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We can now sketch out some new structures to test. Let’s take a look at the most common ways sites are organized, and some common tactics that can help us create our own trees.

 

Common schemes to organize sites

The way we organize a site depends, obviously, on its content. But your site is probably similar to others already out there. Here are some of the most common ways that websites are structurally grouped:

 

By audience or role

When a site caters to several audiences, and the content is different for each, this is a popular choice. For example, a bank may divide its site into sections for personal banking, small business, large corporations, and so on.

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Sometimes the role is age-based, such as this example from the NZ Ministry of Education:

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Jakob Nielsen warns about the problems with audience-based navigation, but if done properly, it can be effective.

 

By activity

Grouping content by tasks may be the most common way to organize a website. It takes advantage of the fact that most users arrive with a specific task in mind:

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Note that activity groups often resemble audiences and roles; sometimes it is just a question of labeling.

 

By topic

Topic-based navigation is often seen on larger websites, where the content varies widely and it’s critical to get the user to the right section before they can start their task.

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By internal department

Grouping content by internal parts of an organization (e.g. Human Resources, Finance, IT, etc.) is common in intranets, but is usually not a good idea for public websites (where site visitors may not understand (or care about) the organization’s internal structure).

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By brand

On shopping sites, dividing the content by brand is sometimes used as primary navigation, but more often used in a secondary role or as an alternate way to filter:

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By geography

Where content varies largely by region, it may be a good idea to divide content accordingly. However, this does assume the user knows the regions by name, and it also means grappling with geographical boundaries and content that does not fit into a specific region.

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By format

Some sites offer sections devoted to certain formats, such as documents (often PDFs), videos, or picture galleries.

This can make things hard to find, because a site visitor with a task in mind may not know which format the site has used for that information.

For example, if you’re at the Home Depot site looking for help on patching a roof, do you try “Project guides”, “How-to advice”, or “How-to videos”?

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Combining schemes

When you start creating a site tree, you will usually play with various kinds of top-level groups, probably trying some of the variations described above.

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