I gave this presentation at SXSW 2019, talking about how content structure can enhance your work on advanced content channels like AI, voice skills, chatbots, and ecommerce.
15. STANDARD
CONTENT WORKFLOW
AUDIENCE STRATEGY OPERATIONS ANALYSIS GOVERNANCE
Identify
customers,
prospects,
people
Identify their
goals and
needs
Identify your
goals and find
synergy
Identify tools,
channels you
can use
Design
systems that
meet your
goals +
audience goals
Use systems to
create and
publish
content
Evaluate
success toward
goals
Iterate
Determine
ongoing
decisions to be
made
Define
framework for
decisions
Use
framework
16. ADVANCED
CONTENT WORKFLOW
AUDIENCE STRATEGY OPERATIONS ANALYSIS GOVERNANCE
Identify
customers,
prospects,
people
Identify their
goals and
needs
Identify your
goals and find
synergy
Identify tools,
channels you
can use
Design
systems that
meet your
goals +
audience goals
Use systems to
create and
publish
content
Evaluate
success toward
goals
Iterate
Determine
ongoing
decisions to be
made
Define
framework for
decisions
Use
framework
19. ADVANCED
CONTENT OPERATIONS
DIGITAL CHATBOTS VOICE SKILLS AI-DRIVEN ECOMMERCE
Topics
Formats
Write
Publish
Define
information
sets to support
conversations
Build
conversation
triggers
Test, rewrite!
Test, rewrite!
Determine
interactions
useful in voice
environment
Design
content for
common voice
interactions
Test! Test!
Test! Test!
Promote
Determine
where data
and needs
intersect
Jumpstart
with
taxonomy/
ontology/
semantic
content
Train! Train!
Train! Train!
Document
buyer’s
journey
Determine
content need
Structure to
create/store/
deliver content
Design
customer
experience
20. ADVANCED
CONTENT OPERATIONS
DIGITAL CHATBOTS VOICE SKILLS AI-DRIVEN ECOMMERCE
Topics
Formats
Write
Publish
Define
information
sets to support
conversations
Build
conversation
triggers
Test, rewrite!
Test, rewrite!
Determine
interactions
useful in voice
environment
Design
content for
common voice
interactions
Test! Test!
Test! Test!
Promote
Determine
where data
and needs
intersect
Jumpstart
with
taxonomy/
ontology/
semantic
content
Train! Train!
Train! Train!
Document
buyer’s
journey
Determine
content need
Structure to
create/store/
deliver content
Design
customer
experience
21. ADVANCED
CONTENT OPERATIONS
DIGITAL CHATBOTS VOICE SKILLS AI-DRIVEN ECOMMERCE
Topics
Formats
Write
Publish
Define
information
sets to support
conversations
Build
conversation
triggers
Test, rewrite!
Test, rewrite!
Determine
interactions
useful in voice
environment
Design
content for
common voice
interactions
Test! Test!
Test! Test!
Promote
Determine
where data
and needs
intersect
Jumpstart
with
taxonomy/
ontology/
semantic
content
Train! Train!
Train! Train!
Document
buyer’s
journey
Determine
content need
Structure to
create/store/
deliver content
Design
customer
experience
IT’S ABOUT THE
STRUCTURE
22. MISCONCEPTIONS
➤Throw it all in there; Google
will sort it out.
➤I don’t need to structure it.
➤I need to structure
everything.
➤My customer will see what I
want them to see.
➤I’m starting from scratch.
23. TRUTHS
➤Critical to start with
customer perspective.
➤You can’t script everything.
➤Creating the domain and
content model pays off.
➤Metadata for the win.
➤You should test some more.
24. WHY DOES IA MATTER
FOR AI?
You shortcut the pattern recognition.
26. DOMAIN MODEL
What it is: An organized way to describe the topics and
information related to your [business, industry, area of interest]
How you create it: Look for existing models, create your own
Format: No specific format. Could be an outline, a set of topics
and descriptions
What it’s good for: Overlay on your customer journey to find
where content is needed. A starting point for any content
strategy.
27. CONTENT MODELWhat it is: A structured representation of content types and
their relationships. The content version of a data model.
How you create it: Organize content types, determine
internal structure of each. Create metadata to make the system
work.
Format: Represented by fields in a content management
system. Designed in variety of software.
What it’s good for: Designing structure within a body of
content. Good starting point to write, even better for
determining how content can be reused.
29. KNOWLEDGE BASE
What it is: A group of electronic documents on a set of topics,
ideally in some organized form.
How you create it: Assemble all your stuff!
Format: Ideally, documents are text with metadata and
semantic structure. YMMV.
What it’s good for: Base of content for AI, chatbots.
31. TAXONOMY
What it is: A hierarchical structure for organizing information.
Could be topics, products, whatevs.
How you create it: Build categories that make sense. Create
metadata to extend the structure into other uses.
Format: Spreadsheet, folder structure, semantic tags, XML,
special software…possibilities are endless.
What it’s good for: Organizing items like content, products.
Structural base for AI, chatbot content, more.
33. ONTOLOGY
What it is: A structure for demonstrating relationships. Could be
topics, products, whatevs.
How you create it: Group like entities, outline relationships
between them. Create metadata to extend the structure into other
uses.
Format: Semantic tags, XML, special software…many possibilities.
What it’s good for: Organizing items like content, products, and
especially complex information. Structural base for AI, chatbot
content, more.
34. KNOWLEDGE GRAPH
What it is: Google presents
structured data in a box on the
right side of the search results
page.
How you create it: Put good
metadata on your content, be
liked by Google’s algorithm.
What it’s mixed up with:
Non-branded information
representations.
40. COORDINATION
AND CAPABILITIES
➤Does any other system need to
understand your structure?
➤Do you need to map to any
other system?
➤Does your industry have a
standard structure?
➤What can your tech system do
now?
41. ADVANCED CONTENT
OPERATIONS: CHAT & VOICE
CHATBOTS VOICE SKILLS
Define topics
covered
Define
unsuccessful
interactions
Q & A/
Triggers
Supporting
content
Similar to
chatbots, but add
challenges of
speech recognition
Evaluate voice vs.
typed conversation
42. ADVANCED CONTENT
OPERATIONS: AI
Define
knowledge base
Create
taxonomy/
ontology
Add semantic
structure
FOR WHAT?
➤PPC program management
➤Topic and editorial calendar recommendations
➤Competitor analysis
➤The Holy Grail: Content creation?
43. HOW MUCH DATA
DO I NEED?
No, even more.
Still more.
More than that, even.
44. Current experience shows that AI
initiatives often fail due to the lack of
appropriate data or low data quality.
--Introducing Semantic AI white paper
Pool Party
46. ADVANCED CONTENT
OPERATIONS: ECOMMERCE
Determine
integrations
Define existing
structures
Structure at least
as granular as the
most granular
system
Structure to
create/store/
deliver content
FOR WHAT?
➤Integration between all suppliers/retailers
➤Make it easy to find and buy your products
➤Create faceted navigation, search filters
➤Create comparison tools, rich content
experiences
49. BUILDING A TAXONOMY
GOALS INFORMATION ORGANIZATION GOVERNANCE
Manage
information well
Integrate with
other systems
Help people find
things
Support
advanced
content
What will be
covered?
How will info be
categorized?
What facets
matter?
How do you
identify the
characteristics?
Are relationships
important?
Document and
understand
integrations
Be flexible
Maintain
organizing
principles until
there’s reason
not to
Look for industry
standards
Group like things
together
Seek clarity
Use user language
for labels
Be cautious and
intentional about
redundancy
Test!
58. RESOURCES
➤ Taxonomy in the Age of Amazon Echo. Mike
Doane, Taxonomy Bootcamp 2018
➤ Taxonomies and AI Chatbots. Gary Carlson,
Taxonomy Bootcamp 2018
➤ AI UX: 7 Principles of Designing Good AI
Products
➤ Machine Learning for Everyone
➤ Designer’s Field Guide to Data
➤ How Voice-Activated Tech Will Change Content
Marketing
➤ Opportunities for AI in Content Marketing
➤ Google’s Machine Learning Crash Course
➤ Designing Connected Content by Mike Atherton
and Carrie Hane
➤ The Human Insights Missing From Big Data,
Ted Talk by Tricia Wang
➤ Why Big Data Needs Thick Data, Medium post
by Tricia Wang
➤ Designing Bots by Amir Shevat
➤ Designing Voice User Interfaces by Cathy Pearl
➤ The Accidental Taxonomist by Heather Hedden
➤ The Battle for the Body Field article by Jeff
Eaton
➤ Training the CMS article by Eileen Webb
➤ Card Sorting by Donna Spencer