Thursday, Jun 12, 2008
A sample 'Only' statement for the I.A. Institute
A look at how to put an Only statement together, as well as how it works using the I.A. Institute as an example.
To kind of go through how this works, I thought we’d work through an example using the IA Institute. Now, I’m not picking on the IAI. I love them. I am a reasonably vigorous part of them. But when I was sitting in the annual meeting, I though to myself, “man, do these guys need an only statement”. So here goes our fictional exercise at crafting an Only statement for the IAI.
We’ll start with their tagline (“The IAI supports individuals and organizations specializing in the design and construction of shared information environments”) and convert that into an only statement:
| WHAT | The only organization |
| HOW | that develops and supports a community |
| WHO | for information architects |
| WHERE | anywhere in the world |
| WHY | who want to design information spaces |
| WHEN | in a world of ubiquitous data, access, and connection |
Well, that’s not totally true. We still can’t agree on what an information architect is, so let’s change that the UX professionals:
| WHAT | The only organization |
| HOW | that develops and supports a community |
| WHO | for |
| WHERE | anywhere in the world |
| WHY | who want to design information spaces |
| WHEN | in a world of ubiquitous data, access, and connection |
And do we really develop new communities, or do we support existing communities? Let’s tweak that, and change the text so we don’t use world twice:
| WHAT | The only organization |
| HOW | that |
| WHO | for user experience professionals |
| WHERE | |
| WHY | who want to design information spaces |
| WHEN | in a world of ubiquitous data, access, and connection |
So, that’s it. Now we have an Only statement that describes who we are and what we do. It’s a nice enough exercise, but Only statement works best as a way to validate design decisions.
Using the Only statement
Creating the Only statement packs all of your meaning together. Once everything’s packed, you can unpack the meaning to understand more about the project’s core essence.
So, in the magic world of our example, we’ve reached the final version of our Only statement, and it reveals an interesting fact about the organization:
- It’s not necessarily a professional organization, and not necessarily supported by membership.
- It’s all about the community of practice, and not necessarily the practice. (Props for the ‘Blurt!)
That definitely gives us some things to think about.
Based on the Only statement, we might reassess the services the organization provides. For our fictional version of the IAI, we might decide a community needs several things:
- Jobs (an ecology of stuff to do and people to do it; not necessarily paid work.)
- Discussions (email lists, forums, distributed conversations)
- Multiple languages (translations)
- Events (meetings, conferences, f2f conversations)
- Localized news, events, discussions, jobs (Politicians always say “everything is local”.)
- Discussions with other communities (elevator pitches/mobile widgets, evangelization)
- Mentors and mentees
And since we’re framing things up, maybe we organize community needs into two chunks:
- knowledge sharing (our list of community needs from above)
- community memory (best practices, tutorials, case studies, library, books, links)
Already, we have an understanding of what the IAI is and what it’s not. We have a framework for deciding what kinds of activities it should support, and those it shouldn’t. Essentially, we’ve defined a strategy we can follow for years.
And that, I think, is the magic of the Only statement: that it can help guide product and design strategy. But does it have to? Next, I’ll talk about at how an Only statement does and doesn’t interact with strategy.
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Cindy McWilliams said:
Thu, Jun 12, 2008 at 07:16 PM
Austin Govella said:
Mon, Jun 16, 2008 at 04:27 PM
Karen Loasby said:
Mon, Jul 28, 2008 at 01:07 PM
Austin Govella said:
Tue, Jul 29, 2008 at 02:25 AM