Nearly every company I've worked with since becoming a web professional six years ago has lacked an efficient way to decide which things to do first. Put 10 people into a room for an hour, and they'll surely come up with a wish list a mile long. A few years ago I was VP of Web development for an online retailer. When the business manager team gave me a list of 250 separate features that they wanted to have by launch, setting priorities became a top concern -- we had only 2 developers on staff and 90 days to launch. A consultant I was working with at the time gave me a TQM-style process for prioritizing initiatives. I've refined and simplified it over the years, and have ended up with a tidy little process that's easy to use.
Fraser, Janice. Adaptive Path (2002). Design>Web Design
Provides a methodology for auditing web site content to produce an inventory -- a tabular document that may be used in information re-architecture projects.
Fraser, Janice. New Architect (2001). Design>Web Design>Information Design
Nearly every company I’ve worked with since becoming a web professional six years ago has lacked an efficient way to decide which things to do first. Put 10 people into a room for an hour, and they’ll surely come up with a wish list a mile long.
Fraser, Janice. Adaptive Path (2002). Articles>Web Design>Project Management>Collaboration
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