This report about the SIG appeared in the
November/December 2001 issue of the
SIGCHI Bulletin (PDF, 540K).
The purpose of the SIG was to provide a "round table" discussion about
how information architecture is being practiced by SIG attendees. In
order to set up the discussion, the organizers presented three scenarios
for how they practice their trade in their different settings: a
technology and business consultancy, a firm that specialized mainly in
information architecture development, and a financial services company.
This definitely was a hot topic with many attendees standing in the back
of the room and many listening in remotely from the halls.
The presentations had an underlying structure of the IAs role in the
product development cycle, the process and method for how they practice
their work, and their focus on the project.
After the presentation, the floor was opened up to the audience. The
discussions included thesauri development practices, challenges in the
role of IA in product development, and the continuing debate of defining
information architecture. With many flavors for how IA is practiced, it
was only natural to hear SIG attendees discuss the overlaps of
information architects with fields such as interaction architects,
usability testing, and experience designers.
The organizers distributed a survey in conjunction with the presentation
in order to understand differences as well as resource discovery in the
overlapping fields. The highlights of some of the survey include who
are influential people in the field, the education and experience of
current practitioners, tools they use to do their job, as well as how
they see components of HCI influencing their work.
The organizers provided a venue for the diversity of attendees to
discuss the practice of information architecture, promote best practices
and cross-pollinate ideas, evaluate tools to support the various stages
of developing systems, and educate SIG members interested in entering
the field. Expanding the practice of information architecture and
leveraging the overlaps with other practices will advance and enhance
the usability and satisfaction of information resources, information
systems, and software. Workshops and tutorials on how to do information
architecture and more venues for discussing IA with the CHI community
would be the next logical steps.
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