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Chapter 4: Creating an Information Model
Funny. Here is what our customers need to know and not one group even
comes close to this! An Information Model provides the framework for organizing your content so
that it can be delivered and reused in a variety of innovative ways. Once you
have created an Information Model for your content repository, you will be able
to label information in ways that will enhance search and retrieval, making it
possible for authors and users to find the information resources they need
quickly and easily. The Information Model is the ultimate content-management tool. Creating your Information Model requires analysis, careful planning, and a
lot of feedback from your user community. The analysis takes you into the world
of those who need and use information resources every day. The planning means
talking to a wide range of stakeholders, including both individuals and groups
who have information needs and who would profit from collaboration in the
development of information resources. Getting feedback requires that you test
your Information Model with members of your user community to ensure that you
haven't missed some important perspectives. In this chapter, you learn It's very easy to tell when a Web site you're trying to navigate has no
underlying Information Model. Here are the tell-tale characteristics: · You can't tell how to get from the home page
to the information you're looking for. · You click on a promising link and are
unpleasantly surprised at what turns up. · You keep drilling down into the information
layer after layer until you realize you're getting farther away from your goal
rather than closer. · Every time you try to start over from the
home page, you end up in the same wrong place. · You scroll through a long alphabetic list of
all the articles ever written on a particular subject with only the title to
guide you. Sound familiar? What does it feel like when a well-designed Information
Model is in place? Oddly enough, you generally don't notice a well-conceived
Information Model because it simply doesn't get in the way of your search. Did all of these pleasant experiences happen by accident? Not in the least.
Finding the information you needed quickly and easily requires a great deal of
advance planning. The basic planning and design tool is the Information Model. An Information Model is an organizational framework that you use to
categorize your information resources. The framework assists authors and users
in finding what they need, even if their needs are significantly different and
personal. The framework provides the basis on which you base your publishing
architecture, including print and electronic information delivery. An Information Model might encompass the information resources of one part
of an organization. For example, your Information Model might provide a
framework for categorizing your corporate training materials or the technical
and sales information that accompanies your products. Your Information Model
might include engineering information produced during product development,
policies and procedures used internally in the day-to-day conduct of business,
information about customers used in your sales cycle or about vendors used in
your supply chain. Some of the information resources you bring under content
management might be available across the corporation for internal use, such as
human-resources information. Other information resources might be specific to
the needs of one department or division of your organization. If an Information Model is clearly defined and firmly established, users
will be on a fast track finding and retrieving the information they need. As you plan what to include under content management and what to exclude,
you must consider a wide range of dimensions through which you will categorize
and label your information. Some of the dimensions will be specific to the
needs of information authors. Others will meet the requirements of your
products and services. Still others will explicitly meet the needs of internal
and external users of information. As you design your Information Model, consider how large an information body
it must encompass. Some Information Models are very small, specific, and
limited in scope. Others stretch across entire organizations, encompassing
thousands or millions of pages. In the next section, you start with a small,
personal Information Model. In subsequent sections, you consider larger, more
complex models for larger bodies of information. Author
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