This chapter touches on important aspects that most information technology gurus are already aware of. The students in our class that aren’t IT majors may not have the knowledge on what to concern themselves with when designing a web page. If I were majoring in journalism, for instance, the first thing I am going to be stressing over is the content in my article on the home page of my brand new web site. Maybe I’ll choose some interesting colors schemes, background design, and add some pictures. On the rare occasion, who will be viewing my web page will cross my mind once or twice but I’ll assume it is just the general public. However, I am not majoring in journalism or any other technology unrelated subject and am fully educated on what it takes to create a successful website. This chapter points out the basics in taking your projected audience into consideration before you even begin to plan your website’s construction.
First, find you major audiences, gather information on each of them, and then list their major characteristics. After writing their characteristics down in front of you, it should be fairly easy to recognize some sample questions, tasks, stories, and main purposes they may have involving your website. Now comes the most important part, creating personas including the personas’ goals and tasks with sample scenarios. Personas are made-up, example audience members covering all angles of your broad audiences’ perspectives. Some basic information to create a persona starts out listing their occupation, marital status, spouses’ occupation, if they have children, and where they live. The more in-depth and critical-to-focus-on attributes would include: the persona’s personal values/emotions, social and cultural environment they are surrounded by, demographics, and technological expertise or experience.