The purpose of the survey was to learn about the type of person who would come to a session
about information architecture at a CHI conference.
We received 57 semi-completed surveys. We asked the SIG attendees a
series of 7 questions that were related to the background, education,
resources, and tools that support their IA work.
This is a short summary of the results of the survey, with a lot of links.
What is your organization, city/state, and type of organization?
Most SIG attendees were from the US, with some nice representation from
the Netherlands, Canada, Germany, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, and
Switzerland.
We all come from a variety of work environments: business
and technology consulting firms, academic researchers, academic
employees, and Fortune 100 firms.
Who are some of the most influential people who have helped shape the way
you practice IA?
Listed here are the most influential people who were listed more than
once in the survey results. The full list had an interesting variety
of people that included academics, mentors, consultants, colleagues and
gurus/experts.
What is your educational/training in IA? What were you doing before you became/knew
you were an IA?
The most common professional backgrounds for
the attendees were web designers and programmers. "Life before IA" ranged
from architects, software engineers, usability engineers and webmasters.
What are the most relevant aspects of Human-Computer Interaction that
help you practice information architecture?
A sampling of some of the attendees' responses: Usability, card sorting
methods, user-centered design, task analysis, goal and scenario based
design, needs analysis, interaction design, field studies, interviewing,
iteration models, mental models, user research, contextual analysis,
psychology.
How do you feel about degree programs or certification for IAs?
- 7: I Strongly Agree
- 19: I Agree
- 20: Neutral
- 3: I Disagree
- 0: I Strongly Disagree
- 8: No answer
What software do you use to convey information architecture DESIGNS to
others? What types of artifacts do you create with each?
Attendees listed the following:
Software: Visio (33), MS Word (15), MS Power Point (14), Adobe
Illustrator (12), Macromedia Dreamweaver (12), Adobe Photoshop (4) and a
spattering of various text editors and graphics editors.
Artifacts: flowcharts, wire frames, sitemaps, prototypes, use cases,
card sorting, content inventory, client audits, site hierarchies,
conceptual diagrams, storyboards, requirements & narratives, blueprints,
screen schematics, labeling schemes, outlines and many others techniques
related to diagrams and charts.
Supply closet materials: paper, pen, pencil, post-it notes, white boards.
What resources (books, magazines, web sites, etc.) have the most impact on how you
practice information architecture?
Books, Journals, Magazines, Proceedings
Websites, Mailing Lists
Other Comments
- Books on design
- Exhibits on design
- Museum exhibits
- Mind Mapping Resources
- Agents & Multi Agents
- Concept mapping books
- UML documentation
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