I am writing this with a bend towards enterprise-level websites that contain lots of information. More specifically, my writing is based on my experience working on websites at a large university. These strategies work well for small websites too, but may be overkill for some.
Content Inventory: Information Layout
There are two documents that can be very helpful for evaluating or building from scratch a website’s information architecture:
INFORMATION OUTLINE
An easy way to create an information outline is to extract a summary of the headings throughout your website into a bullet list. Not only should the headings be an accurate skeleton of the subject, but when you develop meaningful headings you are simultaneously improving your site’s SEO. To think about it another way, a user should be able to skim your information outline and know where they would look to find a specific piece of information. So, when they are skimming your website, as discussed in the first half of this blog article, they are quickly guided to the information that is most important to them.
SITE MAP
A site map serves as a visual representation of a website’s navigability. Each plot on the map represents a unique page and I usually label my plots with the top-level heading on that page (for me, seeing the heading adds value when I’m reviewing the site map). The tendency for a lot of people is to put every page of their site in a global navigation which results in a site map that is completely flat. This indicates that everything is only a click away (good), but that the user is inundated with choices (bad). My organization’s goal for an upcoming redesign is to reshape our site maps so they look more like family tree and less like a distant horizon. Ideally, a site should establish a balance of efficiency (fewer clicks) that leverages the natural flow of information (fewer options), resulting in a streamlined user experience.
Another of my “best practice” quirks: A top-level bullet point on my information outline corresponds to a plot on my site map. So these headings identify unique pages but do not take into account the relationship of one page to another.
Recommendations For Beginners
If I were preparing to write/rewrite content for my website, I would start by creating an information outline. This will give you the big picture and help you identify the most important bits of information. Once your headings sufficiently guide users to the content they need, you will be able to drill down into those partitions, keep your thoughts organized, and deliver a killer user experience.
Just pretend you’re back in high school, drafting an outline for a research paper. Because that was fun, right?