Category Archives: information architecture for news websites

Findability and Exploration: the future of search

When readers are exploring and searching, we see them at a crucial point in time: a moment when they're ready, willing and eager to learn. The power to turn exploration into learning is the most wonderful gift we can give to our readers. Let us help readers on their quest for knowledge by retooling navigation and search.
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The Basic Unit of Information

A meandering little post about (1) three different types of structured information, (2) the "basic unit of information" meme that wants to put the filing cabinet and brains of every journalist on the web and (3) how information architecture for news websites doesn't just pose design and technical challenges, but requires us to think about the fundamentals of the journalistic enterprise and its future.
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We’re in the information business

A well-architected website stores news as a bunch of units of information. Structured information is a prequisite to the new and exciting things every newspaper wants to do online but currently can't. Structure leads to adaptability, allowing us to change course whenever we please or whenever technological breakthroughs force our hand. Going beyond big blobs of text is about freeing us from the chains of legacy costs, and using that freedom to experiment with the future of news.
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Tags don’t cut it

If we re-imagine tags as rich connections that relate content to the persons, organizations, locations, events and themes they talk about, hopefully magic will happen.
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Information architecture for news websites

April will see me blogging about a small but important piece of the puzzle that is the future of news: the information architecture behind a good news website. Each of the four-and-a-half parts will look at the current state of things, criticize what's wrong with our websites and what should change, but also provide a first stab at a solution.
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