Archive for the ‘Illuminant Digital’ Category

How to refresh a website: the 5 most important factors

Saturday, January 1st, 2011

Illuminant's five thingsRefreshing an existing website — as distinct from creating a website for the first time — has a different set of challenges, opportunities and pitfalls than for new websites.

A website refresh project is in many ways a golden opportunity to enhance the communications effectiveness of your enterprise.

These projects can appear daunting, but with good planning, teamwork and tools, the process can be enjoyable, efficient and meet your deadlines.

Illuminant’s Digital Communications team is skilled at the special challenges of website refreshes, and since we have just completed a comprehensive refresh for our own house site, we thought we’d share our insights.  We have distilled our best advice into five simple steps, which we’re happy to offer.

What are the five most important factors the Illuminant Digital Communications team applies to every website refresh project?

Number 1Get your information architecture right

But what’s an information architecture? Your information architecture (or, “IA” for short) is your site’s overall structural design (and we mean “design” in the abstract sense, not the graphical sense).  Your IA defines thecontent you are presenting, the context in which it is to be presented, and how your users will interact with your website.

For complex websites such multi-channel portals, the IA is almost impossible to comprehend from a bird’s eye view, but for the majority of corporate and non-profit websites, a simple and easy-to-grasp IA should be fairly simple to achieve.

Think about your site’s hierarchical navigation system, and you should be able to see your IA in terms of a site map. Then visualize the main page designs in your site, stripped of all their “chrome”, or graphic design elements, and you’re seeing your IA in terms of presentation.

"Day 338: the wiki" by Quinn Dombrowski, CC licenced Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic. http://www.flickr.com/photos/quinnanya/3082733378/

An example of a rough IA site map

For your site map, you’ll always have a home page, and with a click, your users can access a range of other pages which are organised into sections or categories.

In the case of conventional corporate-style websites, your sections or categories are usually neatly arranged into menus and menu selections.

Different users can see different sections or categories depending on their level of privileges (for example, logged-in staff-members might see the company database, while logged-in customers might only see their own orders).  Not all sites have different levels of users, of course, but with the rise free open source content management systems (such as WordPress, Joomla and Drupal) its become really simple to provide these different levels of access for the different classes of visitors.  After all, we treat our team-members, our customers and our suppliers differently when they present themselves to our offices or showrooms, so why shouldn’t we do the same when they visit our websites?

Wiki by Balsamiq (http://www.balsamiq.com)

A simple wireframe, as produced by Balsamiq

Your site’s IA presentation should be visualized as a wireframe, which is a really useful method of presenting the layout of the various content and features of a given page, without all the distracting chrome. Ideally, you’ll have a clear wireframe drawing for every different class of page — these classes are usually called templates.

There is a rich choice of tools available to help you to wireframe. From specialist tools such as Cacoo and Balsamiq, to general purpose tools such as Google Docs and PowerPoint, wireframing is a very efficient process that allows your site development team and your other stakeholders to visualize and discuss layout without the distraction of the most emotive aspect of every website: its visual elements and graphic design (which we call “the chrome”).

IA as a Venn diagram (according to Louis Rosenfeld)

IA as a Venn diagram, according to Louis Rosenfeld

We consider Louis Rosenfeld to be the canonical expert on website information architecure.  He invented this diagram which our IA team keep in their wallets at all times. You might be interested to learn more about Mr. Rosenfeld’s thinking at his website.

Okay, so how should I approach my site’s IA during my website refresh project?

Every site refresh project presents a golden opportunity get your information architecture right.  You want to review your IA, and to amend and rationalize your IA by removing deadwood and adding important new content and sections.

This is your chance to truly learn from past successes and failures and create a blueprint for a greatly improved website to launch at the end of your refresh project.

Number 2Revisit your corporate identity

What exactly is my corporate identity? Good question.

Your corporate identity (CI) incorporates your enterprise’s brandmarks and logos, visual elements, colour palettes, typographical guidelines, boilerplate copywriting elements such as straplines and taglines, and other standardized elements.

Your enterprise’s CI is your enterprise’s face in the marketplace.

CIs are the most powerful single element to set positive first impressions in the minds of the enterprise’s audiences.  If your CI is well standardized, your audiences will more quickly and deeply develop trust in your communications.

Illuminant’s corporate identity work exemplifies a conceptually sound approach to visual communications. The dozens of CIs we have designed (and many we have localised for use in China) have helped our clients to more accurately position their products and services in the marketplace, reducing their communications effort and cost and giving a sense of pride to their employees, partners and stakeholders.

Depending on the size and/or flexibility of your organization (some small organizations are very inflexible, while some multinational corporations can be extremely flexible) your website refresh program may give you an opportunity to examine how your overall corporate identity could also be refreshed.

We should note that we’d rarely (if ever) counsel that a website refresh should call for a complete change in CI.  However Illuminant often counsels our clients to refresh their CI on a regular basis (say, every two or three years).  By being open to regular refreshes of your CI, you can keep your face in the marketplace contemporary and effective.

Okay, so how should I revisit our CI during my website refresh project?

  • If your enterprise has a CI Guidelines document, get it and read it cover-to-cover.
    • If your enterprise lacks a CI Guidelines document, pull together your standard logos, colours, taglines/straplines and other elements into a new document…
    • …or, engage Illuminant to produce a great CI Guide for you — we have produced dozens of highly effective CI Guidelines for our fantastic clients.
  • Consult with your marketing and branding team, your agency and your key stakeholders to use this opportunity to refresh any elements of your CI that are looking stale, inconsistent or that lack conceptual soundness.
  • Ensure that all your standard colours have been accurately translated into HEX colour codes for use in your website. Ensure you have a small but good palette of colours to work with for the main type styles in your website.
  • Check with Typekit if your standard typefaces can be used in your website instead of ugly Arial or Times (or, heaven forbid, Comic Sans!)  Beautiful web type is finally an option, and you should fully utilize it if you can.
  • Consider standardizing on a copywriting style that is consistent across your entire website (although you may choose to encourage different voices and styles in your blogs, as we do in Illuminant’s blogs).

By taking this opportunity to revisit and refresh your CI, you’re not only setting up your new website to be launched with a fresh and contemporary look, but you’re also a hero for your enterprise’s broader use of the face it uses to present to the world.

Number 3Keep your team as small as possible

There is something about websites that encourage more people to comment and editorialize, and to feel entitlement to do so, than any other marketing medium.  Print projects, TV ads and PR campaigns are all easier to design, achieve management approval and execute than websites.

Hence, one of the best things you can do for your website refresh project is to keep your team as small as possible. Seek opinions and approvals only as widely as your enterprise’s reporting lines require, and you will deliver a successful project quickly.

Number 4Define your functional specification, and stick to it!

Second only to the danger of an unwieldy and large subcommittee, the lack of a clear and firmly-held functional specification is the critical point of failure (or extended delay) to most website refresh projects.

Once you have reviewed your information architecture and sketched out your improvements, reviewed your corporate identity (and possibly revised it for enhanced effectiveness) and assembled your team, your next task is to define your functional specification.  The Illuminant Digital Communications team calls this the “functional spec“.

Your functional spec must clearly explain in words and wireframe pictures every feature of your refreshed website.  You need your functional spec to be able to make sensible technology choices and to create a budget.

Call your agreed list of features your version 1.0 functional spec.  When you receive the inevitable request for additional features, cheerfully accept them, but write them into a revised version of your functional spec, for implementation only after your version 1.0 spec has been turned into a real, working website.

Only by resisting inevitable “feature creep” will you be able to meet your launch deadline within your budget.

Number 5Choose and use the right tools for the job

Today’s web development teams have an unprecedented richness of choice for their development and hosting technologies.  If you’re refreshing  your website’s IA and design, don’t miss your opportunity to consider refreshing your hosting and serving technology as well.

If your current website is still static HTML, evaluate a content management system (CMS).  If you are on an old, clunky CMS, consider upgrading to one of today’s slick (and often free-of-charge) CMSes.  The Illuminant Digital Communications team uses and recommends WordPress, Drupal and Joomla! — these are our go-to CMS systems, all free, all extremely powerful.

The end result will be a website that empowers people from across your organization to contribute to your content (all within clear editorial approval workflows), as well as to build a community of stakeholders from your audience.

Summary

Website refresh projects are exciting, and should be easier than building initial websites. By observing these five most important factors, your project will have a clear beginning (planning), middle (development and writing) and end (a successful launch).

If you’d like to discuss any aspect of online and digital development, please don’t hesitate to contact the Illuminant team of professionals.

Colophon for this website

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

We’re often asked what specific technologies and techniques we use to present our website.

Hosting

We host this website (and several dozen others) on our own fully-owned internet server which is housed in an exceptionally reliable and well-connected data centre in San Francisco.  We choose to host in SF because California has the fastest and widest internet connections to practically every other part of the world.  As we have visitors from many countries (primarily China, Hong Kong, the United States, Australia and Europe), we provide the best possible web service to every one of our visitors by hosting in California.

Digital Reality Trust's datacentre in Paul Avenue, San Francisco

Home, sweet home. Where our dedicated server "terminus" lives.

Our server is a monster: its a dual-Xeon CPU server running our own version of Ubuntu Linux with fully redundant disk subsystems and gigantic quantities of RAM (the former so we never lose a byte; the latter so we serve every MySQL database query with the speed of a buttered penguin skidding down an ice slide).  Our server, which we call terminus (after the Roman god responsible for maintaining boundaries) has a full-duplex 100 megabit ethernet connection into our datacentre’s 100% fiber optic backbone.  Our datacentre is in the Digital Realty Trust’s 200 Paul Avenue facility, the Bay Area’s main internet nexus, and one of the premier telecom carrier facilities in the United States.

Our choice of Linux is deliberate — we’re long-term supporters of free open source software and the GNU/Linux project.  Linux on our own server gives us exceptional freedom and flexibility, not to mention the highest level of security and peace of mind possible.

The really nice benefit of having invested — for many years — in our own dedicated server is that we don’t share it (or our precious block of IP addresses) with anyone we don’t know and trust.  Our clients which use our dedicated server all appreciate that their websites and web-connected databases are never blocked by the ahem you-know-what-wall-thingy-in-China that we shouldn’t name.

Do our competitors host their own servers? Largely, no, they don’t. In fact, you may be surprised at the low levels of technical sophistication in many of the region’s most well-known agencies. But we public relations professionals are nothing if not circumspect and understanding of the need for discretion ;-)

Web serving

The web-page you’re currently reading was generated dynamically by WordPress, the world’s most used free open source content management system. No two ways about it: WordPress rocks. We use WordPress technology as a platform for many of our clients (although not to the exclusion of other platforms, such as Drupal and Joomla, which are our other two main CMS systems for client digital marketing work).

For the WordPress fans out there, the main extensions we use in this site are Akismet (which automatically controls posting spam), Typekit Fonts for WordPress (which helps our Typekit-generated online typography look great), Widget Logic (which places all the fun content into the right hand columns of most pages, WPML (which we use to manage our multi-lingual pages and site elements, although we do all our own translations), and XML Sitemap Feed (which ensures major search engine spiders can quickly and fully discover all of our awesome content).

At the time of writing, other important extensions used on this particular WordPress instance include BackUpWordPress, Contact Form 7, Dashboard Notepads, Easy Tube, MapPress, NextGEN Gallery and WordPress NextGEN GalleryView, nginx Compatibility for PHP5, Really Simple CAPTCHA, Web Ninja for Google Analytics, WP-PageNavi, WP-Table Reloaded, WP Tweet Button, and YouTube Embed.  We’re proud to give some link love to these wonderful developers, without whom the web would be a less interesting medium.

The version of WordPress we were using at the time we wrote this colophon was version 3.03 — a very nice vintage indeed. We have since updated to WordPress 3.1.

Yes, we’re kinda nerdy

Its true. We are a pretty nerdy bunch of people in the fairly traditional field of PR. We think that its our grasp of today’s technology (and our solid technical experience stretching back decades) that is one of our most distinctive differentiating characteristics.  If you’ve read this far, and you’re interested in talking with us further about how Illuminant could help with your digital marketing and communications needs (or problems!) please do drop us a line, poke us on the facebook or tweet us.

Beijing Swarm! A Foursquare Day Success

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Social media enthusiasts gathered at the Apple Store in Sanlitun Village on April 16 with the common goal of unlocking Foursquare’s coveted Swarm badge. A small group soon grew to more than 50 people, all of whom had a mobile device in their hands.

Foursquare Day 2010 badge

The Foursquare Day 2010 badge

And then… we did it. The Swarm Badge was unlocked for the first time in five thousand years of Chinese history on Foursquare Day 2010 in Beijing.

A group of Illuminant’s clients and friends (new and old) trekked down to FUBAR speakeasy, where the Foursquare Day celebrations continued.

Illuminant’s Art Director Joel Danielson (@lhiver) took on Mayoral duties for the Beijing Swarm end.

Lucky Charlie Flint (@charlieflint) won himself one of three prize options in the Illuminant Partners Foursquare Day draw:

1. Logo design
2. Business card design
3. Outdoor photoshoot – 5 final images with basic retouch

So what do you say Beijing? Now that most of us have gotten our Swarm badge, Super Swarm in 2011? ;)

Illuminant Partners was enormously proud to have facilitated the world’s first “social media holiday” in the capital of the world’s most populous nation. Many thanks to our friends and colleagues for supporting this fun initiative!

Foursquare Day 2010 Beijing swarm party - monitoring the check-ins

Foursquare Day 2010 Beijing swarm party - monitoring the check-ins

Foursquare Day 2010 Beijing swarm party - checking in with Foursquare Day founder Nate Bonilla-Warford

Foursquare Day 2010 Beijing swarm party - checking in with Foursquare Day founder Nate Bonilla-Warford

Foursquare Day 2010 Beijing swarm party prize winner Charlie Flint

Foursquare Day 2010 Beijing swarm party prize winner Charlie Flint

Foursquare Day 2010 Beijing swarm party - Jim Boyce (BeijingBoyce) after finding out he didn't get his Swarm badge!

Foursquare Day 2010 Beijing swarm party - Jim Boyce (BeijingBoyce) after finding out he didn't get his Swarm badge!

The world’s first Foursquare Day badge awarded?

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Is our CEO the first Foursquare user in Beijing to get the special Foursquare Day badge?

World's first Foursquare Day badge?

Is this the world's first Foursquare Day badge to be awarded?

An idea that rocks: Foursquare Day comes to Beijing

Thursday, April 1st, 2010
Foursquare Day logo

Foursquare Day logo

Beijing was one of the first of major cities to lead and implement the recent idea to globally celebrate“Foursquare Day” on April 16th, and our team at Illuminant is super excited to champion the event in China’s capital. Our chief executive, Simon Cousins, has been a key driver on the global Foursquare Day organizing team from our new office in Tampa, Florida (a satellite of our New York City practice).

The Beijing Illuminant team has been responsible for organizing and promoting the Beijing day’s activities, and we’re getting help from local bloggers, Twitter users,and businesses.

Foursquare, for those who don’t know, is a location-based, geo-social networking website and mobile application available for iPhone, Android, Blackberry and Palm devices (with more platforms currently under development). The app is rapidly gaining popularity in a city where we are continuously and voraciously on the hunt for hip new restaurants, shops, nightlife, and drinking establishments. Users rack up points on a weekly leaderboard as they “check-in” to venues, categorising, tagging, and tacking helpful tips on them along the way. Special “badges” are unlocked for certain milestones or achievements, such as numbers of “check-ins” on a weeknight,or “checking-in” to specifically tagged venues such as gyms, aiports, and ferry terminals. By frequenting their favourite haunts, users in the local community often generate friendly competition among venue clientele by attempting to earn and hold down the title of “Mayor”. It’s rather amusing (if not discouraging) to be “ousted” by a more active user when they steal the title!

Foursquare.com describes the application as “a cross between a friend-finder, a social city-guide and a game that rewards you for doing interesting things. We aim to build things to not only help you keep up with the places your friends go, but that encourage you to discover new places and challenge you to explore your neighborhood in new ways.”

So, you might ask, why April 16?

Well, to put it plainly, April is the fourth month, and 42=16 = 4/16  ;)

The idea for Foursquare Day was dreamed up in Tampa, Florida, by optometrist and social-media maven Nate Bonilla-Warford. He posted the idea on Foursquare’s feedback site, GetSatisfaction.com, and within weeks, dozens of cities around the world had jumped on board to get involved in the grass-roots planning.

One of the most exciting challenges on this day is to unlock the “Swarm” badge, which is achieved when more than 50 users are “checked-in” to the same venue at (or around) the same time, and for the third time in history, Foursquare Inc.  have decided to open the “Super Swarm” badge especially for Foursquare Day. This may be unlocked and awarded at any venue that draws 250+ “check-ins” over a 3-hour period on Foursquare Day. We are all feeling the excitement about Foursquare users meeting up aftercrossing paths (and stealing Mayorships from each other) all around town, from Wudaokou and  Zhongguancun to Sanlitun and the CBD.

We’re set to gather at The Village in Sanlitun and begin our round of “Swarm check-ins”at the Apple Store at 8.30pm, with drink specials available at Blue Frog (also in The Village), Purple Haze’s new Bistro location (at Dongsiliutiao), andat Fubar after 9pm for the wrap-up party. Additional specials may pop up through the week.

Like many other cities and venues participating in Foursquare Day, (#4sqday on Twitter), Fubar has issued a friendly “challenge” to the infamous The VIPER Room club on LA’s Sunset Strip, to see who will reach the highest number of “check-ins”, and we’re hoping to blow the roof off Beijing with the Super Swarm badge (can we pull it off?)

This is a fantastic opportunity for small/medium businesses to engage the rapidly expanding social-media savvy clientele with free advertising and exposure by creating and promoting special offers. Geo-social media is increasingly on the top of the trend, andbusiness owners would be wiseto jump on board and check out atFoursquare.com/businesses.

Follow @4sqdayBeijing on Twitter and visit http://4sqday.com for more information.  And talk to Illuminant Partners for a world class social media campaign for your business!

THE TOP 5 TIPS FOR WEBSITE REFRESHES

Illuminant's five thingsRefreshing your website presents great opportunities and hazards. Learn the top 5 lessons to succeed, and to stay within budget and deadline.

The Year of the Dragon is here now

Everything you need to know about the new Lunar New Year of the Dragon, and how it will influence Chinese business in 2012. Click here.

Search Illuminant