12 Articles worth reading… (Spotted: Weeks 13-17, 2011)
For your reading pleasure this time, a collection of links (with summaries) including articles related to: web strategy, UX, search, web developement.
Beantin Webbkommunikation is James Royal-Lawson+46735931654, Stockholm-based digital strategist and web managerwebbkonsult, webbrådgivare
On this blog you can find articles that cover web strategy webbstrategi, intranets intranät, trends (often with a Swedish twist), analytics, and running an effective web presence. Check out my most popular posts.
For your reading pleasure this time, a collection of links (with summaries) including articles related to: web strategy, UX, search, web developement.
There’s an announcement. Twitter is alive with tweets proclaiming this wonderful new feature. It’s going to be massive. The next big thing. Bloggers have already implemented it on their Wordpress sites. The social media sites have too. Few days later an iPhone app appears. It gets thousands of downloads from the app store.
You have a meeting and talk about how wonderful it would be to do the same. You all agree. You get the responsibility to investigate the possibility further. A week later you’ve gathered enough background information to make a decent presentation to use in your work to get internal buy-in from key stakeholders. two months later, after 8 meetings with the stakeholders plus a telephone conference with the IT department and their preferred supplier, you get the go-ahead to produce a specification.
This year’s budget has already been blown by the marketing department on a flash-based campaign that received no visitors, so when the quote comes back from your IT department’s preferred supplier telling you how much this new feature is going to cost to implement in your WCMS, you realise that it’s going to have to wait until January.
January comes, the proposal gets accepted, work gets underway. Of course the work run over budget and behind schedule. This means that you missed that month’s maintenance slot. The next available slot when IT can fit it in is the next-but-one maintenance window as the activities planned for the next one are critical ones that IT say can’t be mixed with other, “non-essential”, work.
10 months later the feature has finally made the light of day. Of course by this point, the bloggers and various other social media news sites are on their third iteraton, and have implemented a whole load of other features and adjustments that enhance their visitor’s experience.
A tall story? or does your neck ache from nodding in agreement?
Take the launch of Google Buzz. Within a matter of days, Mashable had implemented a Buzz Button of their own. They’re a company of 30 or so employees, and a have a website that gets over 20 million page views a month. Yet they have kept their web presence fluid enough so they can react and adapt their tactics at a pace that fits today’s real-time web.
Your organisation needs to leave the website redesign cycle behind it and adopt a solid web strategy that then gives you the opportunity to measure, and then adjust your tactics. Your web presence doesn’t stop and wait for you to go through a full website redesign and rebuild. Don’t let yourself get stuck - but It’s not a Las Vegas casino you can knock-down and start again from scratch. It’s closer to a living person. You need to be its personal coach, doctor & surgeon.
9 years on from their first survey, Nielsen have produced a new study into the usability of Children’s websites. “It’s now common for a 7-year-old kid to be a seasoned Internet user with several years’ experience.” - If we think that the millennials are the internet generation - in 10-15 years this wave of 7 year olds will be in the marketplace.
This autumn I’m going to be attending a couple of conferences. A couple of interesting and inspiring conferences. Hopefully if you are attending either of them then you’ll manage to find me, say hello and be social.
Later this month Disruptive Code takes place in Stockholm at the Tekniska Museet. It looks like an event that will be worth every kronor of the incredibly low price of 3,955.50 SEK for the two days (after the 10% discount you’ll get by using this link of mine)
“Code. Methods. Apps. Services. Tech. Mobile.” is how they summarise the event, which is aimed at web developers but also web designers, IT- and business strategists and entrepreneurs. Amongst the people speaking at the event are a whole load of guys and girls behind some of the most interesting Swedish startups.
The Twitter hashcode for the event is #dcode
In October Stochkolm hosts a 2-day IntraTeam intranet conference. The first day is an international day, where all the speakers will speak English. The second day has a Swedish focus and will be held in a mix of Swedish and English. Both days are filled with speakers who can give concrete advice and examples of intranet best practices and trends.
I’m attending day one of the conference, and of course hanging about to be social at the cocktail party that brings the day to a close. Looking forward to listening to and meeting James Robertson, Mark Morell amongst others.
The Twitter hashcode for the event is #ies10
So, if you are already going, or if you decide to come along, let me know - and say hello!