From the course: UX Foundations: Information Architecture

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Making sure your hierarchical structure is correct

Making sure your hierarchical structure is correct

From the course: UX Foundations: Information Architecture

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Making sure your hierarchical structure is correct

Once you've put together a draft of your structure, you should test it with users by doing a reverse card sort. This allows you to get quick feedback that the assumptions you made when you created your new information architecture are right, before you make any design changes. A reverse card sort is very much like it sounds. Rather than sorting the task cards into groups, participants indicate where they think they'd go within your information architecture hierarchy to perform each task or find each item. We still run the reverse sort with our abstract information architecture hierarchy, rather than the menu structure we think we'll ultimately create. That way, we get to test out the whole structure in one go. The reverse sort, which is sometimes also called tree testing because your hierarchy is a bit like a tree structure, gives you a good sense as to whether users can or can't find items. You can count the number the hits, that is times when participants placement of items matched…

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