Home BusinessAdvertisingShall We Cry ‘Forward’?

Shall We Cry ‘Forward’?

by Executive Editors

” If you cry ‘Forward!’, you must be sure to

make clear the direction in “‘Which to go,”

exclaimed Anton Chekhov. Timeless

advice, particularly appropriate for

today’s Information Age businesses.

Lebanese companies, from start-ups to

established multinationals, are beginning

to treat information as a chief asset.

Success of external communication with

clients, suppliers, and allied partners – as

well as internal communication among

managers and employees – depends on

the ability to create and use systematic

principles in organizing corporate

information.

In many cases, however, Lebanese

companies distribute information in print

or over the Internet with little regard for

whether its organization and content

make sense to target audiences. Even

worse, many corporate communications

are altogether disconnected from

business strategy.

The Emerging 21•1 Century Profession

The overriding goat of information

architecture, sometimes referred to as

information design, is to promote clarity

and human understanding. Quite

naturally, its origins have expanded from

architecture to integrated corporate

communications and marketing.

Professionals now realize that

systematically ordered information

reinforces and extends a company’s

image, vision, and goats. At the same

time, target readers readily find the

information most important to their

needs.

Examine the most basic corporate

information, your showcased corporate

mission statement. A simple, though

extreme, example of an actual case

demonstrates how one company reveals

nothing – albeit verbosely – about its

services:

“X Company provides a wide range of

fully-functional solutions to a broad

spectrum of forward -looking

organizations, to allow them to integrate

today’s dazzling opportunities with their

situational paradigms, while addressing

the needs of informed consumers

worldwide. “

This company could benefit from the

advice of Joseph Pulitzer, well quoted as

saying, “Put it before them briefly so they

will read it, clearly so they will appreciate

it, picturesquely so they will remember it

and, above all, accurately so they will be

guided by its light.”

Even so, it is not that simple. The

constant development of new

technologies enables Lebanese

companies to increasingly reach the

global market as easily as the local. The

process of designing information

architectures interrelates closely with –

and oftentimes exposes gaps in – basic

business strategy.

“Designing an information architecture –

defining what an organization is, what it

wants to communicate and to whom … is

ultimately about strategy,” writes expert

Lou Rosenfeld. Lasting competitive edge

is not found in the superficiality of

glamorous brochures or highly-animated

web sites but in content welt targeted to

users in specific contexts.

Business Strategy and

Internet (Non)Sense

The Internet is a relatively new business

context for corporate and marketing

communicators. International companies

have quickly taken advantage of the

borderless electronic marketplace to

extend business strategy in ways they

could not have foreseen. Opportunities

abound for creating innovative business

alliances, marketing and selling products

and services, and generating online

business-to-business and other

communities with attractive spending

capacities.

Fewer Lebanese companies today are

jumping on the Internet bandwagon with

the sole motivation of making an

impression. Further, the days of providing

web design agencies with disconnected

pieces of corporate information and

focusing solely on high-tech graphics and

animation are dwindling.

Through pain and considerable expense,

local companies which have paid recently

for massive redesigns of their sites have

learned a lesson of the age. A web site

can play an important role in defining a

company’s relationships with clients,

investors, and suppliers.

Justifying Your Internet Investment

In the process of redesign, companies are

forced to confront difficult questions they

likely avoided the first time:

“What is our purpose? What are our

short and long-term site goals? Who

are our audiences, and why will they

come to our site? What are our

competitors doing?”

“What categories of content must we

include in the site? And how do they

relate to functional requirements?”

“What is the best structure to

communicate these categories and

functionalities? What type(s) of

navigation systems will allow our

visitors to quickly access information

or online services?”

In asking these questions, the interactive

– symbiotic – relationship between

information architects and business

strategists emerges. Each influences the

other through .debate and healthy

feedback.

Perhaps more convincing to management

is an information architect’s long-term

savings of time and money. With properly

developed information · architecture

documents, managers can literally grasp

the foundation of their investment.

Information Architecture Workshop

Eyelearn’s Information Architecture Workshop refines the talents and capabilities of

marketing and public relations specialists, copywriters, and graphic designers

responsible for developing corporate communications.

This workshop focuses on the initial step of development or redesign of a corporate

web site: documenting the site’s strategic foundation through detailed specification

and design documents. The skills gained in this workshop can also be used to develop

offline corporate communications.

Corporate Web Site Specification Document

ESTABLISH SITE GOALS

DEFINE THE USER EXPERIENCE

• DEFINE CONTENT CATEGORIES

DEFINE FUNCTIONAL REQUIREMENTS

Corporate Web Site Document

rporate Web Design DocumenCorporate Web Design Document

SET OUT THE SITE STRUCTURE

FINALIZE SITE TEXT

GENERATE ALTERNATIVE NAVIGATION

SCHEMES

CREATE BASIC LAYOUT GRIDS

Sponsored By: EYELEARN

Abou Jaoudeh Street

200 Feghali Center

Bauchrieh, Beirut, Lebanon

Phone/ Fax: +961.1.879530

E-mail: [email protected]

Written By: The Write Choice

[email protected]

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