Archive for the ‘Project Management’ Category

Incline Ski & Board Shop SMC Redesign Goes Live

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Incline Ski & Board Shop is locally owned and operated and has been serving the Aspen/Snowmass area for 25 years. With prime locations near the Gondola at Ajax, and at the mall in Snowmass, Incline strives to provide the best value and most convenient service around.

To that end, they stay open later than other ski shops so customers can avoid wasting time in the dreaded lines of a powder day morning rush instead of dropping lines in the newly fallen snow. Incline has been so strong for so long in this highly competitive business, because of their dogged commitment to value and service. These were the watchwords that drove the recent redesign of their site. The site is a powerful tool for customers to save both time and money. They save precious time by booking rentals online, and they earn a discounted rate by doing so ahead of time instead of showing up on the first morning of their vacation and hoping for the best. By making online reservations ahead of time, customers know that the specific equipment they want will be right there waiting for them. Offering value is a huge priority for Incline. That’s why they offer only premium equipment, including local brands like High Society Freeride Company.

Shout out to the great team who made the redesign happen. Congratulations to Lauren for doing a great job with PM and Design, we’ll miss you during your leave! Michael and Dan did a great job with development, and Moira ensured a deft deployment of the site. Tim killed it with a tight Google Analytics and SEO setup and our fearless leader Pete Scott made the project possible on the sales side.

Aspen Orthopaedic Associates Redesigned Site Goes Live

Friday, November 6th, 2009

New Homepage

Aspen Orthopaedic Associates (AOA) delivers a personalized care experience catering to outdoor enthusiasts from Olympians to young athletes and local weekend warriors.  The practice was founded fifty years ago during Aspen’s quiet years.  Since then, Aspen has become a glitzy global sporting mecca, and the practice has added centers across western Colorado in Glenwood Springs, Basalt and Rifle.

Provided with a fresh design from the team at Cadence Marketing, we redeployed the site on the Site Management Console (SMC) content management system.  In furtherance of their mission to provide their patients with an unparalleled level of care, the site we created for them incorporates several advanced features that will provide their patients with an online experience that is commensurate with the high level of care they’ve come to expect.  For example, patients can quickly and easily request an appointment with their favorite physician, or have their prescription refilled online.

Providing quality educational resources for their patients was an aspect central to the site’s redesign.  AOA really stepped up and made the investment necessary to create a valuable educational resource.  AOA provides the information, interactive animations, and video needed to demystify the often intimidating prospect of having a surgical procedure.  These animations take patients through a detailed step-by-step explanation of the procedure they will undergo. Patients can even print out these interactive descriptions of the procedure, or they can send them around in an email.

The site also has a community blog where you can track the impressive exploits of some prominent patient athletes.  The Doc’s Desk is an informative forum providing an array of event announcements, educational opportunities, research findings, community-related information, and news about the practice.  They also use the site to promote the Aspen Sports Medicine Foundation. (ASMF) This is a publicly supported nonprofit organization, spearheaded by AOA dedicated to the promotion, support and sponsorship of education and research in the field of sports medicine.

Congratulations to the great team that made this great redesign possible. Preproduction came courtsey of Cadence Marketing with design work by Tom Kenyon, development by Five Technology, Lauren did a great job as PM, Moira and Intrcomm made for a smooth deployment and Andrew made the project possible from the sales side.

Differing approaches to getting started with a website…

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Most webshops worth their pixels engage in some form of pre-production on all projects. This is the planning phase. Building analogies are often used to describe the value of this stage of a project. ‘Would you break ground on a house without a blueprint?’ And it’s a fair point. Websites are complex collaborations between project managers, graphic designers, information architects, developers, QA specialists, account managers, and, of course, a client. In general, it’s a process requiring systematic diligence on the part of an experienced team. Traditionally, the blueprint consists of a combination of a site map, written specification documents, photoshop files, content (copy, photos, multimedia, etc.) and possibly even UI prototypes. These deliverables form the basis of agreement between the client and the webshop as to what is to be produced. They also provide a comprehensive blueprint that an engineer should be able to follow without a lot of additional input. It’s a time-tested and reliable process that the haphazard ignore at their own peril. Once the client signs off on these documents they form the groundwork for the contract to produce the actual website.

This form of pre-production is not without it’s flaws, however. In general, human beings are not particularly good at predicting the future whether its time-line expectations, design comps or functional prototypes. Marketing assistants are not always good at intuiting their boss’s aesthetic. The type of documents web companies and their engineers desire and assiduously produce–invitingly titled tomes such as ‘Functional Requirements v3.1′, ‘Technical Solution Definition’, ‘Service Level Agreement’–are given a cursory glance by the client and signed with all the careful attention one might afford the ‘Terms of Service’ for their computer’s Operating System. Clients, in general, spend more of their energy responding to the photoshop documents, but these  mock-ups too often overlook important user interface considerations and omit the back-end all together. In addition, they are expensive to produce.

So, while the traditional approach–the “blueprint”–described above gets the job done and trumps the alternative of no plan at all, there are often points of frustration.

  • The client is constantly trying to change the requirements, content and design after the blueprint is finished. ‘Let me get you that change order document,’ is not a happy-making response to this desire.
  • The pre-production process can be time-consuming, expensive, and frustrating to the client. ‘Is my site done yet?’ ‘Well…yeah…we haven’t actually started it, per se.’
  • People don’t read, especially when a document is outside their domain of knowledge. The client may sign off on the functional requirements and then express surprise when they find a precious feature lacking after the fact.
  • Photoshop documents aren’t working models and cannot be tested. Often the graphic designer’s solution is neither practical, functional, or the best from a usability standpoint.

So is there a better way? Sort of. It won’t work for all clients or projects, but we’ve found a dash of agile methodology combined with a good content management system like Drupal offers an interesting alternative. With the client’s participation and active involvement, it’s possible to take an iterative approach to starting a website project. Instead of producing  blueprints, the project manager, information architect and client collaborate on a living breathing Drupal site to build out the information architecture and menus, prototype the content types (these are database objects with specific fields–for example…listings, testimonials, events, people), create sortable views of these content types, add page content and other assets like photos or virtual tours, comment back and forth, enable and test modules, and place persistent elements such as sidebar blocks, ads, etc. in their likely eventual locations. The nice part is that a content management system like Drupal is flexible, decisions can be easily reversed. Time spent on these endeavors results in measurable progress toward the final product. One of the primary differences in this method is that the graphic designer (assuming the basic brand is done) can stand aside for this part of the development. When it comes time for them to create the theme or design for the site, they will have a much more concrete picture to work from and it will be clear where their time and expertise is most needed.

But what about the blueprint, you say, what fool would break ground without one? A CMS, like Drupal, provides enough of a framework for building a site that many critical technology and functionality questions are effectively answered. Think of it as a bleeding-edge, environmentally-friendly, factory-made, stick-built modular home that lowers cost without affecting quality or sophistication.

There are challenges, of course, with this method, and it requires a certain type of client. It takes a client with both faith and imagination who’s willing to proceed on an hourly basis secure in the knowledge that the overall cost of the project will be lower, the timeline will be shorter and, at any moment, the iterative work-in-progress can go live. As the ancient Chinese proverb states, the best kind of marketing is the kind that exists. (Websites, unlike print work, will never be either perfect or done.) The client must also be available and able to make decisions for their organization. The frequency of meetings increases, but the meetings are shorter, informal and more focused. In return for these concessions, the client enjoys the satisfaction of participating in an iterative process that unfolds before their eyes.

At Blue Tent, we believe both methods of pre-production are essential and it comes down to the nature of the client and the project as to which is best suited. If you’re interested in a more iterative, less formal approach to pre-production, call us or do some further reading…