Information Technology Reference
In-Depth Information
Fig. 4.5 Participative Methodology for marketing Web sites
and how to promote the Web site. In addition, this stage involves developing a
detailed schedule of activities required in order to carry out the development of the
Web site in an ef
cient and effective manner.
Analysis (SA3) In this stage, users, analysts, and designers expand their
findings in
enough detail to indicate exactly what will and will not be built into the Web site
design, and to add, improve, and correct the initial Web site requirements if they are
not meeting the users
'
Task Analysis (SE3.1): This
step will define the purpose of developing the Web site, the type of users, the type
of work users will do with the Web site, users
needs and wishes. Analysis
'
goals, and their activities.
Design (SA4) The design stage will utilize the requirement speci
cation from the
previous stage to de
ne: (1) what the Web site is; (2) how the Web site will work;
(3) user involvement
in decision-making; (4) future users; and (5) usability
requirements. Design
Usability Goals (SE4.1): This step will allow users (end
users and client
customer users), analysts, and designers (internal and external) to
-
con
cient, effective, safe, useful, easy to learn,
easy to remember, easy to use and to evaluate, practical, and visible and that it
provides job satisfaction. Design
rm that the Web site design is ef
HCI (SE4.2): This step will allow users (end
users and client
customer users), analysts, and designers (internal and external) to
identify that the Web site design is practical. There are many speci
-
c issues that
need to be taken into consideration when designing Web site pages, such as text
style, fonts, layout, graphics, and color. Design
Navigation (SE4.3): This step will
de
ne the speci
c navigation paths through the Web site among the entities to
 
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