Nonprofit, relationship technology user, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Transcription | 52 Comments »
Sunday, June 6th, 2010
Interviewee: Simon Nixon
Location: London, England
Duration: 50 minutes
Date: May 20th, 2010
*Okay to put audio and transcription and name online.
Could you tell me what you use as your job title or area of expertise?
My current job title is user-experience architect, and my area of expertise is user-centered design and project management probably. I haven’t done that for awhile, but it is definitely there at the top??
And how many years have you been in the design industry?
I did my first site in 1994, so that would be 16 years. It’s a long time.
Do you work mainly as freelancer, consultant, or in-house?
Totally freelance now.
How if at all would you label your workflow in reference to your current position or projects?
How would I label what?
How would you label your workflow if you were selling yourself to a client?
Oh the kinds of things that I do?
Yeah.
Goodness me. It’s funny enough because someone asked me this recently and I managed to get it all onto one side of an a4. The whole kind of offer, what is user-experience, so maybe I should share that with you at some point, so you can take a look at it. *email for document
I deal, as well as typically, the normal type of deliverables that you get in UX, personas, user-journeys, ? analysis, wireframes, whatever it is, the other thing I tend to get asked to do quite often, is to gather requirements for clients, in work by courtesy of a bunch of workshops, so when they kind of have had enough of the traditional BA, functional spec route, they might say, is there another, way, I will say, absolutely. We will identify your audience, and then just build everything for them. That sort of thing has been happening quite a lot recently.
Sort of repetitive, but in your own words could you tell me what user-centered design is? And why and how you use it?
Well it is really about the user as part of the design experience. Bringing customers into the project, and there are various techniques and ways to do that. Things that I have learned, over the past few, many years. And it’s very much the opposite; to we’ll say the board that decides to make all the decisions themselves. We get clients to stop designing for themselves and start designing for the customers, so if it doesn’t involve customers, in anyway shape or form, it is not user-centered. If somebody just says, can you design that interface? Sure I can do that, but it’s not user-centered. If somebody says, can you analyze a key bunch of journeys, I can do but it’s not user-centered. It can’t be user centered until the users are in the center of it. They have to part of the process. That is my view.
Does that mean actually customer participation?
Both. Clients and customers. I have clients come to workshops and I give them pencil and paper so I get them to draw stuff, and just get them to engage with a different way of working. And then obviously customers, focus groups, usability testing, interviews, questionnaires, whatever it is, just get that input, get that customer input.
Why do we do it? If don’t do it, then you are usually guilty of ignoring your customers.  So no business ever wanted to do that, even if the purpose of the business was just selling very, noncommercial or community based information, there is always a customer, this is always somebody in mind, even if you are anonymously sending out, you still want somebody to read it, and it is about having those people in mind, and doing whatever you are doing, for them.
There is possibly, I did an arts degree, I am not an artist, but I did an arts desgree, and there is probably a bunch of people I know from the early 90’s who would say about art for art’s sake. What about producing something with nobody in mind but yourself? And I know I worked in the music industry for a long time, and I know that there are a lot of musicians who work that way as well. Who don’t think about their audience, so again, we’ll put those in a special box, but for everybody else. There is a customer.
I don’t know, you said you have worked with nonprofits before, but do you have a specific experience that you used user-centered design with a nonprofit organization, or community type org?
And do you want to speak fluidly about it, or shall I provide markers?
No I can speak. I can always talk. Everybody always says that about me. I went for an interview once and they said I got the record for the longest ever interview…its passion…
The not for profit experience was my first ever website in 1994. It is hardly surprising that I would say it wasn’t very user-centered. This was a bunch a people in Oak Park Illinois, who were trying to figure out how to even build a webpage, and figuring out what a webpage was. So there was nothing user centered about it.
*increase in technology has led designers to thinking more about users? Less pressure in other realms?
It was just us trying to get something up. I got a job there. Because I didn’t have a work visa for the states, so I took on this volunteer position ….And So I got a job there showing and driving people to apartments and showing them, as the community center was about housing equality etc..Trying to have an even distribution of racial demographics in each building. So that was the purpose of that. So was just the guy that drove people to apartments. After awhile, well I said I would like to be a counselor, well that’s just another word for somebody who sits with clients and gets their requirements. So you sit with them and talk to them about what their requirements are, so there is no real counseling involved. Not in the British definition of the word counseling, but it is very personal thing, sitting around and talking about your housing needs. Not if you have got loads of cash, but if you are not wealthy and you have got loads of kids and no husband. This regularly happened. There is a kinda social element to it I suppose. Anyways, so I did that. And then somebody said oh we should do a rebranding project, and so everyone was told to design a new logo, it’s a bit of an urban myth among the people who work there, apparently my logo got chosen, but I think that is not true, I don’t remember that way, I think someone else’s logo got chosen, and I got with my friend here, and said yeah I think I can put it on a web page, and I really didn’t know what I was saying. I just regretted it immediately. Someone I , it was a little bit of , I guess now then probably called it a community forum or discussion board or something, but back then, it was just a list of people in Oak Park who had websites, and a couple did, and I emailed this one guy, and asked if there was any chance he could help me. Out with html and so that is what we did, in a weekend, and then we did a website.
And user centered design for me didn’t really come about till 2004/5, when I had been doing some interface design and more project management and a bit of interface design, but I started to, I went into an organization where the opportunity to test real users was about, so that is when ? started to change. About six years ago.
Um between 2008 and 10 a few months ago, I worked at Direct Gov, it is the biggest most visited, it may not be the biggest in terms of volume of pages, but the most visited public sector website in the UK. With I can’t remember how many millions of visitors per month, but it has got a hell of lot of citizen facing content, as they call it. They are a very user centered organization, the people there before me, preached the benefits, so I just rolled in on the back of that wave and carried the delivery in?? So I was hired as a practitioner and then became leader of the team, and manager of the whole team. So it was our job to design citizen facing content and functionality that let people, ?? and you can’t do that unless you are user-centered. So I worked with departments, like HRLC? The tax people and MOG, some part of voluntary sector?? And things like that. All sorts of things.
?? Recording fuzzy??Who are you working with now?
Actually working with Stereo?? The technology supplier for Direct gov. But that is relatively coincidental. What they do is Smile. Co. uk banking site, the co-ops banking site, they do the police service sites, and I think for one client, they have got 500 developers onsite in the client’s office. And they will often spend in excess of a million pounds just on the bid process for winning a massive contract, to give you an idea of the resource scale and the size of it. I think we have got 19,000 employees and two major develop centers in India. Big. Biggest company I have ever worked for, by a mile.
So there is nobody in there, who does user-centered design. I am the only one. Â So there are 18,999 technical people, and me.
Are you able to talk about a special issue in your direct.gov project that you used user-centered design for? What kind of methods you use within it as well.
There is one that springs to mind straight away. So inside of MOJ, the ministry of justice, they still working on the project, so I will have to talk around it, because it is not live, K, so they are developing a service to help people who go to small claims courts. A lot of people go to small claims courts that arrive with the inappropriate information, so they are in the wrong part of the process to even be in the court room, or they don’t really understand what the concept of winning even means. So there are all sorts of information and education problems that the MOJ face. Giving to people before they get into the court room, Gonna speak slower now, so I can think about what I am saying before I say it. The requirements were put in front of us, and the solution was also put in front of us, because they had mapped out a solution and they extended all the way around the room, where we stuck the pieces of paper on the wall, that was just one of 14 journeys that they had mapped out. So, to say a lot of paper would have been understatement of the year. It was factually correct, and it was legally correct, and it had been signed off, but there was no way it was usable. It was just ridiculous. On paper, even in the room, and being told, and talked thought it with somebody who had been on it the last year or two, it still didn’t make an sense to us. So we decided to try to get them to consider that they might need to redesign it. 14 times around a meeting room took a long time. That means that the client spent a lot of time developing this approach. When 2 blokes walk in and say change it, they are not immediately going to say, oh okay! Oh yeah fine we still just chuck it away and start again. So I would say we had some stake-holder management challenges would be an understatement of my career. Some challenges and some challenging people, but we, so initially they were very resistant to change, and when I say very resistant…quite brutal. So eventually we managed to get them in a situation where they could talk to us, and we decided to try personas as a way of engaging with the idea.
Can you explain persona?
It is an old marketing technique, in the advertising and marketing world, to create a one sheet snap shot of an individual. Who represents your target audience? Their photograph, their name, income, demographics, social background, education, family status, employment history, quotes they have told us, or made up, their actual story, internet usage, tech saviness basically, their favorite websites, what their goals are and we also embed the business goals in the persona as well. So what the business is trying to achieve, so when you look at it you see a person, and they are very real. And the more you write it, the better you get at making them real. Now sometimes we get given massive documentation, we build the personas from what we see in that documentation, customer insight is what it is generally called, stuff that a business knows about its customers, they say what would you like, and we say well everything, and a guys turns up with a wheel barrow, and tips a load of paperwork on the floor, and we usually, produce on average around six for any project.
So in the case of MOJ we actually went to courts and hung around outside the courtroom and interviewed some people who were going in. So some of the personas were created from research and some were reading documentation. Some of the research done where we visited people we had met?? When we were done, we had a bunch of characters, and two of them stood out, so we presented those to to the client, and they really liked it, and they got it.  And about three meetings in after that, one of the personas was called Dean. And the client said, What is that piece of work on the table and turned to us and said, Dean won’t be able to use that. And we had that little knowing moment of knowing they have arrived. They have arrived at the place of not designing for themselves, but thinking about their audience, it is much easier, If I said, think about 20 year old males, who are fairly uneducated with nearly no income, and describe them in a generic way, that wouldn’t really work as well as thinking about Dean, and you knew Dean, with a paper that had everything about him and Photograph, and suddenly the whole picture comes into your mind, that is why a bit easier to use than just customer data, or these are our marketing segments, okay very interesting but I am going to turn these into real people. Because marketing segments do not use the website, real people do. So they have this little moment, the light bulb moment, and that is what you are looking for, you are looking at the clients, and in meetings we talk about them as if they are real and put them up on the wall. And we start every meeting, even if it is just regular status weekly check point meeting, we always put them up. We just put em up and it just irritates people sometimes, and we say there, that’s the customer. Well it’s just a check point meetings. But yeah if we branch out, the project, we forget about the audience. And once we have done that we went back and looked at their 14 journeys and realized they were not usable for the personas that had been created. And then we can start the process. So really what you are looking for is for them to say that is not usable, maybe we should change it as opposed to me going in there and saying that is not very good, you should change it. So you are looking for that moment for them to have the light bulb, like upper management when you work in businesses, just get your boss to think that he thought of your idea, because it’s more likely to travel if he thinks it was your idea. You just remove yourself, and have a little moment to yourself, you know it was your idea, and then just let him run with it. A little bit like that you just want someone else to think it was their idea. So yeah, or it I may be that the client does not have any requirements written down, they may have traditionally, done things in the board room, decisions have always been made in the board room, I mean, that is where the decision has been made. Talk about in the board room, then let’s take those ideas and put them in front of users, and record what people say, and we’ll play it back to you and see if it was a good idea or not.
How much education do you give your clients on user-centered design before hand? Or does it normally go like that- what you just spoke about?
SO we have designed, and I saw we because I work with another guy, we also work with a bunch of other people as well, contractors we bring in every once in awhile, and there is one guy in particular, ???….so what we have done, is we have designed, a one hour , 2 hour, and half day and full day workshop of how user-centered design can benefit, the organizational needs and we even trimmed the one hour one to 40minutes the other day, we did a presentation at an event of about 70 people and we only had 40 minute slot because they want 15 questions from the floor and a 5 minute changeover, so we had to condense, UCD light, so we have different levels we have created, the one hour version is just us talking and the 2, half and full day are where we get a piece of paper out and pencils and we get people to do stuff. And some of those we do in businesses on their premises and offices and next month we are doing a paid version of it, with a partnership with another company, they are doing a half day on Google analytics and we are doing a half day on UCD and people pay to attend, like a proper day’s training, so we are very much focused on making sure people come out with something tangible, I learned this on that day, as opposed to use going this is what this is all about, and that’s great but you come and in and do it for us, but if they are paying us money they need to take away something they can use. Over the last year or so, we have really refocused the longer event to make sure they absolutely guarantee they have something to take out, we have bullet points that tell them what they are going to take out from this session.
Can you also explain journeys?
After someone says you can analyze our user journey which we get asked many times, so I looked at one yesterday for a client, and this one, the very traditional, from our home page it take, a very nonintuitive route and it takes 6 clicks to get to some very good content. I found that out, so I went back to them and went gosh, great content, but it’s really deep and terribly hard to find, and you need to redesign the journey. So typically the types of people who would go on that journey are: this type of person would go down this journey so, school teacher as it was, how they are going to find this, we need to design the site with better navigation???. To make sure they can get to the teaching aids. Another type of user journey might be, because this is an education publisher, might an author who writes books, education books. So they use a journey, and the content they want to find is totally different to the secondary school teacher. So we are going to map this journey and make sure the key content is apparent.  And not buried. And that is kind of basic, 2 up 2 down version of user-journeys. Really, the real user journey, that makes it more real, is if I, said to you, do you own a car, if I said to you, I would like you to, so you just bought a car, there it is, outside window, I want you to buy a tax disk for it. A British task disk, so you are not British by birth, so you would know what tax disk is or even where to start. But I have given you enough phrases to get you started. So you have got a specific goal in mind. That is the beginning of your journey. You journey starts with, how am I even going to get this information, what is a tax disk, am I am gonna type it into google, maybe I will ask a friend who has a car. Who is English, and you might say hey I need to get a tax disk, can you just tell me how to do that or where to go. So there are two starting points for the journey. Google very typical, online starting point still for a lot of people, asking a friend, you might just coincidently if direct gov had been doing their advertising, see an ad on a billboard or magazine, direct gov the place to tax your car. Or the tv ad they ran last year that was very successful. Ah there it is, that is what I need. SO then traditional advertising is the art of your journey. You could come up with a few more. So then that is the beginning of the journey. How are you going to start consuming this information? Even a Google search is going to return you a bunch of results on the first page. Do you find the one you are looking for? Is that frustrating??Was it easy to find? Did you get a deep link in? Dropped right into the correct part of the direct gov site? Or was it badly done, and you were dropped on the home page and you were still searching? So you got to the site search etc… that is not very good experience. If you just typed direct gov into your browser then a site search would be fine, totally appropriate, but not after a Google search. So that is the beginning of a user journey. Identifying someone’s goals, not their needs, and analyzing the experience of that journey and optimizing it. And the optimization might be better advertising, it might be better SEO, it could be anything, but the more starting points you get, the better it is. That kind of home page 6 clicks down thing, that is important, but that is only part of it. You might not even get that far. And you might just be calling me asking me can you just do the tax disk. I can’t find it. So, and the later, is often not considered. And they just mean the home page down. And directly gov gets millions of visitors, …..google it to find out.. visitor stats.
Only around 50% of those people visit the home page. So when someone says can you analyze the user journey, if you only do it from the homepage, you are only doing it for half the audience.
But where did the other half go, they are deep in because direct gov is a task based website. I said to one of the directors in direct gov when he asked me question about the website, and I said well it’s a task based site, he knew about that but didn’t really say anything. If you go walking around the office at around 12:30 what do you generally see? I don’t know where you are going with this he said? Okay you see people eating sandwiches at their desk, coke having lunch, when you do that, you typically see the same old websites coming up, BBC etc..Sky sports whatever, I have never in all the businesses I have ever worked in between 12-1 on the direct gov site. Because you don’t just go for a browse around, while eating, you go there with a particular task in mind. For if you are that task driven and specifically know what you want to get out of it, then your Google search is likely to be that specific. So people are getting links deep straight in. And getting those results at the top at google, that is hwy most people miss out on the homepage. Whereas BBC, a massive amount of traffic on the homepage, because everyone starts off at bbc.co.uk, top news etc…what on tv that may be enough, or maybe a couple of stories. Just different behavior. Even in the BBC which is a big old website, and direct gov as well you can’t just look at it and go, and say they treat this bit of functionality like that, it’s all tested etc…we should just copy what they have done, we can’t copy what they have done because their audience is different. But even if it is same person, you, are approaching it with a completely different mindset. Great they have done something and tested it, we will have a look at it, but we can’t just copy and paste it into ours, it just ??.
At what point in the user centered design process do you actually seek approval from the client you are working with?
Like sign off? Okay let’s just answer the question in two parts. User centered design fits into the project life cycle so that is kind of; it fits in quite near the beginning of a project. Typically a project is already started, and the idea is already out there. Some conversations have gone on a few meetings, whatever, and then there is that kind of strategy thing, where people think what should be done and how do we do it. And if we are lucky that is where we get in. We help set the structure, then we deliver blue prints, architect’s blueprints, diagrams, of what we think it should look like then we hand it to graphic design to handle and we are out. We get asked back in the testing stage at the end. That is typically where we are in. If we miss the early bit, the strategy has already been done, then we are usually given the brief, and they say, just design that. We have done all the thinking all the planning we know what we want, just design that. Any opportunity to challenge it. ? Excuse me. Um no. We have already done the thinking we just want you to design. Well that is typically how a long of projects go. Strategy might have been done by a third party and consultancy, the business might have taken it upon themselves, it could be good, it could be bad, or awful, but if it’s done it is done. Sometimes they accept a challenge. Sometimes not. If a standard design gig is available, as we call it, but its generally pitched to people who are a bit junior, or less experienced, the more experience you get the more you get to challenge and ask about the actual project. Are we building a circle or a square? You’ll say circle and I will say square and I don’t challenge it. When you are less experienced you get ….agreement…so there we are up for another project, even if we are not in the strategy bit we are still in design and technical. They are involved looking at what we are doing and worked very well, and it’s been quite collaborative, nevertheless, it goes before that, in a traditional waterfall methodology, it goes before that.
35:46
Um, we are not really talking about agile methodologies here; we are talking about that traditional stepped process. So where we seek approval for our signoff is, really dependent on what we are asked to produce or what we recommend, we produce, so if we are doing a set of personas, and we have the client involved in the drafting of those, but then they need to be signed off. If we are doing analyzing journeys, or competitive analysis, that needs to be approved. Particularly the journeys. When we get down to the wireframe stage where we are building a prototype, then obviously that has got to be signed off. Because otherwise you got major problems when you go forward in design and build if changes are still being made. There is no real point wireframing in the first place. Um, so really we are looking for a sign off with key deliverables. ???
*comes down to the fact not everything can be flexible or nothing would get done.
So user-centered design can be segmented? Sort of plugged in at any point in the process? Or is not really an entire process itself. Is that what I am hearing?
Tthat isa good question. Ask it again.
So user centered design can be plugged in at any point? As part of the process of creating a website, or is the entire process of building a website?
I think it is more the former.
It can be plugged in?
In itself, as an entity, it only gets you so far.
How so?
Well you can’t…for user experience, some user experience people can do a lot of things. But as a discipline of its own it says, what it really says is that you understand your audience, and we are going to show you what they want. We are going to put that in front of you, and we are going to work with you, but by the end of it, we are going to give you something that for sure is going to be used. Used and usable. ……
But it only takes you to that point. It doesn’t, it is kinda like the sort of customer survey, expanded. And it expanded, because it goes that stage further of actually giving you prototype designs and all interpretations, not some guy standing up and giving you a slide pack on PowerPoint, here is your audience and their needs, we go a stage further, and say, and that is what that really means. Things like that. So, but it, stops when we need, in a digital project, when we need creative and technical. But there are some user experience people out there, or agencies, digital agencies that can complete the whole thing. But as a discipline in itself: It cuts off.
What are some of the larger issues that you run into when completing user centered design? Do you think there are any pitfalls to it, things that should be changed? Issues within the process itself that people have not addressed?
Yeah there are lots of things, if you want to critique the industry or the practice, yeah. Yeah there are lots of things I don’t think are quite right, so let’s throw a few of those things out there. Typically we say that if you and I are going to design something, in order for it to be user centered we have got to show, it to at least one person. So, that makes sense, it that person is representative of our target audience. And we get their feedback; it inherently improves the quality because we get their feedback. But if we only do that once, with like 6 people in one round of testing, then we get that feedback, then we have no idea really if what we just did is any better than what we had in the first place, because we only just had one group of people giving their opinions, and you now have version 2, and you need to show it to a similar group of people, not the same people. But similar demographic of people, so you can say hw bout this, but you don’t want to come, and show 1 or 2, you are just going to show number 2. And you are going to ask the same questions you asked 1, and if the quality of the responses goes up then we know we did better in round 2 than 1. It can go down. You can misinterpret, you can make some mistakes, you can go okay we need to go back and have a look at one. So three is going to be more based on 1 than 2. So if you only do one round of testing, you don’t get that iterative approach that you need. So I have started, to believe that when clients say oh yes, we are going to do some usability testing, I‘d say well how many rounds are we doing. Because one round, I ‘d rather we don’t do any. It would save you money and we can spend it on something else. Cause that ….?? Saying that, the more experienced you get, even one round of testing, can give you some information, when you are less experienced, then you need to run more ideas around, …?? It is complex you know; there are factors that mean that more rounds are going to help you. So I tend to think that one round of testing is really not being user-centered. Probably flies in the face of what most people think.
42:33
…
So um one of the key problems that we have as an industry is I’ve met some user-experience people who are, the way to do it correctly is that you have to have an equal balance of what users want and what businesses need to achieve. User goals and business goals. Hand in hand. The client might say, that big ad that appears on the homepage above all the content generates x hundreds of thousands of pounds per year in revenue. But all the usability testing told us that doing an ad above, nobody likes it, and everybody wants to get rid of it. But the fact is, it works for the business and they sell, so okay so in redesign we are not going to have ??? That sits over the content, so prominent, but that could fly in the face of what our users said. We need to balance what the business tells us with what the users tell us. If you go too far in either direction, then you have some problems. And I met user experience designers who were too willing to do what the clients says and ignore, the users, and I have met some others, who are in a much worse position, is that they are so hell bent in being the user-advocate, that they can’t, they get into massive fights with the client over commercial objectives. Say, well that is not what users’ want etc… and they are in violent opposition with the business because they are so, passionate and dedicated to delivering what users want. One person in particular I am thinking of, I have seen in regularly, one person in particular terrible problems with a project, so the person we replaced them with, was not as experience of a designer or had a great portfolio, but understood, that relationships much better and the client loved him. After the first week, the client wanted to hire him. No, he works for us.
So yeah it is just about understanding that balance.
Does anything change when you working with nonprofits in terms of workflow?
NO, they are all the same, no the way we approach projects, the difference is that, for example in the public sector, there is no commercial goal, there is no sale etc.. dvd book..There is not t-shirt at the end of the process. There is a bunch of information that people need to get and a task they need to complete, so it is the same. Just can’t watch and listen to it and wear it, but it is still, as valuable in your life, that you need to find out about that particular thing, benefit, tax disk, whatever it is. So it doesn’t change. Just the context changes, but then everything else is the same. But those other things, those other things are where the industry needs addressing.
I can think of one thing which is that user experience designers often get carried away with producing beautiful documentation. In Brighton there is a place called Clear Left, podcast the other day, they call it Tool Time, don’t waste tool time. Don’t waste your time in took time, actually it takes ages in Photoshop or Viseo, in Actia, PowerPoint, whatever you are designing in, Omnigraffle, you Flex, you are going to waste a lot of time making it beautiful and perfect. And the quickest way is a pencil and a piece of paper. Scribble your idea down, and on the way to the meeting you can always do a slightly neater drawing, if it is really illegible, as often mine are, I have got a whole lot in my bag here, but they only take a few minutes, rather than days and hours to produce. Now, that agencies will particularly say, now here is how, here is a template, we want everything produced in this style, so sometimes you just don’t have time for all that. So you do a drawing, and show it to a designer, and say, what about that, he grabs the piece of paper off me and says that’s perfect, and I’m like….give that back, I haven’t done it in…No he says that is great, I can see what I need etc… navgatopm etc…
And it’s happened. Last month. We just did some work, and it was going at such a pace that the designer were so fast, I just didn’t have the time, so I did the whole thing on a piece of paper, and I am a terrible drawer, not artistic at all, but you don’t need to be. It’s about getting your idea down quickly. And often you spend ages laying it out on the screen you can’t remember the ideas in the first place. You might see more of that. And the more people I talk to about it in the industry, the more they come around to it.
me…interviewee yesterday said it also keeps clients from misinterpreting the documentation. That it is a sketch and not the final design.
True True, so there is no mix up there, it is like in the music, industry when they say, oh we prefer the demo. We like the wireframe more than the final design. Um, ah so yeah, it’s also I think, I think user centered design is about collaboration. And when something is drawn, the client will often feel like then can get a little bit more involved and often, this one lady said to us at a meeting, earlier in the year, and she said, oh I did some drawings. Okay we don’t normally hear this from the client. You did some drawings? Oh yeah but they are awful. No no that is gorgeous….where are they?
Oh they are back at the office in my desk, so I forced her to scan them in and send em over as pdfs, because that was a great insight into what she was thinking the solution was going to look like. But ah, we do our workshops, we have pens an paper and get people creating stuff.
Do you ever use ethnographic research for any of your projects?
Yes, it has happened. It probably, I guess,….. it hasn’t come across me so much, but it does happen for other people.
Is it something that was successful for you, or part of project, or just something that you have come across?
There was a project I had walked into where it had already been done. A bunch of people had left a project, so they needed to get some new people in. So I was handed quite detailed, ethnographic backgrounds, but done by somebody else. IT was really kinda hard to pick up, because the person was not there for the handover. It turned into a bit of a nightmare; in fact it was a nightmare. I won’t tell you who the client was or who it was for.
What do you think about the idea that there is more work to be done in understanding and building relationships with nonprofit clients and their end users, rather than with commercial work or for profit?
Well, I mean I spent some time in another nonprofit organization,…
Is nonprofit the thing you are particularly interested in…
But my experience with it is ah, I don’t really see that there is a difference, In fact nonprofits, in my experience, are probably more aware of their customers than commercial organization, who absolutely are hell bent on the pounds and pence sales, whereas nonprofits, tend to be more understanding of what the user’s needs are. Whereas commercial businesses are governed on price point or product. So, I actually don’t think nonprofits are behind, I think they are ahead.
I never really thought of that, but happy with the answer…
You said you worked with Wordpress a little bit, and as a side part of my project, because it is what I know how to use..
You know it better than me then,
How much have you used, or what is your opinion of it?
Well up until a few months ago, I was only aware of it as a really good method of delivering blogs, or single entity sites, I want to sell my site, um but it obviously a very powerful blogging tool, and I have seen it integrated into sites as well. So stand alone, mysite.com, or mysite.wordpress.com, and then also mysite. Com/blog. I have seen it integrated and seen it stand alone, ah I also head about people using it for bigger site builds and as CMS, but wasn’t so much aware of that, since I saw the website for the #10, the site for the prime minister, and the site is a wordpress site. http://www.number10.gov.uk/
Beautifully designed, and a great example of what you can do with design, great for government as well. Who are often producing very tired design. Â Its??
So 2 months ago when I started at Stereo, one of the specific terms of reference in the documentation of the project was integrating Wordpress. I was like oh this is going to be interesting, because I have only seen this from one, side of the window, Looking in …
We basically had to look at how we could actually integrate it into our site. So we did that, the technical guys, I just told them how it was going to be used, and then, one of them came to one day, and said this is actually a really powerful CMS, and I am wondering whether or we are utilizing 50% of what it is capable of. By showing it just as a blog tool. So that set off a whole scurry of activity as people started googling and talking to people who have used it. To really find out what more it could deliver. Then we found out that the government cabinet had commissioned a whole set of website with Wordpress if the new government came in. New…in preparation for potential change of government. Didn’t’ want to spend too much money on it, bc if there is no change, they will never see the light of day. But they choose Wp. And David Ponger? Inside of the cabinet office, is a big fan of wp and he commissioned WP. …also a meeting that he might want to consider Drupal, the cms we have been devoping in for the past 2 months. And so yeah, I know a little bit more about it, than I did a few months ago.
And also, there is accompany I work with sometimes called… www.pimpmywordpress.com
Lots of how-to’s…etc…themes…
Did you use user experience and user centered designer interchangeably? What is the difference?
The question. Thank god you asked it.
Have we got time to answer it??
This, in June I have been invited to some UX conference summit thing, and one of the topics, it is going to be very fashionably 2009/2010 and we are going to create the agenda on the first morning, I don’t know if you have been to any events like this, a bunch of broad topics are put out there, and then the people in the room, vote on what they want to work on for the course of the day, so they create the agenda.
It’s very cool, and it’s a great way for everyone to be part of it…I think they are going to do it bar camp style, I think there are going to be 4 topics in 2 days, and you can literally, just get up and walk away from the session you are in, if you are interested in the other one. So it is kinda fluid, very fashionable…what are the topics up for nomination? Probably tackling this issue of titles. So a whole bunch of people from around the industry have been invited. Um, UX London is going on right now, yester…it’s a big problem. There are a bunch of buzz words and phrases that get used around our industry, out of contect, user designer, interaction design, user experience architect, information archictect, product designer, when we do our power point we have a slide of job titles and we make a joke of it. Um because at some point or another, we have been called all of those. I know the differences, But I think I just created them. I do, I am not actually sure anyone has the same definitions as me. So it’s a problem, so we see job ads, and for some other project, and we see what title they have used, some of us reach an assumption, that we know what it is,
An information architecture is classic, because it really is a specific part of the industry, It is a particular subject, with a particular process, with a particular outcome. Some people just use it a blanket phrase for all of UX. For the whole of user centered design. But I would broadly categorize, them, if you want to know what I think.
IA – dissemination of large amounts of information, creating taxonomies and navigation systems that basically says here is a branch full of content and I am going to give it to you in usable chunks, just breaking down content into meaningful pieces. There are certain techniques that go along with that, card sorting is the most well known. There are others, and that is the role of the ia in my opinion, and therefore a good IA, may not be able to design an interface, and I think that is perfectly alright, because I think that they are totally different.
UX designer, product interface design, is designing interfaces. Interface designer. Here is a piece of functionality, here is check out process, here are a bunch of forms, calculator, login and registration, something like that, and design it in usable way.
Nothing like IA, but…
More kinda of research bit of user centered design. People who come from the background of ethnographic studies, the background and know how to write surveys and have experience going into people’s homes and gathering requirements and information. They might not be able to do IA, they might be the worst designers in the world, but if they can give you that customer insight that is completely part of our industry. Not in addition to, but in our industry. So that element of being user centered to one extreme is nothing to do with design or IA, and typically, we asked to do all three. And some of us are capable of doing 1, 2, or 3. Rare people are able to do all three.
I try to figure out which one of those three things are the client actually after. After I figure that out, then I can say to them okay I am generally better at this on that one or the other. I have been very lucky to have been exposed to all three, the level of skill is different than all three, but I have been lucky enough to have an experience with all three. But everybody has.
That is the key thing I find, when I interview somebody, that is the key thing I find, where do they fit into the industry, one of those broad three categories or, maybe someone is just a beautiful visual designer, they produce beautiful wireframes, does their wire framing in illustrator, beautiful documentation, I would probably hire them. For ¾ days when all the kind of thinking has been done, and say here you have got some stuff to do, can you just mock that up in to beautiful looking documents? So they have all places to fit it, but they have interchangeable job titles. Massively confusing.
Check out:
http://www.youthnet.org/whoweare/meetthesmt
Tags: cms, commercial, design ethnography, designer views, relationship technology user, ucd, user experience, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Transcription | 676 Comments »
Sunday, June 6th, 2010
Interviewee: Ronen Hirsh
Location: Israel
Duration: 1:15
Date: April 26th 2010
*Transcription okay, no audio recording on field note blog.
Can you provide with your job title, or area of expertise?
No, I can’t actually, I don’t know. I am unemployed, and I have been for a few years. I am a yoga teacher; I have dabbled in the arts, and my own personal needs to express self online led me to gain some sort of mastery in Wordpress. And that brought about some additional skills.
How many years have you been doing web design then?
I had a 15 year tech career, the last 2 years was design of general software products. I have been using Wordpress for about 3 years.
How if at all would you label your workflow when building a website for someone?
Personal and intuitive.
*intuition is used quite often as a description of skill-set
What % of projects use WP?
I only use Wordpress.
Is there a type of client that wants WP more often?
I get all kinds of queries, and many that I don’t take on or don’t work out. From my perspective there are people who want WP and see it as an opportunity to express themselves and others who see it as a technical solution that is comfortable and usually they are not well attuned to what Wordpress does. So there is a bit of friction with WP, and it happens more with commercial websites than people or organizations that want to say something. They are looking for a cheap solution and Wp is free and in that kind of dialogue. Israel different from rest of the world, and I got a project today from a nonprofit that actually helped me. The general quality of web services in Israel is really lousy, and there are 2 or 3 companies that dominate the internet, and if you are not a web professional and are not up to date on what is going on these companies are well known, but they do a lousy job, and they have lousy CMS systems and that are very pricy. Price point is very a strong point, so when they hear about WP they want to gravitate towards it. But cheap solution in not my thing.
What is the new project?
I was amused that it happened. The organization is called New Family, because in Israel there is no legislation concerning family status. Family status is based on tradition not on law. I met and married a Romanian woman, and there was no way for us to get married in Israel, so this organization helped us do this. *interesting! Linked here. So they really rescued us. We paid them a symbolic amount, because they were a nonprofit, and if we have gone to law offices we would have paid a lot more. The person who emailed me, didn’t actually know about me, as it was eight years ago, but had seen me on a job listing. I wrote him back, saying that even if he had no money to pay me, it was an opportunity to give back.
Could you tell me the name of nonprofit and what sort of work they do?
Nonprofits are atypical because I do not do this commercially. *Interviewee gave three choices of websites. This is what I chose….
Third and biggest project is my wife. My wife is Romanian and she has created a website called feminity in Romanian, and this website has been up for a year in and month now. Over 400 women are visiting each day getting close to 2000 pages. It deals with issues that are just not available in Romanian, just does not exist. Women’s health, fertility, pregnancy, it is not organized as nonprofit yet legally in Romania. But there is an agenda here, and this is the biggest project and the one most closely involved with because it’s my wife.
It’s gone through the most iteration. There are a lot of content. How the design process happened, and how it happened and the needs. And it is live and working.
If you want to start talking what happened start to finish that is fine, if you feel comfortable doing so. However I can also provide questions for you, or markers for you to follow. Do you feel comfortable just starting?
I have a lot to say about Wordpress and how it’s done.
I believe that one of the greatest misconceptions,
What is different about nonprofits, and it is really about a sense of purpose. Rather than commercial and wanting to make money. One of the biggest misconceptions about Wordpress and websites in general is that it is a technical challenge. What I find that is that it is a content challenge. Writing, you know and people trying to make websites and just say they want a website with just 4 pages, content etc., not just a waste of money, but it is wrong to do. IF you expect Google to find you, or for anything to happen, I have this metaphor I like to use. If you are not updating your website all the time, it’s like having a telephone line that is open to thousands of people and you are not saying anything. It’s kinda awkward. And the biggest challenge I find is connecting the idea of content creation to their lives, or work. Even with Andrea, my wife it is not a simple process. We don’t know how install Wp, make it SEO friendly etc…To do many technical things, and I say look that’s the easy part. Cause you are going to end up with a website and now what? And then you need to learn the discipline or writing, of pacing self and creating consistency. And that goes the other example of the website I gave you, the website that is not alive, is just dead in the water. And it hurts me, esp. because I care, I could say it is your business, your project, but I do care. And that is the most difficult aspect to get across to people.  People think it is just a technology issue. And this goes the same for personal blogs, and I say are you sure? Because I can make all the technical problems disappear, but then what? Like when they say in Feng Shui, water that is not flowing is unhealthy, this is the most difficult part I find in the process. And that changes the project from a web design project to something different all together. It is a long process of guiding and being there for them. What to do when I don’t feel like writing, what to do when I have nothing to say. Issues that come from the world of writing and not from web technologies. It is an ongoing process, there is no finish. This makes it difficult to price it. The most time consuming process I have that I put into any project is my attention. If someone comes to me once or twice a month with a question, they are with me that month. And if I have 10 clients that month, I am not emotionally well. If someone can come to me at anytime, and they want to know this or this. Goes back to my yoga routine. Should I be charging them? Is this part of the work. There is always a clear beginning, but it is an ongoing process.
Andrea’s website we just launched the third design. It is not a whim, it is not because we feel like it, it is because we run into an issue and we have to decide what to do now.
*happens often with all clients, that simply can’t predict an issues until in the process, but nonprofit have less money to deal with them.
If I were an outsourcing developer that would be an another design project. And I honestly don’t know how to deal with this as a solutions provider, because its expensive to do a web design project each year. When you need money to sustain yourself. No way around it.
One of my biggest qualms with WP is that that it is not simple, it is complicated to use. I have been trying to raise this qualm in the community for some time now and I gave up on it. Because they are all developer and developers like to have options and lots of buttons. I have stopped counting on how many times I have taught people to use it.
Do you teach people to use Wordpress as part of the process or do you wait till the end?
That is where the intuitive part of the process comes in. I do it whenever it is necessary. I try as a matter of process to get people writing as soon as possible. Either on a notepad or do it online. Someone I just install Wordpress and tell them to get started. I give them a staging environment somewhere on my domain, and tell them to write their first post. Or write their about me page. That is the biggest one. I generally push toward them getting started on the writing as early as possible. Many times there isn’t even a logo or an identity. SO it has to start somewhere. So if someone sees a website with their content it is much more approachable and they can relate to it. It is not a philosophical question do I like this design? Which is terrible design wise? Do I like it or not? This is a very narrow question. OS I try to get people writing as soon as possible. Because it is never soon enough. There is always resistance to it.
*also found this a problem for myself trying to blog field notes. Difficult to get started.
I have never come across a person who did not resist writing. It sounds so easy when you see it from the outside, but if it is your first time doing it, it is a huge obstacle. Anyway that is my experience consistently  with people.
When you teach people how to use Wordpress, do you do it in Web design terms, or in a vernacular that speaks better to people who are not technologically literate?
I will always look for metaphor languages that relates to the person I am teaching. I do try to get some basic vocab now, so I can say post, page or category and they know what it is.
*language related to software that allows client to maintain site selves. Not to technology that created software.
But it always comes across better when there is a personal association or relationship. Their category, if they have a list that is relevant to them they understand what the category is, and not some distance technological concept and they just don’t get it.
Its like about a long time go, I taught this kid math,…doing these kind of basic algebra and if you buy 5 oranges etc.. and the kid couldn’t get it. So I used gummi bears and he got it.
Does this make people wanted to update things and increase their investment?
It is better for a project to fail early on if they can’t get into it, and then have it launch and have it be dead. So I push this as soon as possible for people o get involved early on. This also informs and drives the design. I am not a professional designer, and you have much more design skill than I do, I do basic designs and layouts because I do not believe that it is important. When people get too caught up in Details about colrs etc… come-on nobody, not even you are going to notice this eventually. But if you don’t have content, it’s like you are trying to avoid the issues. It doesn’t matter if it doesn’t say anything, because its pretty! Well that only works once. So that also inspires me, so see someone’s about page. Where do you want to go, what do you want your organization to be. It’s tightly coupled with organization itself. And this is the issues to me. I am staying away because I believe the technical issue are not the issues.
I worked 2 years at a high end design consult, and company would pay tens of thousands of dollars and the design manager will say, I do not like Blue. Should that be a factor in the design process? Should I take you therapy and explain what a lame comment that is? I really try to , honestly, I work with people a very low budget , and I can’t afford to muck around with design so many design revisions. Let’s just get this done properly.
*important for nonprofits
I am starting another project with cousin in the states who has a psychology practice. He asked how much it would cost, and I said I don’t know. Whatever you want to pay. Because honestly I believe the conversation we are having now, is something that most web designers don’t do. They focus on the obvious things. This is my experience and insight in working with technology and products in the tech industry and now I am bringing it to you on a personal level. SO you know if I were to price this, and when I consult I have a really high per hour rate and you wouldn’t’ be able to afford me. I and we had a really amazing process, and he was afraid to this because maybe he didn’t have enough to offend me, and he is three months into it and he is still thinking about the name and we are having conversations about the name and vision the goals. And I said to him imagine if we had some sort of agreement, I should be telling you come on man, we had an agreement, we have to get this done. And that is just wrong.
In what ways do you think web designer thwart the conversation? Sort of put clients in their place in some ways?
I think it is where it hurts the most; it is how involved you are. You can’t afford for me to be involved more than you can afford???. When you offer a quote, it assumes a certain amount of effort and I don’t think there is a web designer or technologist out there that doesn’t know it is not going to exceed . Your starting point then becomes how do I reign this in, and I am thinking how do I open this up? IF you are thinking reigning this in, your aren’t going to go anywhere.
A lot of illusion. Yeah there are a lot of cheap prices for 200 dollars. I am not even willing to talk to you for a certain amounts of money. I won’t even tell you why you shouldn’t for that amount of money. I had this same conversation with the large scale design firms, something would cost 30,000 dollars and they would say well I can get an independent freelancer to do it for 6, 000. And I say, by all means go for it and I will see you 2 years down the line, not selling and not working and it will cost you more on principle.
Does WP affect your workflow specifically in being more open or is it just a tool?
I can say two things about this. First of all, because it was originally a blogging tool, it has an amazing quality that pushes toward blogging. It is intuited in how it works, and I try to embrace this. Because the very idea that it does have categories and is time based, it pushes towards having a conversation in a website.
*conversation
The second thing is that it makes life simple for me. I tell people, I am not a developer and if you want this and this, and I can do anything that Wordpress has in terms of good plug-ins. So I can’t do anything for you that Wordpress also cannot do. Has to be good plugins, many are not.
*in that way shapes what is going online and also what nonprofits can do
When people come to me with needs and requirements, let’s see how we put this onto what Wordpress can do.
Because you are not a developer, and you are using Wordpress’ functions, do you think this opens up more time for you to have a relationship with the nonprofits?
I think it keeps, puts more weight on content and functional design. It has to be simple to do in Wordpress. If it is complicated, I am not your man.
If it is too complicated it is misusing the platform.
…Going back to the specific project and talking about the process.
Online you can see how it’s evolved…*link
Started as Hebrew website…but nothing was happening. No comments etc…
IN the Romanian site there are comments and not a week goes by that my wife does not get an email saying that it has changed her life. And that is a kind of rewarding experience because we are not getting any money for this. And we gave up on the Hebrew site.
Andrea wanted to start doing it in Romanian. SO took the theme, translated it to English and put it online. And the feedback was amazing. One person writing. We have a page about basic human anatomy and like 15,000 women read it. That is a huge achievement I think. So it started like this and at one point, trying to think back, I am not very orderly.
??? Fuzzy recording
I design on paper, and when I am done designing throw it out.
The first major change, occurred when the amount of content increased. We had a magazine type layout with 4 categories. Newspaper websites, with categories under topics. This brought more content to the front. The nature of the blog is for old content to sink down below, but this was wrong for that sort of context. The first articles are as relevant as the new ones.
This was the first thing that we addressed, so needed to more air time for more posts.
This is process, it was not some kind of light change, it, but it was a very specific need. How do we get people to see that there is more content here than what is on this page?
Categories are not enough.  People don’t click. What is in front of people’s s face is what they are going to see. There will always be the women who are more invested and more interested and because they have personal problems, and will do digging a round but most people are browsing though. So I got to make sure they meet the content we want them to meet in the browsing process. That was the second design iteration.
Added an email subscription. With over 400 women. It uses to be automated emails, and now its manual, so it is more personal. There is a summary in the mail.
Ops now I am skipping.
The last iteration is about a month or two old. What you see now. And actually I think there was a first major visual re design, needed to be a lighter and open color palette. What Andrea asked for was a shift…when there is just one person doing it, it is an uphill battle. And she found that people actually thought the project was much larger than that. And there are serious articles and all professional on diverse issues.
So this realization that people see this as bigger. SO her wish was to make this a nonprofit organization, not a nonprofit her, and acknowledging the fact that this is bigger. She was in Romainia was a few months because she wanted to meet people an promote the work, and the women and she stayed with friends there, and people opened up their homes to her, and she realized in a way they were already involved. It wasn’t really just her anymore. So we wanted to acknowledge this in the design, and this was the big change we were working towards. What you see on the website in the header is her. It is her picture. And people thought it wasn’t here, people couldn’t believe it was actually her.
*what nonprofits often rely on
When she went to Romania did she do interviews? Just speak to people?
We had an agenda, but we just were open. In the end it was about getting closer to the realities of Romania. In Israel there are a lot of options when it comes to birthing..etc.  A menu of birthing. And our natural preference is towards home birthing. But to preach this to a Romanian woman is just stupid, because natural childbirth is one where the doctor does not light a cigarette between their legs. You expect the world to be as you know it, and it’s not. If she wants to give knowledge, it has to knowledge that is accessible and relevant to the realities of life in Romania. In that sense the visit was very important. Realizing what is possible.
It is like anthropology participant observation then.
Yeah, exactly. There is nothing like going there and being in it. One of her topics is able aromatherapy and being a herbalist. But in Romania you don’t have as many options as in Israel. Need to know what options make it relevant. No use giving advice to people that they can’t use. The agenda really is to move our lives back there.
She is looking for organization in Romania to help us get support and to get more people involved and collaboration that will help us make the transition and to get more women involved. Already have another woman who is a writer and write about her personal story or journal.
If you look at the website there are some design issues or solutions that address needs. If you are the homepage you can see that there is the post has a gravatar next to it. What happened was, a recent change, this women, a guest woman, and she started writing and from a personal perspective and what we realized was that it came across as another post. And the funny thing was that someone replied to one of her posts and she became a consultant. And we said well this not what you are here for.  Okay and because it was also controversial. And it is kind of way down, and it shows that it is a personal entry. And give them a different feel. If you open up a journal entry it opens up a different looking page. Shows the difference between an article and a personal story. But the comment did not fit into the experience of reading. The conditional tags changed the looks. And it was really powerful because it changed the way things were done on the site. Should we not have women writing or what to do?
Do you make the major decisions on the website together?
Yes. And it is another reason of why the process needs to be intimate. If I was an outsourcing service this change would have been complicated. We sit here in the living room and we talk about it, and sit here and describe it to you now easily because I now know what happed, but we sat and discussed what made us uncomfortable for a few hours in the living room before we figured it out. And I suggested one design solution, and she disagreed. It is processing of discovery. Not one of knowing. But you experience something on the website and they you take the time to figure out what to do with it.
I have done a lot of design projects in my life, and this is not something I could have expected or preempted. It was a few weeks of work and interactions. Until this happened, I could not foresee this problem. Any design spec I could have made would have come across this it. When it hurts you, you solve it. Big words, high talking, not relevant.
Another design story if you go back to the home page, if you click on one of the posts, let’s say new biological in Romania. There are 2, I wanted to write about this, things you can do with Wordpress, but I have lost motivation to give back to the Wordpress community. There are two things here, two achievements. Remember how I told you things would sink into history. Now here you see a random sampling of posts, and see content flowing by, so women can see variety of information. It brings up 4 or 5 random posts. SO even if the user does not do anything, content still moves by. And this is on every post page.
Another one, if you notice below the post title, there is a box, that is gray bluish with a title. What we created here, part of growing into a state of mind of an organization, we wanted to express, we wanted to have a wanted section, how you can participate in this organization. Calling out to more women to be part of the process. Created a new call to action category. Great, but how are you going to get people to see this. Every time a woman reads an article, there is a suggestion for how you can participate in this process. All these things are coming from a wish to grow. Not only to create a perception on the outside, but to create a realization on the outside that is it more than just the two of us. And we have had women writing in, and we have gotten help with translating.
And suddenly things started moving, cause people started seeing our wanted ads. And People being to see and respond. And this is the kind of stuff, and what I can say about feminitate. And what may expand the picture for you in another link* Have you ever heard about fertility awareness methods….it is…by observing bodily signs you can predict when you will be most fertile…or form of birth control. Etc..
Specifically, you need to keep track of these things, and all the ones currently online have poor user experience and design. And Andrea wanted to put up something people could use to track this process. And what she created, I decided was it would not work, so I created my own flash application that can do this. And it is the only application that I know of that can do this translated into so many languages. And had to be built in English in the first instance because I cannot develop in Romanian….not about knowing when ovulation, but knowing about your body.
This project is intended to expand and we don’t know how, but it will.
You said you mainly used sketches, but do you ever use wireframes or info design or anything like that?
The irony of it, is that I hate being in front of the computer. But one of my oldest customers who keeps coming back to me…??? but one of my main tools for wireframes was PowerPoint. They could make revisions and drafts without getting me involved. For small changes. If in PowerPoint they can just open it up and change it. Now when I moved to Ubuntu I lost it and open office is lousy. Because of this project and this circumstances, I have started to use Mockflow? Sometimes I do use wireframes and use that program.
I try not to accumulate information because it burdens me. Let the client take care of their materials. I don’t want too much on mind.
What, about your workflow makes it better for you as an individual?
I am not sure I understand?
Is there a specific aspect of your workflow that makes it better for you personally?
I am in an awkward position in life. One of my motivations for doing WP projects I that I need money. One of my frustrations is that I don’t like working for money. I like putting my heart into it. And I will say what I said a couple of minutes ago. I don’t like working in front of computers. I don’t like doing WP projects. I love the fact that doing WP project leverages people’s lives. I like helping my cousin express himself, and if that becomes part of his infrastructure for private practice that is like an amazing privilege for me. If I didn’t need to think about money, and if it wasn’t part of the process, I would just find a Wordpress guy and just concentrate on the process. Help with the process of expressing themselves. There are two posts on my site that help express why I use WP. This is what interests me, not the design process. Not the web design. I like to do the, it is almost a yoga process, the client wants a website, but I want to teach them about purpose because this is what is it is to me. It is your voice. This is the amazing thing about Wordpress, we have been able to teach 15000 women about female anatomy. If I wanted a book I would have never been able to publish it. And this is what I see when I go to a project. And people say web design, and talk about pages, and I say come-one because I know that is not what people want. They have to trust me at first, because they don’t understand what I am talking about. But in retrospect they will get it completely. But nobody hires me for that. People think they know that already. It is not part of the job description. But when somebody hits a wall and say they cannot get through my about me page, is that part of being a web designer? I may not be answering your question, but I am raising questions. But that is the heart not web design of creating an online presence. There is much more to it than installing Wordpress and creating a theme. If you say you are going to have 10 categories, I say, yeah write one post my friend. You have to have at least three posts in each category for it to work. That is 30 posts. That is depressing, that is prescription for writers block. How to take the first steps, in this content and expression process. How to have the freedom to know what is right for me in the future. You sometimes have to go half a year. You cannot predict what people are going to respond to. You have no idea where this is going. If you say you do it is bullshit. But I understand why people bullshit, because you are on a timeline and you are doing a web design project. But that is not what it is about. I am not good at business part of this, but if someone trusts me and I will help them through it. It is really process of discovery and closing it off in any way it’s the wrong reasons, especially for nonprofits is not the way to go.
That was a perfect answer to what I wanted. I wanted a nice summation of ideals…
It’s not I want to make a website, it’s I want to make the world a better place. That is the project. It is not about logo, colors and schedules. That is superficial, you are not delving into things and you see these empty websites. The standing water, it is not flowing it is unhealthy for you. Take the website down if this happens.
There was a great thing on wp tv *link he gave an amazing example, if you are washing machine guy and you want a website, what can you possibly write about, and I acknowledge it and he wrote me back. If he wants a website, and really wants to invest time in it, then there are tons of topics to write about.
Find your niche *WP tv
You can really do good website about anything if you really dig into it.
That is also why I left design, changes should be made for different customers with different needs. Darma and Karma.
I can’t just build a website for you, because I don’t know how, and if I say yes then I am lying to you.
I won’t sell out my piece for anybody…that is me.
Tags: cms, designer views, expert model, Nonprofit, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Transcription | 696 Comments »
Sunday, June 6th, 2010
Interviewee: Web Designer #4
Duration: 44:15
Date: April 26th 2010
Location: India
*Use pseudonyms, transcript okay to put online
Could you tell me what you use as your job title or area of expertise?
Own and run a small business. Name is supposed to be a mix of x +x. A very bad mix of something. Building digital conversations. Self taught web designer and developer to some degree. Little bits of everything. Work with partners who do heavier development or photography.
So you do collaborative stuff?
Yes
How many years have you been in the industry?
Since 2004. Aboout 6 years.
If you had to label your workflow how would you label it? Or would you at all? Or the process by which you build a website?
It is a bit of mix actually. I mean I am trying not to, I did look up your research proposal on your website, trying not to use waterfall. Am I allowed to?
Yes of course that is what I use sometimes as well.
It is a bit of waterfall and influenced by a company called 37 signals which does a mix of iterative and rapid changes sort of workflows. So typically when I work on something I have a staging serving and bit of equipment called Basecamp. Collaborative with clients so they see every stage of the deliverables.
What % of projects do you use Wordpress for?
Just started using Wordpress less than 6 months ago on actual projects. Before had used to set up small blogs for personal projects and blogs for friends.
It was about 6 months ago in November when I also started setting up the blog for the nonprofit. Basically the organization was run a friend and needed something online quickly and searched for a theme that seemed acceptable. With a little bit of tweaking he got something that was acceptable especially since it cost so little. That was the first time I started using Wordpress. Only recently like less than a half month ago, only started programming and delving into the way it works. Was unsure of using Php at the time instead of XML or whatever. Normally use text pattern for the CMS.
Why again do you choose to use Wordpress?
The only reason using Wordpress is because of the admin interface. Especially in the nonprofit sector people are really not tech savvy, and with the other CMS interfaces like Drupal etc… The admin interfaces are very convoluted. Wordpress has a really nicely designed one. Esp. for small things and for WSIWIG. It is very good. Hide the kitchen sink is a great help to people not comfortable with technology. The only reason I picked it up. Because of the workflow for the clients. Because I knew I was comfortable using other CMS’s and to pick up Wordpress was a very minimal amount of extra work to learn.
I would like to hear the process of building the website. A sort of life history of the website. If you could start out stating the name of the nonprofit and what sort of work they do if you are able.
*please keep documents private, not posted on blog, no organization name
It is a school, where I went to school, I volunteered 6 years ago to keep website going. Basically, not hired, but volunteered to build for free. I did an initial design and then started redesigning with Wordpress in mind so that would be able to update themselves and not come back to him for maintenance. In term of a workflow, the content was all the same, so I Just had to change it slightly graphically, and you can see the difference between the two links that I sent you. In that sense the workflow was very simple. I made a template very quickly, and converted in it into html and css. And then converting it to Wordpress theme. That is the workflow so far.
*many design with Wordpress in mind
You said that mostly it was transfer of content, so in terms of the initial planning stages was there a lot of conversation, or were you given free reign to do what you wanted?
Well we basically we worked out collaborative with the school sitemap and we worked out content, and apart from that they had very few restrictions of what they wanted. Went through a few iterations of what they wanted for the visual design.
So the graphic design was the big deal for the project?
Yes, because they had taken care of the content and the site itself is not terribly complicated.
When you were actually do the graphic design, how did you go about understanding what they wanted? Or did they trust you to design something that they would like?
I suppose I had an initiate understanding of the environment because I had gone to school there, and I wanted to translate the environment of the locations to the website. And I don’t know if that had come across, but it is a very sandy dry area and I hope it reflects that to a certain extent. I had mostly free reign on the project.
At what stages then did you ask for client approval? Did you do wireframes of anything? Or did you ask for approval during the design?
I didn’t do wireframes for this project because it was so simple, mostly just hand drawn sketches. I can possibly share some of the feedback that they gave me. * see document.
Each line or paragraph is from a different teacher or person. They were looking at different sites side by side and that is how they gave feedback.
There was one person in charge giving main approval, but getting feedback from others at school
In process of building the site, did you offer instruction on how to use it, or did you wait till the end to show them how to use Wordpress?
I identified the people who would be responsible for maintenance in the beginning and told them to set up a blog at wordpress.com so they could play with it immediately. The interface is nearly identical so they were able to work with all the features. Also really seemed to really get into he concept of a blog as well. SO the transition was fairly seamless for them. At some point in time, they might need handholding with the less experienced people, but I hope that the more experienced people will be able to help them out at that time. Good for the client-designer relationships, as I am not getting paid with this nonprofit project, and I would like to minimize my time spent doing maintenance.
So did you end up putting all the content tin the first instance or did you let them put in as much as they could?
A little bit of both, I put in a about 80% of the content, This is very much a work in progress. SO if you go to certain pages, it is still filler text at the moment. Waiting for them. Just transferred content from old site and making sure it is not out of date.
What aspects of the workflow are specific to nonprofits, you had gone over some of this, but is there anything else you would like to add?
What aspects of your web design were specific to working with a nonprofit?
In this particular instance, like I said, the relationships in somewhat atypical, but in general with nonprofits, may I answer even if I am speaking about process without Wordpress?
Yes of course.
Obviously there is less money involved, so they are often looking for solutions that are less expensive, even including the software, which is where CMS’s come in. So for them free CMS wins over a paid supported one. In terms of my own workflow, it does not differ too much, except I try to leave as comprehensive of documentation as possible to minimize the amount of maintenance requests and support queries after the project is completed.
When you conclude a project, you are making sure they can take care of much by themselves, yes?
Well, it varies again, I like have pleasant relationships with my clients at the end, even if we haven’t worked out a support contract, typically people come back and ask, and I can’t really turn them away and make them pay, a certain amount per month to talk to me. So I try to be as nice and possible to take care of what they need. If they have a support contract it is fairly straightforward.
Is there a signifier for you, and to know when you client’s needs have been met?
Yes typically we have a scope document. Sent a pdf. Along with that I would get clients to sign off on a scope document. Stating the things they would like and the functions and features they would like. Discussion forums, multi-author etc…So at the end there is a testable condition, and if it satisfies all the criteria then the website is done.
What do you think about Wordpress changing the client web designer relationship?
Oh I think it’s great!
I am great at talking myself out of jobs actually; I just tell them oh you can really just do this on your own all you have to do pick a theme. Yeah I do this all the time. I think WP is great because it allows them a whole lot of flexibility, typically nonprofits are doing something they do not have budgeted amounts for and is usually part of administrative expensive. It usally works better if they have a free solution. The only problem with WP is that there are very few themes that can be use a fully fledged CMS. More are directed toward the blog structure still with the 10 posts on the home page, and the archive pages. And the WP actually has strong pages sections which I am just discovered and that is typically what a NP would want to have, static pages, and that is my experience with nonprofits. In that sense it is bit of pain to find a theme that lends itself to that.
I am actually, I am teaching a course for web designers for social entrepreneurs in developing countries. Africa, Asia etc.. who have an idea for a nonprofit of some sort and all of these people are actually blind or visually impaired. I have been teaching them how to use WP and to set up a website of their own. I teach at X organization for social entrepreneurship and X Organization.
*sent links here
Website put together by someone who is completely visually impaired, and they just used the basic installation of WP.com and this hugely empowering because they don’t have t pay anything at all. Need a credit card to use a lot of online software and something like this works really well as something to start off with. Can buld something slightly more professional later on, when they get going.
*would have also been interesting to a do a study on accessibility and how CMSs and plug-ins are affecting technology use by impaired users.
You have been doing this for how long?
Not very long, just since October. The course has been running for 3 or 4 years.
Do you think that clients should be only learning to building basic websites through graphic interfaces, or do you think there will be a point when people will need to learn basic html or css?
Well that is bit tricky, in an ideal world, everyone would be able to write html, but with a good CMS and WSIWIG, even with intermediate language TEXT type I am fond of and used with other nonprofits. *linked here, site has been mangled by nonprofit a bit since it was handed over, but that is always a problem with CMS’s and handing them over to clients. Really nice hybrid language between html and plain text, really easier to teach than html. It’s like marked down syntax. With these tools, I am moving away and as these tools figure out what we need and they become more understanding and forgiving of what humans are trying to do. We should be moving towards this rather than teaching people html, because it is not a completely logical language. I would tend I suppose say, that software should work?
*text pattern other link
Back to workflow, is there anything specific about your workflow that makes it better suited to you specially?
I have evolved this workflow over time; it is not something I picked up immediately. It takes into account the realities of building a website. You don’t always have ability to be, it is important to have some documents to keep flow more strict and to get client approval at specific stages, rather than showing a mockup and then having the client say it was not really want they were looking for. I like to separate strictly content, behavior and presentation. In some ways in my head, it helps me keep things separated when I document them as well. *this has been mentioned by other designers
What do you know about user-centered or design ethnography, is that something you have heard of it?
We do some user profiling, if that is what you mean by design ethnography. Some amount of research.
Yes.
As far as the research what sort of method are you using? Like interviews?
Yes interviews, but we are rarely ever able to use formal usability testing with labs, but mostly quick surveys. Most of the time it is fairly basic AV? Testing, soft launches and seeing what works and what does not.
As far as the research, do you feel that is eye opening or just getting the basic information and moving from there?
What I like doing, but that doesn’t happen often, is getting feedback throughout the project, rather than getting all information the beginning. However there usually is not a budget to do this throughout the project, esp. getting the right sample sizes, or random sampling. So what we do is very low budget testing with smaller sample sizes, possibly people who have seen the site more than once. Not ideal, but the best on can do with a fairly low budget.
Do you think that content management systems will change the amount of research designers do, because there is less development?
I haven’t really thought about it, but I suppose it makes sense as one gets slightly better, I can imagine in the next project spending more time elsewhere.
The hardest part to sell is always the research and user testing. People would much rather spend their time and money on the graphics.
And that ends up being, where you also spend most your time?
Of last yes, also because I have given work to other developers. Most of my time is spend with client relationships, 30% of time minimum, rather than on design or development.
Tags: cms, design ethnography, designer views, Nonprofit, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Transcription | 2 Comments »
Saturday, June 5th, 2010
Interviewee: Peter Cole – 2010-04-27 17.31.13 with petercolesdc
Location: Bristol, UK
Duration: 22 minutes
Date: April 27th 2010
*Both audio and transcription can go online.
Area of expertise or job title:
I suppose my job title would be, well I started out as web designer, but it’s probably grown into web designer to web developer to doing printed media, I change what I call myself really, pretty much just go with creative, and whatever comes after that.
How many years have you been in the web design industry?
Professionally 4+ years, but I have been doing web designer since 2001
Do you work mainly as a freelancer or do you work in-house?
I am actually employed by a company called X In Bristol and do little bits and pieces in my spare time, but its growing more and more, something I am looking at. But yeah I am employed fulltime.
How if at all would you label your web design workflow?
Do you mean process?
Yes.
Well it depends really on what sort of project I am doing, what the time scale is, how much money is involved. Â It depends for little sites; kind of do simple sketching and a few conversations then we just dive into it. For the larger projects there is a lot of research, a lot planning, and a fair bit of red tape. And we are doing some work for an animal charity; there are a lot of people a lot of scientists involved in the projects, a lot of predevelopment stuff.
What % of your projects then use WP?
It depends, more recently quite a lot. It has gotten to a point now where it is being requested. Maybe 6-8 months ago it was here is something we can, it has got quite a nice interface and people would run with that. Last couple of things people have actually requested that I use it. Probably personally about 80%, and in the job 10—15% because we do a lot of in-house stuff that is not suited to that kinda thing.
Is there a type a client that asks for to use WP for more often?
Um again, if you ask me that question in about 6 months time I could give you a better answer. Nonprofits do seem to be quite keen on it, because it is open source, and it aligns with the ethos of nonprofits.
Why in particular do you like wordpress? Or do you?
Yeah I do like using it. Mostly because like I said I started out as a web designer, front end developer and my Php and Jquery skills are limited in so much as putting sites together. I can write a bit of code but nothing so advanced, and WP is designer friendly enough that you can put things together in quite a good way, rather than using something like Drupal or Joomla which is just a bit too much. To step up that.
We can move on to the web site life history. Could you tell me the name of the nonprofit and the type of work they do?
International Gorilla Conservation program which is based in Dem of Congo, Uganda in Africa, and they work primarily with mountain gorillas, but other species as well, and the other locals communities as well. It is a subsidiary of Flora and Fauna. I am consulting with them at the moment regarding their website.
How did you become involved?
Good friend of mine from University is working for them, Flora and Fauna and like I said they requested something through him for Wordpress and he didn’t know how to do that. So being friends and this is what I do for a living, he got in touch with me and asked if I wanted to do it and of course I jumped at the chance because it sounded really cool and that is how I got into it. And now they seem to be asking for more and more stuff.
Workflow start to finish…provided markers…
How many people were involved in the project and what were their roles?
I say dominantly three, there was my contact…in the organization they provided content and gave feedback. A project manager in a way. Another, provided feedback and content, and discussed the design side of the project. All of the design and development was just me. A few other people involved but not really anyone I ever dealt with?
SO the 2 people involved in the project, where they solely responsible for design decisions, or was it done as a committee?
Well, Â part of where the research would come in. We spent quite a bit of time setting goals and figuring out what they wanted to achieve with the site. So after providing content and giving feedback on the design, I kinda ran with, provided some wireframe and mockups and they Okayed that, then I ran with it. I was in contact with both of them 3 or 4 times a week for a 3 or 4 months, so it was a close kind of contact, but I was the only one doing the work.
Could you go through the documentation you used in the project? You mentioned wireframes and such, but was their anything else used?
By documentation do you mean sort of like a style guide? Things like that?
I mean a lot of that was decided in house, and I didn’t really have a lot of hands on style because they had their own way of writing things. Yeah obviously the wireframing which was actually quite quick, because the site is not that large. Maybe 5 or 6 wireframs for the main part of the site, and some visuals then building up. They provided a lot of content up front so I was able to strap it on to the navigation and apply it to how it works. We did a lot of focusing on 5 or 6 areas, as they had before something a bit more sporadic.
When doing the research, what sort of methods did you employ?
It was a small project on a small time scale, and the staff involved were on an entirely different continent, that was kind of difficult, but the research was mainly..I like to read up a lot, especially if I am doing something that I don’t know about, I will spend a weeks on it, on something I have absolutely no knowledge at all, because it helps you make more informed decisions. Yeah in terms of research it wasn’t something I generally do, it is not something that has come up.
After the complete the design, did you do usability or was that something not necessary?
To a certain extent, I mean it was a quite simple site, it was something I would have like to have done, but working on such a small budget with a small group it is quite a hard thing to perform.
Could you tell me a little bit more about the relationship with others in the project?
The main issue of course is working remotely. As good as tools like Basecamp or Skype are, it’s never quite the same as being the same room. I was lucky at the end, I got to go and train them and that was really beneficial, and we ironed out little bits and pieces, but we really did not have that luxury. I guess yeah. We did quite a through email and skype, and using skype to walk through.
Did anything work particularly well in relationship? Not so well?
We got to know each other quite well. Cause we talked quite a lot, and once you have built a relationship with someone, and gel with that person quite well, it helps a lot with second guessing that person??? And it did help that one of my good friends was involved in the project as well. We worked together in the past and working together now. Open collaboration and regular contact is good if you are working remotely. We didn’t’ get to use any face to face tool, is one of many problems.
How did you conclude the project and know your clients needs had been met?
Basically, I hit the deadline, and made…and did training, and that after running through the site with those involved, that was when the project concluded. And going in and tailoring a few things….a couple of days going over things I think that worked quite well.
So you were training them how to use Wordpress then?
Yeah, I wrote them a manual and sent them that a few weeks before and I went over step by step through things. I mean it is quite a simple system to pick it. So I walked them through that.
Were you trying to training people who were specifically in charge of updating the site, or the entire organization?
Training the communication officer who is the sole updater of the site.
How does Wordpress specifically affect your workflow, if you think it does?
I don’t think it does really. I mean I think you need to be a bit logical with the site, especially with large sites, and pick out what is possible and what is not. What would take a lot of work to make it possible. I tend to put a large division between design, user interaction and development in my head cause if you deign something for Wordpress that is not easily possible then you shouldn’t be doing in. It not about getting a square peg in a round hole.
Are there any aspects of your workflow that are specific to nonprofits?
No, not really, I don’t think it is a whole lot different. You are tailoring your work to a specific audience, same as you would anything else. No, I wouldn’t say so.
Do you think WP affects the workflow for the nonprofit client?
Probably, I have seen a lot of in-house systems, not specifically for the nonprofit, but organization and in-house system become dated and very hard to use. Anything that can be used, it doesn’t have to be Wordpress that can streamline the process is a very good thing.
Is there anything about your workflow that is specific to you as an individual?
Probably, working with designers and developers in the past, they all got a different way of approaching things. Cause I have got quite a bit of experience working in teams as opposed to just being a freelancer on my own, I take quite a logical approach to my work, especially more recently bc obviously the more you use it the better you become. Yeah so there is a lot of logic involved a lot of planning things out, and practice and updating the way I do things on a weekly basis, just refining things.
Are there any skills that you have that your team especially values you for?
I suppose, I design and do front end code and those are my main skills…certain codes and the speed at which I can do things now, I can put things together in hours now rather than a couple of weeks.
Do you prefer nonprofoits vs for profit?
Nonprofits are just a better feeling in generally. A better feeling than just making money.
If feels more rewarding to my soul, doing nonprofit work. At the end of the day I have to pay the bills like everyone else. I do enjoy my work and I enjoying doing work for nonprofits.
Tags: designer views, expert model, Nonprofit, ownership, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Transcription | 23 Comments »
Saturday, June 5th, 2010
Interviewee: Web Designer #1
Location: USA
Duration: 50 minutes
Date: May 16th 2010
*Okay to put transcription and use pseudonym for name and company
What is your job title or area of expertise?
Design researcher
How many years have you been in the design industry?
Technically three years now. Including a graduate degree I guess.
Do your work mainly as a freelancer or in-house?
I work as a consultant. I mean I have done both, but right now I am working as a consultant.
How if at all would you label your workflow in reference to the volunteer position you emailed me about?
I think what I do in work maybe inspires and guides the sort of things I do for the nonprofit. So I think a lot of what I end up doing is inspired by techniques of participatory design that we use in our research. And I use it kinda to structure conversations and use it plan activities and define ? and also to think about my design skills. I mean I went to school to be an interaction designer and I use that as a way to think about what people are doing and how they should be doing it and why. What makes sense and how to make it easier.
For your web design projects, what % actually use Wordpress?
Like I said it is just the front facing blog is Wordpress, and then we have another site that we just started and that is using Drupal.
Could you tell me the name of nonprofit and type of work they do?
Yeah, they are called Company X and we are trying to work in the intersection of art and technology. And our mission is to connect artists and technologists together and help pretty much random ordinary people discover their creativity. And we do that by holding events and exhibitions, we have workshops where we teach specific kinds of skills, sometimes it is technical skills, or non-technical.
Recording blank for few seconds
..Sometimes it’s our own projects, where we show our thinking by example.
How did you become involved with them?
I think I was at one of their events when I moved to the city and I just basically saw an opportunity for me to sort of use my expertise and what I was learning at work and cross this over, and we are a really young organization, we are barely about three years old. We have grown really slowly, we have had to create our own presence and create a crowd.
As a growing organization I felt that it could use design thinking so to speak. So I thought I would test it out and see what I could do for these guys. So that is how I ended up with them.
So for this particular site, since you did not build the site yourself, I would like to hear about an issue you had to focus on at one point and how it was dealt with from start to finish.
Is that something you feel comfortable starting to talk fluidly about and I can interject where necessary, or would you prefer I provide markers for you?
When I came in the Wordpress site was already running, um it really didn’t have too much of a structure. I guess and it was just there and the thing that happened was that we really didn’t have a big glaring problem that needed to be fixed, nothing broke, nothing was majorly dissatisfactory of some kind, but what happened was we weren’t actually getting, we were not doing a good job of getting people through from our workshop description pages to making donations and signing up for classes. That was pretty much the point we said okay, we need someone to help us do this and there was a Php developer that somebody knew who was willing to help out, and it was somebody who had just started doing web design on their own, and had just spun off into their own thing.  They ended up taking our basic installation and filling in a few custom modules and maybe doing a bit of theming. What we had to figure out after that was sort of how do we make this work in terms of people and who has access and how do we change the way information is presented. Which is something we have not quite solved yet. But really about the only kind of problem we have faced is with simple things like formatting the output or trying to figure out how, when the payment action happens on the site how do we control what happens after that, which we still haven’t sort of managed or bothered to be honest dealing with. We probably might do it if it was easier, it is almost like okay this is collection, a kaleidoscope of different modules, and part of thing is that if it works, don’t break it. SO we haven’t bothered making any major changes or fixes. NO serious problems or serious fixes.
What is encompassed in your regular maintenance duties for this project, or what do you do on a regular basis for them?
Mostly it sorta runs itself. There is a bunch of other stuff which is much harder to do. SO I do much more maintenance on the Drupal site, rather than the Wordpress site. On the Wp site, it is mainly making sure things are, the code and installation are updating and plugins and modules are updated, because we have people that change in a out of roles, and some people basically swap in and out of the marketing role who end up posting to the blog. Managing those permissions and anything else that goes wrong. I get a bunch of forgotten password requests, those pop up every so often and their username and which email these used it with…
But really that is the bulk of it. I do a few tweaks and adjustment of settings.
And one time we switched hosting providers, so I had to handle the migration and make that work.
How many people are usually involved in the project at one time then?
Um, we have about 30, and 20 steady volunteers. And it probably about 5-7 of us who are really core to this and different parts of the process. In the beginning we were all over the place and everyone did everything, and now we are starting to really specialize and switch roles. So increasingly, we have few people involved with the WP install, whereas, earlier there were probably more.
*people growing into and switching roles common for nonprofits as volunteers move in and out and the nonprofit itself learns what processes work best for them
You stated in your email that you participat in driving the dialogue between workflow and site design, could you elaborate?
So one of the things that we have to figure out how to do, and this specifically relates to the workshops that we hold. All but instructors are volunteers and so we have people who teach workshops for us that don’t do anything else and so that pool is growing and shrinking and changing over time. We have gone from doing one-off sort of workshops to really thinking about a curriculum and structuring a series of workshops together so they have great depth on a topic. So we have started to have more regular workshops, the same workshop starting every so often. And with all of this we start to have challenges of doing things like maintaining rosters of people who maintain our workshops frequently, tracking how many folk attend what kind of workshop and which ones go well. And so what we ended up with was a two headed solution that is really not satisfactory. The way we do it is that we have a bunch of different worksheets in Google docs, and there is a workflow associated with that. I had to sit down with a couple of other folks and do that, and edit and track the information and so on. And then part of that information ends up going to the Drupal site and part of that information ends up going to the Wordpress site. And I have to sit down with the people who update the Wordpress site to figure out how things like the workshop description, once the workshop was planned and finalized, and structured in terms of cities and seasons of the workshop and all other necessary information of the workshop have been set, we figure out how to get that information quickly and easily over to the person updating the Wordpress site. And also, trying to get our instructors to rely really on the Drupal site for coordination, instead of trying to do things entirely over email. So that is why, it is two headed solution, it is a little bit here and little bit there. When ideally, it would be best to have a single something that would go directly from planning and coordination, the actions of planning and coordinating, and writing the initial lesson plan and things like that, and following that through cleanly into the public facing aspects. So since tech does not allow us to do that right now. I am part of the process that says who sends an email to whom, and who is responsible for updating what kinds of information and what sort of information should live in the public site and what should live in the internal site. So that is probably the strongest example, we are starting to do this sort of thing with other aspects of our work, so you know we are starting to figure out other certain kinds of information that we should be putting out on your blog. So again, with the workshops, there is a workshop planning guide that is on the website. And that was, once we figured out how to hold workshops , what each instructor had to do, and how they are to work out a lesson plan and sort of all the instructor’s workflow, we basically wrote that down, and put that on the external website, so any potentional instructor could come in and see approximately the amount of effort its takes to teach a workshop. As we have had people who have never taught a workshop before.
How do you think your particular organization, because it seems to be very involved, inspires greater investment in keeping it updated?
Honestly, I don’t think it does. To tell the truth. I think we have a very standard aspect, for the WP site right now, that is pretty much all our workshops, because that is most constantly changing aspect of what we do?
Recording fuzzy here.
And that is sort of planned out, because we have a marketing and workshops coordinator that handle this in tandem and um it’s almost like the because we are still figuring out who we are and what we are doing, end up being on our personal blogs and Twitter, and Facebook and that sort of thing, and it doesn’t really become part of the group identity in terms of those thing quite yet. So what we tend to do is make announcements, workshop announcements or exhibitions updates, of that sort, but it doesn’t really tend to be anything more than that.  We don’t’ feel that the blog is the right place yet, to do things like present a collective mind, or yeah, so it’s really, I really don’t know why that is, I am not sure if it is a cultural or organization problem, or if it is just a question of I really, whether the expense of time and effort is too much, or maybe they will only go to it once a month if they really have something to say.. just makes it not interesting enough to us??
I am not quite sure why that is the case. That is really how it is. And I think part of it is also, that we ended up with a site that is not really friendly to random thoughts. And it is almost like, and this for instance is a problem we haven’t really fixed, and looked at it in the eye and figured out really what to do with it. We usually are, the things that we need to find really quickly are the workshops, and the event announcements, and what we ended up with in terms of site design, is that we ended up with sort of a main slot, and the most recent posts ends up being there. And then there is a sidebar of most recent workshop posts, and so usually the main post that stays up there is something related with a workshop we particular want to promote or event we want to drum up and keep alive. And so using the blog really as a random collection of chronological ideas would really destroy that because it would remove that significant sticky post we want up front. I don’t think anyone has really thought about it, but I think it I part of the problem as to why we don’t do this more often.
And it’s almost like; we have sort of backed ourselves in a corner in respect to that. So those things are sort of going to together, the slight lack of interest and real group identity and this rather silly setup we seem to have.
That organization is sort of specific to Wordpress, so do think then that is Wordpress’ “fault†as it is time based?
Yeah. Honestly, you know why we picked Wordpress for this? We basically said, we picked Wordpress because it had the easiest post editor. Like the WSIWIG text editor and that was really easy for people to use. And um it was basically the interface that sold it. And when I was faced with the decision, with what do I recommend Drupal or Wordpress, or whatever and at the point Drupal, probably still, was not very easy to use. And I did not want to take a critical piece of our public facing technology and make it hard to update. So yeah, I think part of that is definitely Wordpress because I do think it is really designed for the sorts of things…it basically supports one kind of content. And it does not really give you the freedom to separate or not easily at any rate, you can’t really design a separate area of the site, a separate visual structure that is just for you know big updates, and then a separate visual area that is more for less significant ones. Unless you sit down and do some Php coding and stitch modules together, and that stuff. And even then it is not a very elegant solution. On the other hand there really is nothing easier to update. That does make it really easier to insert media and pictures. So it is sort of compromise.
Do you offer instruction on how to use Wordpress for people in the organization, or do they learn on their own, or how do they learn how to use it?
I think mostly a mixture of self taught plus “Wedesigner #1 omg how do I do thisâ€, so think that it is easy enough that people start doing their basic things when they first get it,  and so they immediately start updating posts and doing stuff, so it is at the point that when they start to do something more complex um you know reorganizing the pages or managing the content, in someway, that I typically get called in to do that. Like I said we don’t really do anything that complicated and our content does not really change. It is a very simple, linear sort of updating process. So I think people get up to the stage where they can comfortably post and attach pictures and all that, but it’s at things like: can I have a gallery on this page, and sometimes I even have to sit down and figure out how to that. It is a learning process for all those involved.
Now I would like to move on toward your role as design researcher.
You said that the beginning that you had a masters in Interaction design, yes?
Actually, HCI – Human Computer Interaction.
Does Company Y often do the research for building of websites or what sort of projects do you normally take on?
Our work is really very like upfront, generative research, we are looking at opportunities for new product development and we are really with very fuzzy spaces. So we have clients who come to us and say “what is the future of tv†, alright lets go out and talk to people, it can get very tactical, for instance we have done work for company that makes garden chairs, and we have helped them make a better garden chair. So we don’t do what is considered in the industry User-Experience for websites. We rarely work directly on the software level.
How does ethnography fit into your work then?
Um, sometimes it doesn’t. Actually about half the time it doesn’t. For instance in my personal work. I spent, when I was in grad school, one year with a research group studying cognitive science. They were looking at interdisciplinary cognition in, sorry cognition in interdisciplinary environments, so I was spending 6 months in one lab and about 8 months in another, sort of hanging out, and doing regular interviews, and what would technically be called ethnographic field work. So obviously now, I don’t have that sort of luxury anymore in my work, but it is sort of like we had to do a lot of things in very short period of time, and with much less rigor than is afforded in classic approaches to ethnography, so what we really had to do was really keep the spirit of ethnography and maybe not the exact letter. So I would use, my interviewing technique is ethnographic, so I tend to be a little looser, be less structured, to follow my hunches, and what people are saying more often. The way I reuse their terminology and frame things different, so the interviewing style is the most obvious way in which ethnography becomes part of my work. But in a less obvious way, it is guiding the overall research design doing things like saying, you know if we are going to construct a participatory activity, how can we maximize the amount of information present in, actually coming from the participants, versus something given to stimulate. So for instance, if it is a card sorting kind of thing, how can, to what extent can we ensure that the names and ideas are actually coming from the participant? And at an even higher level it influences the way I frame the research question and how I try to get the clients to think about the problem.
Is your ethnography backed by anthropological theory after the method is carried out, or how is your data interpreted and processed?
You know to tell the truth, there really isn’t much theory that we end up using. Which is something I am trying to remedy. There really is unfortunately for us, x company used to have anthropological researchers , but we don’t anymore. But because my training is not in Anthropology, I can’t off the top of my head really say hey “yes there is this framework or theory that we can useâ€. Often it is something that comes along on the way and I will try to do some secondary research and try to find something, but it’s not very structured in that sense. That being said if you do grad school in HCI you do pick a few basic theories along the way and they tend to get applied all the time in my work. Probably the most obvious and biggest thing that gets used is theories around identity and what that means and how is it expressed in different ways and how it is expressed with technology or not with technology. And what should our clients be doing about it. Should they be concerned about it or not. If they are not concerned with it, should they be etc…A lot of theory around that tends to be as far as I can do. Because my coworkers are from a much more traditional design background and their theory orientation is much less than mine is. They are much less interested in doing that. So toward the end, it ends up being trying use what anthropology theory I know, and framing the question and interpreting the results, but for the most part its freeform because I can’t get other people to think with theories, I can only do it myself.
For the designers who don’t know any anthropological or ethnographic theory or methods, where or what data do they use to make their design decisions. Or what is their role in the research? (since company does not do design, just research)
We are all researchers, we all just come from a different perspectives and variety of backgrounds. And so for people who have more of design background, I think they are going by more their instinct and making interpretations and framing their interpretations. Obviously we don’t make stuff up. So it’s almost like saying, okay we got all this data, we have gone through it, sorted it and organized it, and worked it out, but beyond that the instinct and the experience of having done things like this in the past, we look at what level this sort of information is going to be useful at. How abstract do we need to make it? How do we structure or provide a framework that would make sense to people? How do we, what parts of this do we really need, enrichment for the kinds of data, or forms of expressions, and that is really where their decisions are made and where their experience comes in. So somebody who has a communication and graphic design background is going to be thinking about a more visual background and connected frameworks and someone who has had more of an industrial design background wants to see how they can represent their information as inspirational design ideas or statements of framing opportunities. So I think we all have slightly different ways of dealing like that. But most of it is , I am a designer, I am a x this is what I wanna do this is what I have been doing for the past x number of years and therefore this is the way to tell the story, or this is the story exists.
Actually once you are a consultant and you keep doing projects over and over again, they are just for different clients, so you are after awhile you are like “I know what we are going to find in this particular project†because we have done it before. So there is some of that too.
What do you think then about the idea that the design world should be answerable to the academic world if they are using let’s say again, ethnographic methods?
What do you mean answerable?
Maybe peer reviews in a way, following manuals written by anthropologists rather than designers, maybe against the idea that designers should be able to formulate their own methods and pull from wherever necessary.
You know to tell you the truth, I think all that sort of putting up the rigor flag is, it seems like boundary protection to me. Because, if nothing, I am a hybrid creature, I have an undergraduate degree in computer science. I worked at a furniture company doing research for them. So my metric was doing eventual, the end result of the research. And what the impact was and how it was done. Most of the time, honestly my experience has been, that the real problem with methods and the discussion on what methods should be used and which one are right, is not so much that there are methods that are misapplied is that the questions that are inspiring the research or project are badly framed. And what that is that is actually an organization problem, it is not a research methods problem, it is the problem of the organization that comes up and says this is what I want to understand and the thing they want to understand and the way they have framed the question around what they want to understand is not well done. Or conversely they have a good research question, a good perspective on it, but they don’t really have a good way to socialize that knowledge once the research is done and insight done and the knowledge is found. Or the team that does the research does not really know how to do it. Or doesn’t really know how to, produces outputs that are more socialized, more usable. I am not going to say actionable, because they always are, but it’s a question of whether people bother acting on them. So it’s this question of, who should be allowed to do it, or what the right thing is, or accountability or who should be allowed to claim it is also counterproductive honestly. I would much rather see better awareness of which methods are to be use and why and probably more understanding on what some of these things are, so it is more not that I feel that designers need to explain themselves to academia, it more that designers need to learn a little bit more about where academia has come from and why it is saying the sorts of things that it is saying so that they have, a more clear approach to doing research. I don’t have a problem with people claiming something in ethnography that is not ethnography, I think that is beside the point; I think the point is that they manage to understand the ethnographic or whatever process. We are talking ethnography here, but we may as well be talking about the ??? Have they understood why they are doing something and what is the relationship between the method and the kind of knowledge it is going to reveal and knowing about the boundaries of that knowledge? And really saying, this is what I am comfortable saying. But beyond that, I am not comfortable saying, but saying it is possible to say this based on the data and it’s not possible to say this other thing. And I think that is maybe where we should be have a dialogue around.
Could you describe co-creation in your own words, and what it is in terms of your organization?
For us it is more of a guiding principle, that says we don’t want don’t pretend to be and are not going to be the experts on all things related to the research, so what we try to do is partner as much as possible with our clients, and get them involved with the whole research design process and each step along the way, and that involves the interpretation process as tightly as we can make it happen given distances and all that. And obviously also with a, in terms of the participants in our research we try to think about how much can we put the task of coming up with what is the meaning of whatever thing we are studying as much as possible in their hands and giving them as much ability as and as many different ways to express and articulate. Unfortunately, what it isn’t yet is in our work is it does not mean we are able to be the organization , say the corporation that needs the design done to the people that are going to be affected by the design are, or who are going to be affected by the products basically act as the people who facilitate that interaction over a long period of time into the beginning of the project during research. That rarely happens. I guess co-creation in a sense is very short spurts of co-creation. Focused around specific kinds of design and knowledge making activity.  As opposed to a co-creation around the whole process. That starts from inception all the way through to making something and fixing it and selling that and all that stuff.
What are its main differences between participatory research or design?
I think that last bit is probably what I am going to say. I mean you know there seems to be two distinct senses between participatory design. We do it, then we talk about it, I think that we end up using tactically, we end up using participatory design methods. Um which is in terms of expression, articulation, and structuring …blanked out…in the sense of actually setting up a design process and being part of the process from start to finish and shepherding the stakeholders from start to finish. Because like I said, we don’t do design. We don’t end up with that aspect, even though it is closely related to what we want to do.
Could you describe Flash immersion?
I don’t know what counts as flash immersions, because our clients always accompany us into the field. Because of the sorts of work we do, it’s usually big picture, general research we actually have clients who come back to us over and over again. And they are sort of generally familiar with an area. They are generally comfortable going into people’s homes. The kinds of knowledge change that will happen to them when they go in the field. I don’t think those guys really count as beneficiaries of immersion for us. But we do have occasional clients who we realize; okay these guys really need to be in the field. And we will try to take as many of them as possible. And to expose as many of them as, to do as wide a range of experiences as we can. So typically when we have decided that someone needs immersion, we will go beyond bringing them into people’s homes but take them around the city go to a market place and see things related to what they are studying, and try to do that.
But because our clients don’t always need that, we don’t end up doing that very often.
End conversation summary…design research to be done in nonprofit as have more to benefit from them due to building of relationships.
*I felt a lot of questions I asked in this interview could have been more creative, and I should have emailed the organization itself for answers instead of making my interviewee recite them to me. At the same time, it was more interesting to hear a description in a nonbusiness setting.
Tags: Anthrodesign, design ethnography, designer views, ethnography, Nonprofit, relationship technology user, ucd, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Anthrodesign, Transcription | 796 Comments »
Saturday, June 5th, 2010
Date of Event: June 2, 2010
What: Druid Cycles Ethnography
Who: Thor Bard and rest of shop
Where: Druid Cycles’ Shop
What happened:
Today was beautiful in London and a nice day in the shop as well. Got to ride in the front of Thor’s bike cart on a Victorian stool as he pedaled us to another part of London. Hilarious and fabulous to see Londoners actually notice (and smile!) at something outside of their personal bubble.
The first hour or so I spent taking a few photos, as I have brought my camera for the week. My hopes are to not only use the camera as a tool for documentation but also as an elicitation tool. Was good to use the camera to view a different side of the shop and keep myself busy for a bit. I also was able to take a few higher quality photos of the bikes that the shop has done up to attempt and sell on their website, then spent the next few hours putting patches on tubes with two of the other employee/volunteers. Nice to do something mindless, yet useful and gave me chance to chat to the others.
Being in the shop for a few days now, I have a lot of ideas moving around my head, about what would work better in terms of a website for Druid Cycles. Again, their current website is a really basic installation of the default Wordpress theme. Most importantly it is not linked to Druid Cycles’ Twitter or Facebook accounts. Thor and his friends on Facebook really use the site quite a bit to hook up and spread information. While Wordpress is easy to update, it would be better to keep a system in place that already functions quite well.
Briefly speaking to Thor about his plans for the future, his major goal if of course to solidify his brand as Druid Cycles and to create a community that not only preaches sustainability, but is sustainable within itself. As I stated, at the moment a lot of what helps run the shop is an exchange of services and materials. Thus not only are materials reused, but close connections also keep transport costs down and perpetuate the close ties of a community that help his shop run. Relating back to the website then, the site also needs to be able to give back to the community. A very diverse one at that. This website must mirror such connections, integrating translations where possible and as Thor stated an integration of Skype so people all over can call the shop for free. Being open and helpful on the web will be essential, providing useful information about cycling and an easy access contact form. From what I have observed, Thor is very good at answering emails, especially messages on Facebook, so I feel that he will be able to handle this.
But I also feel that for Thor, to achieve a certain level of social awareness, the website should also offer something particular to his community. In the actual world , Thor offers that “good neighbor†vibe and is really willing to work with people who can prove their worth and who want to learn. I will have to think more on this and talk to Thor and others about what they receive from the community currently that really benefits them. So in general this website really is about translating their message and ideal online.
Anyway, at the moment, Thor’s previous web designer had gone missing taking the WP password and username with him. AND all the domain and hosting information. Will deal with tomorrow as well as hopefully have a more in-depth conversation to decide what exactly is happening with the website.
Few Notes:
* I think I might need to finish this project in about a month rather than 2 months. I can’t seem to really start writing my thesis, because I haven’t time to really sit back and look at the information I have gathered. And I don’t think I will be able to actually write 20,000+ words coherently in a month. Remember to speak to advisor about this….
*I need to actually speak about my use of ethnography in design…I will do this in the next few days. Now that I have posted it on the blog I have to get it done.
*Also need to decipher the purpose of using Meetup.com as a place to network and informal focus groups.
*There is a divide between nonprofits that need to set up and work with Wordpress themselves and those who outsource. I am not sure how important this differentiation is, or just needs to be clarified as it is brought up.
*Should limit my study to Wordpress.org or if can include some input about .com?
*Recent article as well in design research that I will be taking a look at: http://www.uxbooth.com/blog/complete-beginners-guide-to-design-research/
It is of course interesting me to see what designers consider to be best practices in ethnography. I will attempt to start a list, as I also want to be comparing what everyone is saying.
Tags: design ethnography, Field notes, Nonprofit, participant observation, web design, wordpress, workflow
Posted in Nonprofit | 125 Comments »
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