Title: Content-Centric Design The Future of Online User Assistance
1Content-Centric DesignThe Future of Online User
Assistance
- Presented by
- Edward Galore, University of Washington /
Microsoft - David Farkas, University of Washington
- Janet Galore, Microsoft
- Mark Huentelman, Microsoft
- Bruce Keever, Microsoft
- Zherina Salamanca, University of Washington
2A contemporary help scenario
- User searches for invitation template
- User is looking for a way to create an invitation
using Word
3This isnt quite right...
But where to go next?
4What well cover
- The problem is discoverability
- Traditional models of user assistance inhibit
discoverability for large online help systems - Examples from Office Online
- Content-centric design
- Applications
- Conclusions
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
5The problem
6The problem is discoverability
- The trick is getting the right content to the
right user at the right time, even when they
dont know the right terms - Site hierarchies are designed based on an
educated guess as to where the user will go - Hierarchies dont adapt to new content types and
unexpected user behavior - We have good intentions and excellent content
- Every new feature requires new help content and
each help article dilutes discoverability
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
7Coming in deep
Users do not always come in through the front
door via a Web sites homepage
Users often come in deep and are lost without
the context provided on a homepage they may never
see
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
8Example external referrals to Office Online
- Over a 3-month period
- 99M referrals (75) were to the top 5 home pages
- 24M referrals came to other pages and content
- 6,502 different entry points
Number of visits
Entry pages
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
9Invisible hierarchies
- Web sites are structured according to a designer
imposed hierarchy - Search technologies obviate hierarchy and
decontextualize content - Site architecture becomes largely invisible to
site users
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
10Limits of traditional help system Information
Architecture
- Traditional help system IA
- Is modeled on a hardcopy table of contents
- Tends towards linearity
- Is inadequate for large, complex products
- Ignores realities of continuous publishing and
user provided content and user tagging
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
11Content needs context
- Search ignores hierarchy
- In the absence of an explicit hierarchy, other
methods must be employed to provide context - Encapsulating context within content is
content-centric design
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
12Content-centric design
- The primacy of Search is recognized and supported
- Hierarchy becomes just another piece of metadata
- Empowers users by allowing them to validate
content and forge new paths among content
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
13Microsoft OFFICE ONLINE
14What is Office Online?
- Office Online is the broad customer connection
for Office. Its where Office customers go to get
help, software updates, training, clip art,
templates, services, and more - Goals
- Increase customer satisfaction
- Increase customer productivity
- Increase revenue through upgrades, sales, and
advertising
office.microsoft.com
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
15How big is Office Online?
- Over 70M unique users per month worldwide
- In the top 30 sites on the Web (US unique users)
- 48 markets, 34 languages
- Over 800M page views per month worldwide
- Supports over 25 Office branded products
- Over 150,000 clips, 1.2M help articles, 4300
templates, 150 training courses, 87 homepages,
and more - Over 250 writers, editors, site managers,
production engineers, localization engineers
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
16Who uses Office Online?
Globally, the majority of Office Online users are
from business segments.
Source Office Online worldwide customer
satisfaction survey, 2005
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
17Continuous publishing on Office Online
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
18Customer ratings and comments on articles
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
19Context mismatch near miss
- Users often almost find the content they are
looking for - Near misses represent one of 5 types of context
mismatches, right idea but - Wrong application/version
- Wrong user intent
- Wrong user type
- Wrong terminology
- Wrong language
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
20Context mismatch wrong application
- A topic may satisfy the users intent, but may
not match the application about which the user
has a question - Scenario
- User searches all Office Online to find how to
make an invitation - A topic for MS Publisher comes up first, along
with some templates in Word - User clicks on first topic, not thinking about
the application
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
21Context mismatch wrong application
- The user does not notice the visual cues about
what application the topic applies to - There are no links to find similar content for a
different application - The user clicks on No and writes a verbatim
comment
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
22Context mismatch wrong application
The writer examines customer verbatim feedback on
that topic to dig deeper
Many users are not looking for Publisher help
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
23Context mismatch wrong application
- Possible remedies
- Create similar topics for other applications
- Create a general invitation topic that talks
about multiple applications - Create search best bets for this query
- Include links to similar topics in the see also
area of the Publisher topic
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
24Context mismatch user intent
- A topic may look like the answer the user is
looking for, but the topic does not satisfy the
users intent - Symptom Frequently failed search query
signature led to deep analysis of existing
signature topics
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
25Context mismatch user intent
- Scenario
- User searches on digital signature
- User intent A visual representation of their
signature in a document - Top search results
- Digitally sign a file
- Insert a picture
- Create a signature for messages
- User action Clicks on first result but finds
its not what they want - Marks the topic as No and leaves negative
comments
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
26Context mismatch user intent
Selected verbatim comments reveal some users
intent
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
27Context mismatch user intent
- Possible remedies
- Modify the insert picture topic so that it also
mentions that inserting a picture can be used for
adding a visual signature - Add a link to the insert picture topic from the
digital signature topic
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
28Context mismatch user type
- One writing style or approach does not work for
all users - Office Online serves primarily information
workers, but all audiences come to the site - There are different content types for different
purposes and learning styles (help topics,
training courses, videos, etc.) - Investigate if users might identify themselves in
their verbatim comments, and if there is user
mismatch happening
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
29Just a few types of users...
access expert administrative assistant amateur asp
iring web page designer audio learner baby
boomer beginner user big computer
freak biochemistry instructor
freelance editor gas service engineer genius good
VB programmer grandmother graphic artist hair
dresser hands on learner
disabled user disabled veteran doctor dyslexic
experienced user faculty member first time user
knuckle head lawyer legal secretary librarian lice
nsed minister luddite Mac person mainframe
programmer manual laborer
slow learner small business owner social
worker software test engineer special education
student student system administrator
teacher total beginner
blind computer user branch chief brand new
FrontPage 2003 user brand new user business
owner case manager certified applications
instructor chef
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
30Context mismatch user type
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
31Context mismatch user type
- Possible remedies
- Consider tagging content by audience type
- Have clear destinations for different audiences
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
32Content-centric design
33Apples and oranges
- When developing content taxonomies, designers
create buckets, categories to store content - Apples go in the apple bucket, oranges go in the
orange bucket - Great! A time and place for everything under
heaven
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
34Bananas
- Expect the unexpected
- New, unanticipated content types are constantly
being generated - We need dynamic site architecture to accommodate
dynamic help content
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
35What are bananas, anyway?
If only user assistance content were as orderly
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
36Three stages of design philosophy
- Rational design (designer centered)
- User centered
- Content-centric
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
37Rational design
- Designer knows best
- Rational, not empirical, design methods
- Design optimized for the system rather than the
userusability is secondary - Finite pathways
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
38User centered design
- User is incorporated into the design
- Task oriented
- Benefits from empirical studies of user behavior
- Design for typical users
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
39Limitations of user centered design
- Task or transaction oriented
- Assumes finite number of user actions
- Doesnt necessarily account for dynamic content
- Employs a top-down approach based on anticipated
user behavior
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
40Content-centric design
- The content-centric approach does not imply that
UCD is no longer valid - On the contrary, it assumes that user input is
invaluable, so much so that content should adapt
to user needs dynamically - Web sites are forever changing new content is
being added continuously - Every new piece of content challenges the
existing structurecontent-centric design is
adaptive to users and content
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
41Applying content-centric design
42Applying content-centric design
- How might content-centric design improve the
experience for a user wanting to edit a comment
in MS Word? - Relate content and provide context
non-hierarchically - Aggregate and incorporate user feedback
dynamically - Provide multiple contexts for See Also
Near missesincluding visual context
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
43Current UI hierarchical breadcrumbs
- Breadcrumbs give the user context in terms of
where they are in the systems information
architecture - But breadcrumbs reflect the designersnot the
usersperspective of the site
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
44Current UI hierarchical breadcrumbs
Home gt Products gt Excel gt Excel 2003 Help and
How-to gt Sharing Information gt With Other People
gt Comments
Home gt Products gt Excel gt Excel 2003 Help and
How-to gt Sharing Information gt With Other People
gt Comments
Home gt Products gt Excel gt Excel 2003 Help and
How-to gt Sharing Information gt With Other People
gt Comments
Home gt Products gt Excel gt Excel 2003 Help and
How-to gt Sharing Information gt With Other People
gt Comments
Home gt Products gt Excel gt Excel 2003 Help and
How-to gt Sharing Information gt With Other People
gt Comments
Home gt Products gt Excel gt Excel 2003 Help and
How-to gt Sharing Information gt With Other People
gt Comments
Home gt Products gt Excel gt Excel 2003 Help and
How-to gt Sharing Information gt With Other People
gt Comments
- Context provided via typical breadcrumbs only
shows systems linear, hierarchical path to the
article - Do not show the users actual path
- In order for users to see where theyve been,
they must use the back button - Users do this because on the Web, as in real
life, a sound way to discover where you are is to
see where youve been
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
45Content-centric UI My Path
- Pathways users take to article are unique and
reflected in UI as My Path - User can trace their navigation pattern without
using the Back button
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
46My Path real breadcrumbs
My Path reflects the users actual,
non-hierarchical path to the article.
My Path Home gt Search All Office Online edit a
comment gt Edit a comment (Excel 2003) gt Modify a
comment (Word 2003)
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
47Current UI Article rating
- Users can give input as to whether the article
was what they were looking for or not
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
48Content-centric UI User suggested articles
- Related article suggestions can dynamically
populate according to user behavior and feedback
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
49Current UI See Also
- See Also boxes appear in some articles, providing
suggestions for related content
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
50Content-centric UI More related content
- Two new ways to show related content
- Related Search Results provide limited context
through text - A Visual Map can use graphics to help the user
visualize how content is related
51Visual map vector based navigation
- Tags for the topic are shown as vectors to
additional content - Tag vectors could be color coded
- Vectors could reflect customer provided tags,
aggregated user behavior, or categories as
assigned by content authors, or all three
the problem office online content-centric
design applications conclusions
52- This Slide Intentionally Left Blank
53Conclusions
54Conclusions
- Users dont always use the front door, prepare
for their arrival by other means - If you want content to be discoverable
- Make search work
- Make it easier to get to content from a related
topic - Dont create the perfect taxonomy, allow it to
evolve
the problem content-centric design office
online applications conclusions
55Conclusions
- In the absence of an explicit hierarchy, other
methods must be employed to provide context - Hierarchies are just another type of metadata,
not always a meaningful navigation tool for users - When content authors and users add new content,
they also indirectly affect information
architecture
the problem content-centric design office
online applications conclusions
56Edward Galoreedward_at_washington.edu