Blue Flavor

Concrete and Shadow by D. Keith Robinson

FOWD: IMDb Project Recap

November 15th, 2007 at 11:10 a.m.

So last week Ryan Sims and I presented at The Future of Web Design in New York city. Our presentation was about design process using a redesign of IMDb as the backdrop. It was a great time and a very nice event overall. (You can get a more general overview from Kevin’s post.) I thought I’d take a second and talk a bit about our presentation and the thinking/work that went into it.

Talking about process

Going back a few years now Ryan and I have both been part of the Design Eye panels at SXSW (and we’ll be doing one again this year – stay tuned) which have been very well received and pretty fun to do despite the extra work involved. When the folks at Carsonified approached us to do a “Mini Design Eye” we were pretty intrigued and excited.

The general premise of these panels is that you take a well known site and give it a make over. In the past these have really been about the reveal and showing the work that was done. And to some degree they will always be. However, Ryan and I began talking about it and we thought it would be nice to focus a bit more on the actual process involved.

Again, if you saw the talk last week, we still talked a bit about the work that was done, but tried to frame it in such a way that we could talk about process; things like tips, tricks, philosophy, etc. In some ways I wish we had more time to talk about the work and the process, as there was quite a bit of work that went into our talk that we didn’t get to share. You can only do so much in 45 minutes.

I think it went well, and since then I’ve received mostly positive feedback and have had quite a few good discussions about some of the things we said and talked about. Process is something that’s seemingly interesting to just about everyone, even if it is just a means to an end. As well, some of the philosophical bits we raised had lots of people thinking – which is good. I really wish we had more time for questions.

The deliverables

In any case, I promised I’d share some of the example deliverables I used. I want to make it clear, as I did in the session, that these deliverables were used to inform Ryan so that he could focus on what he does best. Each project has different needs and a different process and especially in the case of Wireframes, some deliverables can be tricky at best, useless or even detrimental at worst.

So view this with a grain of salt.

Keith Robinson

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