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UX Design Practice Verticals

User Experience Design

The Boersma Assertion

In a 2004 essay titled, Big IA is Now UX, Peter Boersma asserted that information architecture was a practice among many that contributed to the effort of user experience design. I refer to this claim as the Boersma Assertion. The Boersma assertion implies that the complete practice of user experience design overlaps or entails some aspect of every form of professional practice in the design and development of computing interfaces. However, Boersma’s assertion never included an argument that explained where the overlap of UX design occurs throughout each practice. Since the publication of Big IA is Now UX, no supporting argument has been proposed.

Finding Information Architecture by Investigating UX

In a November 2011 column titled, The T-Model and Strategies for Hiring IA Practitioners – Part 2, I revealed the overlap of user experience design across multiple practices. To explain the UX design skills that can be expected from a maturing IA practitioner, I needed to modify the grouping of practices found in Boersma’s original proposal. I then produced a diagram that contained the specific areas of interest for each practice vertical and as a consequence provided evidence of how user experience design overlaps the first three tiers of each practice.

This segmentation is the first attempt within the IA community to validate the Boersma assertion.

More importantly, while the proposed segmentation reveals a great deal about the domain of user experience design and related practices, it ultimately helps to ground further the positioning of the practice of information architecture and its function.

Practical Uses of the UX Design Practice Verticals

References

Boersma, Peter. “T-model: Big IA is Now UX.” November 6, 2004. Retrieved December 2, 2011.

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