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Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 3rd Edition
book

Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 3rd Edition

by Peter Morville, Louis Rosenfeld
November 2006
Intermediate to advanced
526 pages
15h 34m
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 3rd Edition

Chapter 6. Labeling Systems

What we’ll cover:
What labeling is and why it’s important
Common types of labels
Guidelines for developing labels
Developing labels: borrowing from existing sources or starting from scratch

Labeling is a form of representation. Just as we use spoken words to represent concepts and thoughts, we use labels to represent larger chunks of information in our web sites. For example, “Contact Us” is a label that represents a chunk of content, often including a contact name, an address, and telephone, fax, and email information. You cannot present all this information quickly and effectively on an already crowded web page without overwhelming impatient users who might not actually need that information. Instead, a label like “Contact Us” works as a shortcut that triggers the right association in the user’s mind without presenting all that stuff prominently. The user can then decide whether to click through or read on to get more contact information. So the goal of a label is to communicate information efficiently; that is, to convey meaning without taking up too much of a page’s vertical space or a user’s cognitive space.

Unlike the weather, hardly anyone ever talks about labeling (aside from a few deranged librarians, linguists, journalists, and, increasingly, information architects), but everyone can do something about it. In fact, we are doing something about it, albeit unconsciously: anyone developing content or an architecture for a web site is creating labels ...

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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 0596527349Errata Page