It's probably the least glamourous part of web design, but information design is by no means the least important. Locating and consuming information is the quintessential web task, far surpassing buying, playing and communicating, all of which include a good portion of information design themselves. How users find and then avail themselves of all that information is affected by how it is structured and presented. Thus every web designer should be equipped to make qualified and informed decisions on just how to do this.
The 3 Components of Web Design Series
This article is part of a series on the three components of web design, here are links to the other articles (so far published)
- The 3 Components of Web Design
- 9 Information Design Tips to Make You a Better Web Designer
- 6 Interface Design Tips Every Web Designer Should Know
- 8 Ideas, Techniques and Tricks for Your Web Toolkit

1 - Be methodical
Information design is a problem that gets more and more complex the bigger the website. However even a small website will benefit from a methodical, step by step process to figure out how to order and organise the site's content. Here are some simple steps you may wish to take:
- Understand the Site's Content, Processes and Purpose
It's pretty hard to organise a bunch of stuff if you don't know what that stuff actually is. So your first task is to skim through the site's content, processes and goals. A site's content means copy, images, video and other assets you've been given or briefed on that needs to go into the site. A site's processes are the tasks and workflows that users will need to complete to interact with a site. And the site's goals refers to both the client's goals and the user's.
So for a simple restaurant example you might find that you have text for pages 1 through 20, you know that users will be attempting to complete some task such as making a reservation. You might also see that a user's goals on the site are to find out what the restaurant serves, where it is located and whether there are tables, and then hopefully make a reservation. Finally the client's goals might be to serve the user, but also to push them towards a set of specials they run.
- Prioritize and Look for User Paths
Once you've got a firm grasp of what's going into the site, you can begin to prioritize information and figure out how users will traverse the site. What paths will they take to accomplish their goals? What pages are the most important? Which should be seen right up front and which are just supporting information?
Even with a simple example like our restaurant site, there are many ways of setting out the information. For example you might push specials straight away on the homepage, or you could tie them into the reservation process, or you might work them into the menus. Similarly you may find that given a client's goals, you will have a different priority on page content. Maybe the client tells you that no-one is ever able to find this restaurant, so you need to make a How to Get Here page and give it a high priority.
- Organise the Information
With an understanding of what is going into the site, and a clear grasp of how the different elements relate to each other, how users will want to work through them, and how important different sections are, you can now organise the information for the site. This organising involves not just categorizing pages - for example figuring out that 'about the company' fits under an 'about' tab - but even questioning and rearranging the content you've been given. Sometimes you may find that it's better to combine multiple pages, break up one long section, turn some text into a simpler diagramatical representation, or any number of other rearrangements.
Develop a sitemap or plan of how the information will site in a heirarchical way. Although sitemaps are usually just a set of boxes indicating pages, you can work in all sorts of extra information explaining how the site is going to be set up, including things like quick links from the homepage, how different sections might tie in together, and paths a user might take through a sitemap.

After realising there was so much information on the marketplaces, we now believe a wiki is the most effective way to organise it
2 - Think out of the Box
Sites with a reasonable amount of complexity can be rearranged and reorganized many different ways. One site that I've worked on organising and reorganising countless times is FlashDen. I've lost count of the number of times I've looked at that menu and rearranged it. In some instances we just move pages into different sets and groups so that they seem more logical, and in others we've introduced more out-of-the-box thinking.
For example some months ago the menu was becoming overly complex so we removed a whole heap of the more "fluffy" menu items and created a blog that now houses competitions, newsletters, subsite links and other pages that were cluttering up the menu.
Recently we've found we have many of what I call "stragglers" - that is pages without a home in the menu. From an information design point of view, stragglers are terrible - even I can't remember how to get to some of them! The solution this time is to build a wiki system, pipe top level content into the menu behind the scenes, and then use the wiki to house deeper levels of information with its own search, tagging and categorization facilities.
The point of my experiences with FlashDen is that organising information doesn't even necessarily have to be about putting it into menus and submenus. You may find that some information shouldn't be on a site, or that it requires a subsite, or that you need to do something else altogether. With FlashDen I have the advantage that it's been almost 3 years now that I've been looking at the content and still to this day I find new arrangements and solutions.
To be an effective information designer and to find the most optimal solutions often requires thinking out of the box. Of course saying "think outside of the box" is much easier to say than to do! Sometimes we are constrained in a box we can't even see. Some time ago I heard of an experiment where a bunch of jumping bugs were placed in a glass box and over time learnt to jump only so high. When the glass lid was removed the bugs continued jumping the same, restricted height not even realising they could if they wished get out.
So how do you overcome a box you can't see? Simple! With the help of others who aren't restricted by the same issues you have. For complex information designs I will often ask other people for organisational ideas giving them only the raw problem and not my own permutations. Getting say a programmer's ideas or a user's views will often surprise you as their perspectives are completely different from your own and unhindered by the same set ways of thinking.
3 - Keep your structure balanced
When you do organise large sets of information, an obvious question that always arises is how deep or how wide should your navigation be. Depth refers to how many layers of categories and subcategories there are, while width is about how many of each level there are. The trick is to find the balance. If there are too many items on a single level - especially the top level - then you risk confusing the user. On the other hand if a user has to click many levels in, you risk losing them.
A good rule of thumb is to keep the number of options on a given level to 4 - 8. If you have 8 top level items, each with 8 subcategories, and each with 8 sub-subcategories, you'll have enough space for a 512 page site. Of course rarely do things automatically balance out so well. So again you have to be careful that you don't have a heavy side and a light side. For example, on a site with a couple hundred pages, if you put contact up on the top level somewhere, chances are it's not going to have 8 subcategories with 8 sub-subcategories. It's more likely that contact is going to be a pretty simple section - even for a complex site.
On the flip side if you don't put something like contact at the top level, you may get a more balanced depth of information, however you risk not having an important user task completed because it'll be hard to figure out how to find the contact information. A simple solution to this particular problem might be to add 'quick links' where you give a user a few options on the homepage to jump deeper into the structure without navigating the usual way.
4 - Design for Scanning, Skimming and Jumping
I don't know about you, but it is seriously rare that I will ever fully read a webpage. Whether it's to read instructions, terms and conditions, or just regular copy, most of the time I skim, scan and jump. Assuming I'm not the only one who does this, it makes sense to design pages to faciliate this way of consuming information.
Don't wrap key information in bundles of text - highlight it. Don't give users paragraphs on end - break them up with headings, subheadings, bullet points, diagrams, whatever it takes! Think about how a user will use your site and design it to facilitate their use.
A good example of designing for user consumption is on our sister site NETTUTS, a site that as most of you know, publishes tutorials about web development topics. Now on NETTUTS we noticed early on that most people, on first viewing a tutorial skip right through to the end, where they try to find a link to a demo and / or source code so they can decide if the tutorial is worth reading in the first place. Once we realised this, it was a simple matter to add special Demo and Source buttons and place them consistently at the top of the tutorials. This simple adjustment to match our design up to user consumption patterns has gotten us a lot of happy feedback.

PatternTap is a good place to get ideas and see how other people design articles and textual information
5 - Design text that wants to be read
I'm not sure if I'm just getting older, or if spending all my time in front of a screen is just making me picky, but lately it really bugs me when I'm presented with text that doesn't compel me to read it. The aim of a site design is usually to transmit information and most of that is written text, so focusing on displaying it well should be a priority.
Using too-small font sizes, low contrast between text and background colour, or badly using light text on a dark background, are all design sins that we've all been guilty of (me on many on an occasion!) But beyond these, there are other ways that your design can make the visitor actually read. Aim to design such that your layout focuses visitors on the copy and leads them in with titles, subheadings, demarcations, pullquotes, and other techniques for pulling the eye.
6 - Guide the User both across pages and through pages
Earlier I mentioned User Paths - that is set ways that users will tend to traverse a website. Many of these will come about simply by the way people behave, but with planning, you can choose how a user will be guided both through a single page and across multiple pages. Once you know specific paths you can work in visual guides and links to help them move along that path.
For example on FlashDen, when a new user arrives, it is our aim to get them to register, find files, deposit money and then buy those files. So we first give them a summary of the four step process on the homepage, then at each stop there are pointers to direct the user onto the next step. In our next redesign I'm hoping to make this path even more obvious as it's essential to the site working as it should. Note that the path I'm describing is not 4 pages, but 4 tasks. For example finding files might involve the user looking at dozens of pages, but it's one discrete task. User paths don't need to be through set pages, they can just as easily encompass set tasks!

Steve Krug's very worthwhile book!
7 - Don't overcomplicate things
It should go without saying that simple is better for users than complicated. Nonetheless it's all too easy to overcomplicate designs. I know that I often make things seem more complicated so that I have more visual elements on a page to work with (bad Collis, bad Collis!) Another overcomplication sin is using unnecessary words on buttons and calls to action. Steven Krug in his excellent book Don't Make Me Think gives the example of a hypothetical employment site with a button that reads:
- Jobs
- Employment Opportunities
- Jobs-o-rama
One of these is clear, one is reasonably obvious, and one is - well who knows.

Information can be presented as more than just text!
8 - Visualize Information
As designers, we more than most, know the value of a good visual. And there are plenty of opportunities to diagram or visualize some data, concepts or information. This very article as you will remember begins with a very basic diagram of how interface design, information design and aesthetic design relate. These visuals not only break up text, but they are also more memorable and give you an opportunity to bring a page to life.
DoshDosh have an interesting article on information visualization, diagrams and what the author calls infographics that is worth checking out even if it's only to see the brilliant graphic examples.

Analysing paths and goals has never been easier thanks to tools like Analytics
9 - Analyse your Information Design
Information design is one of those things that is hard to get right on the first attempt. So once you've built a site you should be analysing it to see how people use and digest the information, how they behave and where you can improve your design.
A neat tool in this regard is Google Analytics. For example where I mentioned User Paths earlier, Analytics lets you track paths through pages using the Goals feature. You set up a sequence of pages and Analytics will report the %'s of visitors who make it through (and by extension click away) at each point.
Another Analytics feature you can use is search term tracking which lets you see what users are searching for on your own site's search field. Knowing what people are looking for tells you what information needs to be more readily available!
Do you have any Information Design Tips?
Share your own tips and ideas about good information design in the comments!
Update: Check out this article on AListApart
By some odd coincidence AListApart has published a neat article about Information Architecture today - Flexible Fuel: Educating the Client on IA. Go information design :-)
Part of Web Design Week
This week our sister site ThemeForest launched a whole new category of items to sell that are particularly relevant to PSDTUTS readers - namely Photoshop Templates. The new category means you can now design and sell Photoshop designs, as well as regular Web Templates and WordPress themes to earn a side or even full income. And on the flip side if you're coming up short on inspiration, you can get a kickstart by grabbing a PSD design from ThemeForest. So to give the new category the launch it deserves, all this week I'll be bringing you articles and tutorials on web design as part of our PSDTUTS Web Design Week.
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User Comments
( ADD YOURS )Josh December 3rd
GREAT!
( )Collis December 3rd
Meanwhiles speaking of all this information design. Does anyone else find the text too small here on PSDTUTS?
( )John June 28th
I do find it just a tad small, not too small, but just a little bigger would be cool, not for everyone though i realise, hard to suit everyone.
( )Amr December 3rd
very cool and useful article!
( )thanks
Matthew December 3rd
I find the text size easy to read. Although, a text resizer would be a great option.
Great article.
( )Alex Coleman December 3rd
Collis: Personally, I have no problem with the text being this size.
( )Excellent post!
Kevin May December 3rd
I actually wouldn’t mind the text on the site being like 1-2 points bigger. The headers sure do stand out lol. Great article.
( )Amber Weinberg December 3rd
The text is a normal 12px font right? Seems easy enough for me to read on my 13″ macbook and I should be legally blind. (A blind designer? lol) Great tips for information design though
( )Brent December 3rd
I actually was just thinking the same thing. I have never really noticed it until the past two articles you have posted. Maybe because I am focusing solely on the text, it does seem a little too small.
( )Ben Reid December 3rd
@Collis – ( On a Mac ) Firefox looks great but using Safari the text size looks about 10px rather than 12px in FireFox, line spacing for that matter too.
( )Mastergreed December 3rd
Yep, text within posts should be slightly bigger, but it’s OK in case of comments.
And for Odin sake, Collis – you can even make wiki looks awesome, lol…
( )Verne December 3rd
Really enjoyed this article!
I don’t have a problem with the size of the text, but a point or two larger would definitely slow down the blindness-due-to-web-addiction process.
On the topic of font sizes, I find that the section headers could be a size or two smaller. I say this from a organizational-visual-cues standpoint. The section headers within the article seem to be the same size as the article’s main title (if not bigger), suggesting they are all on the same level within the content hierarchy. If we are to visually classify the section headers as sub-sections of the article, then perhaps the headers should be smaller than the article title. Just a thought.
Keep up the great work!
( )Bjorn December 3rd
Great article indeed.
Re: Text size. Seems right to me, but what do I know… my wife enlarges the text on nearly every website she visits. She’s not hard of seeing, just says “if the text is bigger, it’s easier to read!” There’s no concern on her part as to how the site looks with larger text.
( )Mike December 3rd
Another excellent article and one that I am thinking of using educate to clients as well. As they all seem to think that any user who lands on their site will read every single word on the page, left to right and top to bottom.
I don’t have any problem with the text size here but I know a few people who probably would.
( )dave woodruff December 3rd
a comment about text size…
enlarge it using the built in browser function if you want it bigger. If you don’t know how, learn.
( )Nino December 3rd
Aha! VideoHive to join the other selling sites eh?
( )Sounds awesome.
Great Post By the way.
insic December 3rd
this is really nice article. very useful.
( )Nate December 3rd
Text can easily be read so I would say it’s not small at all. Good writeup, thanks!
( )Adam December 3rd
video hive eh…..?
( )Duluoz December 3rd
Good article.
Font size too small – change it through the browser preferences!
It’s what they’re there for.
( )Alex Beltechi December 3rd
Looking forward to seeing how you created that template from theme forrest, Collis! I’m not much of a web designer… ok, well, I’m NOT a web designer, but maybe something from web design week might stick to me too! I’m really enjoying this series btw, and it’s great to have you back.
( )Guer December 3rd
I don’t usually post comments here, but I have to say that when I began reading this article (and actually this entire series) I couldn’t get over how well-timed it was. Our parent company – a very large company – has taken it upon themselves to create our division’s Web site in-house, despite the fact that they not only have no clue how to do so, but no understanding of why they should HAVE a clue.
I would love to see some suggestions for how to successfully preach it all to people who aren’t already in the choir!
( )Dan December 3rd
Collis, I wish you had the time to post more often, this web week stuff is informative and practical. This info is valuable stuff.
( )Alex K December 3rd
I agree with Dan. Collis, your content is amazing. It hits everything head on as to what i would love to learn and explore. No BS approach!
Thanks.
( )Greg December 3rd
Wow, great list!!! I like it a lot!
- Greg
( )Matt Radel December 3rd
Great to see that Don’t Make Me Think is still going strong (I didn’t know it the second edition was out). Great read.
( )Mabuc December 3rd
Thank you for this tips collis. very nice
( )Pepa December 3rd
the font around here is 11px Verdana. +1 or 2 px might help
( )Fabryz December 3rd
Awesome =D
( )Tagged on favs
Joefrey Mahusay December 3rd
This tips is very useful. Thanks Collis!
( )Bryan Grajales December 3rd
Yep.. Collis.. when u have soem problems with ur eyes even if ur using glasses the text is small… Kind of hard to read because theres like alot of information and text.. that u get lost while ur trying to read…
=]
( )Cain December 3rd
Use one of those text resizing sliders Collis.
( )DollaradoDredz December 3rd
Great Tut,
( )Just what I needed to read tonight..Im working on an interface design and this helped put a few things into perspective.. I luv this site!
Honour Chick December 3rd
great information
( )BogDinamita December 3rd
Maybe increase the text size, but no more than 1- 1.5 pts. Other than that this rocks, and have been missin you Collis, you da man
( )Jennifer Farley December 3rd
Terrific article. The tip I give to my students is to simplify, simplify, simplify. The design is complete when you can’t take any more AWAY from it and still have it make sense and useable.
( )Stefan December 3rd
“I’m not sure if I’m just getting older, […]. Using too-small font sizes […]”
Nice you mention this … PSDTuts uses 10px. This *may* be a *little* to tiny, don’t you think so? I need 14-16px to be comfortable.
( )Dave December 3rd
VideoHive …Sneeked that one in
Great work Collis
http://blog.videohive.net/site-news/videohive-is-launching-soon/
( )Marc December 3rd
great one!!!! Very good and clear examples.
( )agustin ruiz December 3rd
very useful, thanks! this web design week comes in really handy
( )Timothy December 3rd
Very nice. And very useful. Delicioused
( )Tom Ross December 4th
Collis: Great set of articles so far this week. I personally would love to see what it would look like with a text size 1 or 2 pts bigger on PSDTUTS, I find myself skimming the text here sometimes simply because the text is so tiny compared to the headings. A resizer option would probably work best for people though.
( )Thomas van Zuijlen December 4th
Hey, nice article in a great series, but shouldn’t that be “Think OUTSIDE the box” (i.e. outside the regularly tread paths) rather than “Think out of the box”?
( )Chad December 4th
Thanks for the article. I’m curious, where do all these web design blogs get their content (articles + beautiful pictures)??? I’m lost how each blog has unique articles with all these related pictures. I’ve tried Googling about this, got nothing much but generic article repo sites with no pictures.
( )Andre December 4th
wicked
( )Gary Smith December 4th
Collis,
Good information and mostly common sense, as is practically all good advice.
( )Cristiano Diniz da Silva December 4th
Great Article. Hardly enough we think about the text while creating an design and when you place a text on the already done site, some times it seems to fall a part.
This sure helps.
( )Jessica December 4th
I just bought “Dont Make Me Think” recently, and its a great book…
( )Jhay December 4th
This is a great article! Thanks for sharing
( )Maicon December 4th
A lot of useful information! I have used some of this even don’t thinking about.
( )Tom Altman December 5th
Thank you – this is a fantastic article.
( )Abdo December 5th
cool, thanks
( )Rick Hecker December 5th
Great article! Thanks, Collis!
( )AFRIX December 5th
every thing what i need
( )http://afrix99.deviantart.com/
Scott M. December 6th
I’ve been looking at “Don’t Make Me Think” for a month now trying to decide if i want to buy it. I’m probably going to do so now!
Here’s a tip that i think is useful. My website is a small photography portfolio site, and the links at the top were originally supposed to be an image map (good font, etc…) but for some reason it didn’t seem right to me. there was no life in it. I found this great tutorial (maybe on nettuts, i don’t remember) on how to blur menu items using CSS only, and now the links are much easier to see. Every menu item except the one that is hovered over is blurred, while the one remains sharp. This makes it easy for the reader to see what they are clicking on.
Just my two cents.
( )madman December 6th
http://sourceofknowledges.blogspot.com
( )madman December 6th
GREAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
( )madman December 6th
the usefull tips!!!!!
( )madman December 6th
the nice website…
( )http://sourceofknowledges.blogspot.com
Takumi86 December 9th
Great informative details as always from PSDTuts
( )Javier Centeno December 9th
Great tutorial!
@Scott: Do buy the book. It’s worth the money and it’s not that expensive. Go to a Barnes and Noble and read a couple of chapters. You can actually read the entire book in a few hours.
( )David December 9th
So glad you asked about the font size.
I personally find it Way too small. I try and keep my monitor set back a couple feet to alleviate eye strain, and find myself squinting to read the text on this site (and have 20/20 vision). I think with the higher resolutions and bigger monitors these days, a minimum of 12-13 px is really optimal to account for the lowest common denominator users on most sites.
I think bumping it to 13 would be great. I have yet to ever hear anyone complain about type being too easy to read
.
( )Farid Hadi December 10th
Great article. The more I read, the more I’m appreciating this web design series. Really great work. Thanks!
( )Xtream December 11th
Very useful article.
Mozilla User can expand the size by Ctrl + Mouser Scroll (UP and down)
http://www.priteshgajjar.com
( )Rirate October 30th
Thanks for the information! It is very interesting for many.
( )Denver Web Design December 13th
Great tips. Don’t Make me Think was a good read.
And if you truly want to be a better marketer at the same time, look into split testing / conversion tracking. If you can test two small (or big) changes against each other, you will find out which one worked better for your site. In the end, it really is about more visitors, more conversions, more $$
( )Marcin Petruszka December 15th
Great article.
( )As for the text size – your site renders at 11px Verdana in Safari and I’d like it to be at least 12px. Of course I know that the great majority of your readers know of the possibility of making the text bigger using their browser’s capabilities. But… maybe it’s me and the ppl i know but I have to say that almost none of those ppl that are not involved in web develompent or IT or computers in general, knows that they CAN resize the text, not to mention of HOW to do it.
So I’d say – make the text bigger a bit and if some like it smaller they sure know how to make it so
And there are the visually impaired – all of their organizations ask us developers/designers to make the copy text 16px. Otherwise the browsers preferences make no sense – the site should render at 16px but the designers make text much smaller only for the end users to make it bigger again – endless loop.
Just my 5 cents.
rashid December 31st
very informative
( )Alex January 22nd
Coolis, you are doing great tut´s, thx to u
ps: to your question:
Does anyone else find the text too small here on PSDTUTS?
Yes, i find the text too small to read. I tried to zoom in a little with firefox, but that´s not a good solution^^
( )I would be happy if the text-size could be a little bigger
Kevin January 29th
Once again, very usefull, thanks !
( )Creative Web Design February 20th
Very useful tips. I especially agree with tip 5 about the text, you want the information on your site to be read that is what it is there for to provide information to the user. Like you send you don’t want the type face to be to small and the contrast low between the text and background. Make important information bigger, bold or in a different colour and break your text up with images or icons, one thing i hate is when you visit a site that has streams of text and no images, you want to make the text as interesting as you can and make it complement the design of your site and not ruin it.
( )Listorbit March 20th
Great graphics presentation.
( )Synergy Informatics July 8th
Great article…
I had read lot of articles on same topic earlier.. but yours is really good & to point…
Thanks for this….
Cheers
( )Krunal
Synergy Informatics
Cheap Joomla Websites - Josh July 14th
Very thorough! Good visual examples. A good point on text that visitors will want to read.
( )pom website design July 18th
Really good article, thanks for sharing these should come in handy i really like great examples.
Thanks,
Luke
( )Luke July 18th
Great post, thanks for sharing really like the textual explainations.
Thanks,
Luke
( )