The Elements of User Experience: User-Centered Design for the Web
by Jesse James Garrett
Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 3rd Edition
by Peter Morville; Louis Rosenfeld
The Design of Sites: Patterns for Creating Winning Web Sites, Second Edition
by Douglas K. van Duyne; James A. Landay; Jason I. Hong
A Project Guide to UX Design: For User Experience Designers in the Field or in the Making
by Russ Unger; Carolyn Chandler
Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web, Second Edition
by Christina Wodtke; Austin Govella
Dreamweaver CS4: The Missing Manual, 1st Edition
by David Sawyer McFarland
Sams Teach Yourself Microsoft Expression Web 3 in 24 Hours
by Morten Rand-Hendriksen
Content Strategy for the Web
by Kristina Halvorson
Using Drupal, 1st Edition
by Angela Byron; Addison Berry; Nate Haug; Jeff Eaton; James Walker; Jeff Robbins
Most discussion about Web design seems to focus on the creative
process, yet turning concept into reality requires a strong set of
deliverables—the documentation (concept model, site maps,
usability reports, and more) that serves as the primary
communication tool between designers and customers. Here at last is
a guide devoted to just that topic. Combining quick tips for
improving deliverables with in-depth discussions of presentation
and risk mitigation techniques, author Dan Brown shows you
how to make the documentation you're required to provide into the
most efficient communications tool possible. He begins with an
introductory section about deliverables and their place in the
overall process, and then delves into to the different types of
deliverables. From usability reports to project plans, content
maps, flow charts, wireframes, site maps, and more, each chapter
includes a contents checklist, presentation strategy, maintenance
strategy, a description of the development process and the
deliverable's impact on the project, and more.
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Based on 38 Ratings
full of information - 2009-04-17
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an easy read and jam packed with vital information when working as an interaction designer.
Good reference - 2009-04-07
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The book considered as a very good and valuable reference, I think it's essential for those in the field (development) to have this book in their libraries.
Dan Brown really opened my eyes on different methodologies on design documentation, the content inventory, Concept models, and even the Competitive analysis which I've been performing for a while now. There are some parts of the book that i already know and was useless (not in bad meaning) to me such as usability test, usability reports, and persona.
The best part of the book for me was the site map which is amazingly great.
Great in-depth methodology on UX design - 2009-11-10
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Great book for ux professional. Lots of in-depth techniques on each step of the ux design process. However, for small and medium companies, this approach might be too formal, and may need to be adapted to be more flexible.
Great Resource - 2009-09-30
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This is a great resource for showing you all the various documentation process that surround web design today. This book sits next to me on my desk at work with The Elements of User Experience by Jesse James Garrett at the moment.
A good book for a none designer - 2009-03-23
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I'm been a web developer for several years but recently I've been pushing myself in to the design field. not easy but either hard. This is a great inspirational book if you want to start creating new web2.0 sites. it gives you color palettes do you can have brief ideas from where you can get started. Great book though. Author has a very nice gallery in its own web site, so I always get there to get me inspired.
Top Level Categories:
Graphics
Internet/Online
Sub-Categories:
Graphics > Web Graphics
Internet/Online > Web Design
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