Findable vs Discoverable
Categories: Information Architecture, Online Resources, External Articles, Donna Mauer
Tags: findability, ia
A reflection from Donna M post Findability vs discoverability.
I fully agree about the importance of distinguishing between making something findable and making it discoverable. The key here is that web sites nowadays starts to be rich information spaces, with a complex user interaction and a heavy load of fresh content.
While the amount of information increases, making anything simply findable could become impossible or economically not viable. In other words, maintaining a top down ia, a taxonomy, it’s an hard task.
On the other side, a folksonomy, though naturally less precise, invites users to investigate, to surf, to discover site content in an enjoyable way.
As said by Donna, discover is:
“To notice or learn, especially by making an effort”
This definition highlights the learning aspect, rather than the locating aspect. It puts the information task in a broader context of learning rather than focusing on it as a task in itself. It broadens the task into something that could encompass a lot of small ‘finding’ tasks.
In the same category:
