Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, Second Edition
by Louis Rosenfeld, Peter Morville
Bringing Our Work to Life
Information architecture lives beneath the surface. Users rarely look at a web site and exclaim, “Wow, check out this brilliant classification scheme!” In fact, much of our work is intangible; many people who are directly involved in web design have only a superficial understanding of information architecture. They may recognize the need for clear labels in a navigation bar, but have no clue how a controlled vocabulary could improve the search experience. If you can’t see it, touch it, taste it, or smell it, it doesn’t exist.
This invisibility is fine with respect to users. We don’t want to force users to see our hard work; we want them to complete tasks and find information in blissful ignorance of our labors. But invisibility is a major problem when it comes to justifying our existence to colleagues and making the case for investments to decision makers. We must constantly work to help people see the complexity of the challenges we face and the long-term value of our solutions.
We must find ways to articulate the key concepts of our craft, helping people to understand the sophisticated nature of user needs and behavior. We must show the interconnections between people and content that underpin knowledge networks, and explain how these concepts can be applied to transform static web sites into complex adaptive systems (Figure 1-4 [6]).

Figure 1-4. Information ...
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