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Research Project: Website Redesign

website redesign with user research + testing

This assignment was based off of an email Kent State recieved from the librarians at the Upper Sandusky Community Library in Sandusky, Ohio. The librarians were concerned that,

Our current website look is quite dated from a technological perspective, and while there is an abundance of information, it can be daunting for our users to FIND that information (i.e. it could be organized much better).

In addition to the redesign making information easier to find, the librarians had requested that any future website updates be uncomplicated so that the existing library staff can maintain the website without any extra strain on the library’s limited budget or technical resources.

problem

The Upper Sandusky Community Library’s website - redesigned after this project's completion (http://www.upper-sandusky.lib.oh.us/) needed to be updated, and where possible, the library content should be repurposed and reorganized for the benefit of its patrons. Future updating needs also needed to be taken into consideration so that the website could be maintained with limited technical resources.

Website Review

The original information architecture/organization of the Upper Sandusky Community Library showed:

Annotated USCL Home Page
  1. a mix of topical and task-based organization schemes in the global navigation bar with
  2. primary “Our Library” navigation on the left side of the page.

In addition to the global and primary navigation options, the website offered 2 additional navigation options:

  1. the offsite “Resources” which include the library catalog, and
  2. another offsite database plus links back to the “News & Info” page.

Areas for Improvement

It was initially suggested that the lack of clearly defined style guide caused the organic growth of the website’s organization (or lack thereof) and potential confusion of its users. I noticed during a full content analysis that there were several pages with recursive and broken links:

During the content analysis, I also noticed that several pages (mostly the pages for special groups/purposes, such as the “Heritage Room,” the “Ellison Room,” and the “Teen Advisory Board”) lacked a cohesive feel with the rest of the Upper Sandusky Community Library website. The lack of a style guide not only can cause organization and navigation confusion to its users, but also causes the website experience to feel disjointed as a user navigates among all the pages, such as navigation among the pages listed above.

actions

I knew that I needed to understand first, who the library was supposed to be serving and then second, review the information architecture for myself - before I could propose any solution.

Techniques Used:

What I Did:

personas + task evaluation

Based on the information I collected from my interviews with Gina and Steve, I figured that I had 2 primary personas and 1 secondary persona who were regularly looking to accomplish 6 tasks between them.

Primary Personas

Woman with toddler
Middle-aged man

Secondary Persona

Teenage boy

Task Evaluation

Once I had an idea about who my library users were, I started to get a feel for what they would use the library website for:

A summary of how a User Persona would use the library's website.
Task Persona
Katie
mom,
with kids
Justin
single,
without kids
Chris
teenager,
high school student
High Priority Tasks
Library Hours Yes Yes Yes
Register for Programs Yes Yes Yes
Search the Catalog Yes Yes Yes
Medium Priority Tasks
Renew Books No Yes No
Place Holds Yes Yes No
Check Out Social Media No No Yes
Low Priority Tasks
Technical Support Yes No No
Discover Other Library Resources Yes No Yes
Leave a Book Review No Yes No

additional project work

After I finished my initial research, it was time to evaluate the information architecture and content strategy.