Developing use cases in the initial design of a taxonomy is something I did not learn about until I went into consulting, but it is a useful approach to taxonomy and metadata design in any circumstance, regardless of the involvement of an external taxonomy consultant. The use case technique comes…
Category: Taxonomy testing
Card Sorting and Taxonomies
Card sorting is a common technique in information architecture for developing the organization of menu labels or categories on websites. It would thus seem to be a very suited methodology for developing all kinds of taxonomies, but in actual practice card sorting is not utilized for most taxonomy projects, at…
Testing Taxonomies
As mentioned in my previous blogpost, “Evaluating Taxonomies,” taxonomy evaluation and taxonomy testing differ. While the evaluation of a taxonomy by a taxonomist is needed when a taxonomy is created by non-taxonomists (such as by subject-matter experts instead), testing of a taxonomy, on the other hand, is recommended in all…
Evaluating Taxonomies
In my last blog post, “Taxonomy Management Consulting,” I mentioned that more organizations now have taxonomies, so the need is shifting somewhat from designing and building new taxonomies to managing existing taxonomies. It might not be that simple, however, if the existing taxonomy was created and never used, created for…