This blogging hat is where I try to connect the broad user experience topic (encompassing HCI, usability, IA, design, writing, branding, and so on) with the even broader worlds of business, technology, society, etc.
I invented the name "Experienceologist" for this role. Insert tongue-in-cheek.
This blog is for updates on my presentations and how to download them (look for "attachments"). Also, I am slowly adding presentations to Slideshare - the darling of the IA world.
This blog is when I have my IA hat on: navigation, wireframes, taxonomies, content management and other "down in the trenches" work.
RSS feed of only my Information Architect blog
This blog is where I will post when I am focused on my employer, IBM. I am on the ibm.com User Experience Design team.
My blog entry will usually tie into to the information architecture of ibm.com in some way - because that is what keeps me awake at night.
This is a personal blog, of course. "The postings on this site are my own and don’t necessarily represent IBM's positions, strategies or opinions."
This blog is for when I have my local (Toledo, Ohio) hat on. I will concentrate on pointing out activities for other user experience professionals in the area (and within the Ohio-Michigan region).
Every once in a while I will comment on something else local: politics, business, gossip, etc.
When I first read Getting to "we" in the April 2008 Communications of the ACM, I really liked two things about the article:
(You can download the article from ACM above. It is also available at The Profession of IT series from Peter J. Denning.)
A few other folks thought this article was also worth mentioning:
Weeks later after first reading it, I am still finding it useful (I have gone back to it several times lately), so I decided to mention it here. This article is another nice data point on the "IT systems" meets "social change" landscape for me.
I am lucky. I am off to visit the Almaden Research Center next week for the Almaden Institute 2008 conference.
I did a little research about some of the (non-IBM) speakers to help me get the most out of the program. Here are a few links in case you want to learn more, too.
I managed to also plan 1 day of "extra time" to hang out with area IBMers that I do not get to see often enough, like Fred Sampson, Andrea Ames and Thyra Rauch. And do "real ibm.com work" with Rob Johnson. Finally, it will be nice to see EWHCI colleague Allen Cypher while I am there.
This could be a first: three Toledo-area job openings in web user experience, at the same time.
#1 is with the Toledo Zoo as a Web Project Coordinator: "...create a website experience that engages audiences..." is mentioned in the description (in today's Toledo Blade). I do not see an online description of the job to link to, however. Contact the zoo for more information, I guess.
#2 is Web Interface Designer with TolTest, a construction management firm. "...Design web interfaces for TolTest’s next generation of internal and external applications" with "solid understanding of user-centered design principles and methodologies, information and interaction design".
#3 is Web Development Specialist/Designer at BGSU (PDF). "...Continuously improve navigation, accessibility, usability and brand image" based on a "knowledge of designing and implementing site architecture, functionality, data flow, user interfaces and intuitive navigation".
(There could be more - these are 3 that I found completely by accident. Let me know if you know of any other web user experience jobs in the area - I am happy to promote them.)
Perhaps there is something to the idea that customer experience is recession proof.
These 3 jobs are small potatoes compared to the big economic development news in the area, of course. Xunlight getting more funding and hiring. First Solar continuing to hire.
Brief and rough notes from the Saturday IA Summit sessions.
Jared Spool, UCD "rocks" but not in the way that you think
Gene Smith, Tagging trends
Tingting Jiang, Exploratory search and folksonomy
Bryce Glass, Reputation systems
Jess McMullin, Experience impact framework
Brandon Schauer, Wow factor
I just reviewed the IA Summit 2008 sessions and updated the list of what I want to attend. I am sure what I attend will be different for several reasons: getting caught up in a great conversation in the hall and missing a session, doing the "divide and conquer" with my ibm.com colleagues, or just changing my mind at the last minute.
A few trends / hi-lites / random thoughts:
And start planning for next year - Memphis, February 18-22, 2009 - only 10 short months away.....
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