Intranet evolution, best practices, and case studies by Toby Ward.

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Web Development & Design Blogs - Blog Top Sites © 2006 Prescient Digital Media. All rights reserved. www.PrescientDigital.com
View Article  Intranet design is important, but not that important

The world’s biggest intranet, the Navy-Marine Corps Intranet (NMCI, with a total price tag of about $10-billion) serves more than 500,000 users – mostly marines and sailors in the field.

 

The end users are happy with the intranet – whether its dependability, support, or the ability to find information – user satisfaction is about 70%. Mission accomplished. Or is it…

 

NMCI is viewed as a failing project. A report by the Government Accountability Office (see GAO-07-51) is critical of NMCI for never implementing a plan developed in 2000 to measure and report project progress. GAO says that NMCI intranet has met a paltry three of 20 performance targets set for the intranet.

 

 

"By not implementing its performance plan, the Navy has invested, and risks continuing to invest heavily, in a program that is not subject to effective performance management and has yet to produce expected results," auditors said.

 

But the real damning evidence is from management. In two different satisfaction surveys with naval and marine commanders, the intranet was shot to pieces.

 

“Specifically, on a scale of 0-3 with 0 being not satisfied, and 1 being slightly satisfied with the contractor’s support in meeting the mission needs and strategic goals of these organizations, the average response from all organizations was 0.65 and 0.76 in September 2005 and March 2006, respectively. The latest survey results show minor differences in the degree of dissatisfaction with the four types of contractor services addressed (cutover services, technical solutions, service delivery, and warfighter support),” says the GAO report.

 

Users can find information and do most of the things that they want, but the intranet is failing to live up to its purpose. If an intranet fails to achieve business objectives and deliver on the priorities of management, then the intranet fails. It’s money wasted, and opportunity squandered.

 

Design and usability are important, but both are tertiary values compared to planning, performance and content (including governance, process and resources). Despite the incredible hype and emphasis on look-and-feel and usability testing (specifically these ridiculous awards reports and ceremonies), colors, pictures, blogs, and podcasts are all for nothing if the intranet does not have well executed plan that supports management objectives.

 

 

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For more intranet news visit www.IntranetReport.com

 

© 2006 Toby Ward - Prescient Digital Media

View Article  Good to great intranet

What is the difference between a good intranet and a great intranet? What do you do to get to great?

 

There is no simple answer. In fact, using the Prescient Digital Media intranet methodology of rating and scoring an intranet out of 10, I estimate that to advance a 6 out of 10 intranet to an 8 out of 10 requires twice the effort and much more intelligent thinking.

 

In preparing a magazine article on great intranets I developed a success factor comparison matrix on good and great intranets based on real experience with both good and great intranets with an average of 5,000 employees. The following is a summary of the complete table to be published in a couple of months:

 

Success Factors

Good

Great

 

 

 

Design

Reinforces corporate brand, limited employee presence, simple colors and images

 

Bold, progressive, real employee photos, excellent use of shading

Layout

Two to four columns, large banner, over emphasis on images and design

Three columns, minimal banner, emphasis on information retrieval, text to white space ratio of 70/30

 

Content

Centralized content supported by some standards, sometimes formatted for the web, mostly up to date

Distributed authorship, well defined standards, central content management platform and standardized templates, web trained writers

 

Usability

A working search engine, some meta tagging, working links, global navigation

Taxonomy supported meta tagging, multiple information paths (e.g. dynamic site map, site index, How to…), standard footers & headers

 

Information Architecture

Organizational structure with some catch-all sections for forms, policies, etc.

Business intuitive architecture with 6-8 parent categories, many redundant links

 

Plan

Defined goals, log analysis, user research

Critical success factor tracking and measures including ROI, formal, detailed directives that align with enterprise

 

Governance

Shared ownership between communications & IT, some standards (largely ambiguous)

Formally defined committee structure driven by one or two executive champions, well defined and enforced standards

 

 

For the complete table or more information on evolving your intranet from good to great then please contact me directly: toby{at}prescientdigital{dot com}.

 

 

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For more intranet news visit www.IntranetReport.com

 

© 2006 Toby Ward - Prescient Digital Media