Saturday, January 14, 2012


Module One: What is Information Design?

Communication   Designing Information   Solving Problems   Selling Ideas








Logos   Icons   Apps   Branding    Graphics   Shortcuts   Pictures  
 


The Industrial Revolution paved the way for the Information Age and technology provided the tools for an information explosion. Logos and corporate branding became desktop shortcuts, leading to icons, and then apps. A once intricate corporate branding strategy, with complex designs, has evolved into a small icon used as phone apps, internet advertising, or tag lines on email messages. Technology bridged the generation gap and provided communication methods tied to gadgets designed to peak everyone’s interests, with no age limitations. Technology is a critical component of communication; Information is everywhere and interfaces are plentiful. Nanotechnology provides finite chip designs that facilitate new and improved devices which are smaller than previous models. The Internet provides countless information sources to sync devices. Streamlined communication, using a vast array of sources and data streams, is necessary for organizations to remain competitive. “Companies in every sector understand the need for using information design practices to differentiate themselves and gain strategic advantage” (Baer, p. 20).

Information design is essentially the presentation of data in a way that coveys useful and meaningful information. There are a plethora of sources that define the term and different professions that work within the discipline. In the Information Design Workbook, Baer refers to a definition of Information design from the Society for Technical Communication’s (STC) special interest group as being “the translating [of] complex, unorganized, or unstructured data into valuable, meaningful information” (Baer, p. 12). In his article, Information Design: The Understanding Discipline, Dirk Knemeyer defines it this way, “Information design is the integrator that brings other disciplines together to create excellent information solutions.” Despite any confusion or debate concerning definitions and meaning, it is clear that Information Design is about efficient communication.

The disciplines that have come together within the field of information design are Graphic Design, Information Architect, Interaction Design, User Experience Design, Usability Specialties, Human Factors Specialties, Human Computer Interaction Specialties, and Plan Language Specialties (Baer, pgs. 14-15). These specific practices all work with information in an effort to convey a message. Research, user experience, interactions with peripheral devices, products, services and environments, along with visual communication, organization, and interactions with information all encompass aspects of information design.
References
Baer, Kim. Information Design Workbook. Beverly, MA: Rockport Publishers, 2008. Print.
Knemeyer, Dirk. “Information Design: The Understanding Discipline” (2003). Boxes and Arrows. Web. 14 Jan. 2011. <http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/ information_design_the_understanding_discipline>.
Redish, Janice C. (Ginny). “What is Information Design?” TechnicalCommunication. June 2000, 163-166. Web. 14 Jan. 2011. <http://dwheelersite.com/PDFs/Articles%20for%20Reading%20List/Redish%20What%20Is%20Information%20Design.pdf>.

3 comments:

  1. Stopped by to repay the favor and mention that when I first saw your it completely intimidated me - it was so great - not a small amount of work went into this blog as well! I thought the information was well thought out and excellently expressed!
    I appreciated your opening analogy and loved your opening paragraph. How true that complex branding strategies can now be reduced to a byte or tweet - who would've thunk. And I liked how you illustrated that point with all the little squares; it really drives your point home.
    The words up top are in some way a rhyme, you are not sure why they are there but they key you in and then resonate when you see them again.
    I like your background a lot; the only thing I would say is perhaps you could apply a wash or lighten the outer frame to remove focus from it so as to draw the eye inward to your information.
    Truly great post,
    Shayna Horowitz

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    Replies
    1. Shayna;

      Thank you for the reply and feedback. I appreciate it. I was on the fence about the background because it is "loud". I ended up using it because I thought that the colors swirling into one another had some information design technique. I will look at it in a few different browsers as you suggested. I did view it in Chrome but not Firefox. Thanks for the suggestion.

      Lisa Pimpinella

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  2. That's strange. I'm looking at your post in Firefox now, (I usually use Google chrome but it won't let me post replies to blogs - something to do with the captcha technology) and your blog looks completely different. I doesn't have the outside frame in this view at all! Go figure - you actually have to test you blog out on different servers if you truly want to know how it will look to viewers... Sometimes the web, I'm sorry to say this, is a little bit weird...
    Shayna Horowitz

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