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Web ReDesign 2.0: Workflow that Works (2nd Edition) (VOICES)

Web ReDesign 2.0: Workflow that Works (2nd Edition) (VOICES)

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Authors: Kelly Goto, Emily Cotler
Publisher: Peachpit Press
Category: Book

List Price: $55.00
Buy Used: $24.48
You Save: $30.52 (55%)



New (32) Used (22) from $24.48

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 75 reviews
Sales Rank: 25973

Media: Paperback
Edition: 2
Pages: 296
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9
Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 8 x 0.6

ISBN: 0735714339
Dewey Decimal Number: 005
UPC: 752064714330
EAN: 9780735714335
ASIN: 0735714339

Publication Date: December 20, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: This book has typical wear and tear from daily usage. It may contain highlighting and/or underlining. Online access codes (i.e. Infotrac) may or may not be valid or included.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Web Redesign: Workflow That Works: Methodologies and Business Practices for on T
  • Paperback - Web ReDesign: Workflow that Works

Accessories:

  • Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, 2nd Edition
  • Designing with Web Standards (2nd Edition)
  • Prioritizing Web Usability (VOICES)

Similar Items:

  • Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, 2nd Edition
  • Communicating Design: Developing Web Site Documentation for Design and Planning
  • Information Architecture for the World Wide Web: Designing Large-Scale Web Sites
  • The Elements of User Experience: User-Centered Design for the Web (VOICES)
  • The Design of Sites: Patterns for Creating Winning Web Sites (2nd Edition)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

If anything, this volume's premise--that the business of Web design is one of constant change-has only proven truer over time. So much so, in fact, that the 12-month design cycles cited in the last edition have shrunk to 6 or even 3 months today. Which is why, more than ever, you need a smart, practical guide that demonstrates how to plan, budget, organize, and manage your Web redesign - or even you initial design - projects from conceptualization to launch. This volume delivers! In these pages Web designer extraordinaire Kelly Goto and coauthor Emily Cotler have distilled their real-world experience into a sound approach to Web redesign workflow that is as much about business priorities as it is about good design. By focusing on where these priorities intersect, Kelly and Emily get straight to the heart of the matter. Each chapter includes a case study that illustrates a key step in the process, and you'll find a plethora of forms, checklists, and worksheets that help you put knowledge into action.This is an AIGA Design Press book published under Peachpit's New Riders imprint in partnership with AIGA.



Amazon.com Review
Anyone who has managed the process of developing or redesigning a Web site of significant size has likely learned the hard way the complexities, pitfalls, and cost risk of such an undertaking. While many Web development firms have fantastic technical expertise, what sets the topnotch organizations apart is the ability to accurately manage the planning and development process. Web Redesign: Workflow That Works directly addresses this crucial area with a specific, proven process.

This brief but important book lays out a specific five-step strategy--called the Core Process--that can always be applied to the development of Web sites and fine-tuned to almost any type of project. Each step--defining the project, developing site structure, visual design and testing, production and QA, and launch and beyond--contains three related but distinct tracks. The text begins with a brief overview of each of the steps, then delves deeper into each with detailed explanations as well as specific forms and project-management strategies. This book does not cover back-end, server-side programming. Instead, it focuses primarily on the visual, conventional components of a Web site.

Authors Kelly Goto and Emily Cotler compiled this book in an attractive, easy-to-read format. This process guide uses numerous full-color screen shots to illustrate site examples, as well as plenty of site diagrams and sample forms. The book even has a companion Web site with downloadable forms in PDF format to put the Core Process into immediate action. --Stephen W. Plain

Topics covered:

  • Step 1--Defining the Core Process: discovery, planning, and clarification;
  • Step 2--Developing site structure: content-view, site-view, and page-view;
  • Step 3--Visual design and testing: creating, confirming, and handing off;
  • Step 4--Production and QA: prepping, building, and testing;
  • Step 5--Launch and beyond: delivery, launch, and maintenance.



Customer Reviews:   Read 70 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Excellent resource and excellent tools   November 12, 2008
Kukkimom (Iowa-United States)
This is a must have for project managers, web department managers or hands-on web designers. The authors give an in-depth, but easy-to-follow, step-by-step process for web design. Although it's called "Redesign," the core processes apply whether it's a redesign or new design. Their accompanying website has great tools and downloads, which I've customized for use in my department, and their sidebar tips are great nuggets of information.


5 out of 5 stars Very practical   September 14, 2008
Kathy Marks (Wausau, WI)
We purchased this book as a resource manual for our agency. We develop websites and it is an easy to read, practical guide for approaching the planning phase of executing sound website redesign, as well as the execution. Like many people, we tend to jump too quickly into production and this book has helped our team to slow down and plan more. It makes sense for web designers, web developers, copywriters, project managers and anyone else that comprises a diverse web development team.


1 out of 5 stars Poorly put together   July 19, 2008
E. Caspersen
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I had to use this book on college, out of all my books this is the only one that I burned. I even kept my math books. Now that I am an instructor and author myself I look back on this book as the single worse publication currently in the industry of web design. Yes they do spend to much time boasting about themselves. The book goes way off topic about topics unrelated to web design without even a single attempt to justify why it has done so.

Kelly is (and I quote from the book) a self-proclaimed "design ethnographer," I do not buy into this line of crap at all. A professional does not self-proclaim anything, if through hard work your peers gave you this title that is one thing. Other then that this is a sign of a person with serious egotistical issues about themselves.



5 out of 5 stars Saved us lots of time and aggravation   July 10, 2008
Bling It On (Atlanta, GA)
My company was recently hired to do a site revision for a HUGE site. This book helped us keep our ducks in a row and do lots of up front work before we started changing over content. The client resources provided at the web site were very helpful! HIghly recommend for any web site designers/developers library.


5 out of 5 stars Kelly Goto deserves the Nobel Prize   June 13, 2008
S. Harrison (Clements, CA United States)
Back in the Olden Days of the 20th Century, during the waning days of the dot-com boom, (when a lot of us pioneers thought that we were really awesome web-studs when we actually didn't know diddly-squat) Kelly Goto's first edition not only saved my tail, but actually helped me get a job with a large State located on the west coast of the USA. (I think you've probably heard of the place if you think about it..) I was able to go into the interview and knock 'em dead with my knowledge of web project management.

Kelly clearly explains step-by-step what you need to do at the start of a web project in order to avoid an unmitigated disaster at the end of the project. Her advice is straight-forward, logical, and accurate.

Flash forward, and suddenly I find myself a web project manager once again, called in to Save the Day because someone else did some really embarrassingly stupid things with a public website. What was the first thing that I did after getting this assignment? Find my Kelly Goto book! What was the second thing I did? Order the newer edition!

Kelly offers good solid practical advice. Kelly Goto offers templates on her website. Kelly Goto has sage advice at Adobe.com [...]

Heed the wisdom of the sage, Grasshopper, and you will find enlightenment.


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