Chapter 20. MSWeb: An Enterprise Intranet


How three types of "taxonomies"an indexing vocabulary, schema, and category labelswere successfully utilized to describe high-value content
The technical architecture that was developed to maintain these taxonomies
How a modular approach and an emphasis on service helped the MSWeb team succeed in revamping the MSWeb intranet

What is the Holy Grail for information architects? It's the secret that will help them develop and maintain a user-centered information architecture for a large, distributed enterprisethe kind made up of all sorts of autonomous, bickering business units that have their own goals, their own sites, their own infrastructures, their own users, and their own ideas of how to go about things (see Chapter 19 for more on enterprise information architecture).

It's nearly impossible to develop a successful information architecture against a backdrop of explosive content growth, content ROT, and the political twists and turns common in any organization. And, we're sorry to say, no one can claim to own the Grail. But we've had the privilege of getting up close to a large number of corporate intranets. And one of the best approaches we've seen so far is the one taken by Microsoft's intranet portal (MSWeb) team.

Before you protest, we admit that yes, we understand that you probably don't have the same resources at your disposal as Microsoft's team did. But we think everyone can learn from Microsoft's efforts; what it's doing today is what most intranets will be doing in three to five years, for two reasons. First, MSWeb's approach is flexible enough to be customized for many large organizations. And second, knowing Microsoft, it's a reasonable bet that the good ideas described here will soon enough find their way into Microsoft's product offerings and into your IT department. So perhaps you'll own a piece of this approach in the not-too-distant future. Let's preview it here so you'll be ready.




Information Architecture for the World Wide Web
Information Architecture for the World Wide Web: Designing Large-Scale Web Sites
ISBN: 0596527349
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 194

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