AB
1
How to use this sitemap template
2
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".
12
13
14
Versions:
15
0.5 Initial version9 May 2017
16
1.0 Initial Release10 Oct 2017