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1 | How to use this sitemap template | |
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3 | This document describes the site map for a museum website. In the 'Sitemap' tab, you'll see a nested list of page titles. To make your own sitemap, copy this document and add, remove or rename titles to suit your needs - the given titles are only suggestions (albeit based on card sorts and tree tests) This document can be exported as a csv file and imported into GLAMkit to instantly make navigable pages for your entire site. If you use this document, we'd love to see the results! Share your doc/csv with tim@interaction.net.au - we'll incorporate feedback and improvements into the next version. | Visit GLAMKit.com |
4 | Notes: | |
5 | Use the 'brief' section to describe the purpose of each page. Who are the audience personas? What are they here to do? | |
6 | Items in (brackets) indicate content that should be referenced on the parent page, but that exists elsewhere. | |
7 | Items in [square brackets] should be fleshed out, or omitted, depending on your needs. | |
8 | Check your brand/style guide for naming and lettercase conventions. | |
9 | We have suggested titles that have tested well in card sorts and tree tests with museum audiences. If you diverge substantially, be sure to test your assumptions. | |
10 | When it comes to education/learning, we tested audiences and found that non-schools audiences aren't motivated to browse sections like 'learning' or 'education' - learning content for general audiences should be placed elsewhere - we suggest in 'what's on'. | |
11 | GLAMkit creates URLs from the slugs of the titles, e.g. "press-room/press-releases/". If you want a different URL, specify it in "URL override". | |
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14 | Versions: | |
15 | 0.5 Initial version | 9 May 2017 |
16 | 1.0 Initial Release | 10 Oct 2017 |