There Is Such a Thing as a Mobile Context… and There Is Evidence to Prove it

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“There is no mobile web”, said Stephen Hay. Agreed. “There is no mobile context”, added Stephanie Rieger, And Jeff Eaton, and Karen McGrane. Or is there? I, too, believe there’s no single mobile context. However, when researching top tasks for one of the four University Medical Centres in the Netherlands, we discovered that that people who visit the hospital’s site from their home, office or medical practice, have different top tasks compared to people who are either on their way to or in the hospital for an appointment or visit. This not only demands a mobile-optimised or responsive site, but it also warrants mobile-specific or responsive content. I’d like to make the case for content to not only shift or change priority, based on (mobile or other) context, but perhaps to even change altogether. How would you deal with this in content strategy and content creation?

Transcript of There Is Such a Thing as a Mobile Context… and There Is Evidence to Prove it

There Is Such a Thing as a Mobile Context and There Is

Evidence to Prove itHelsinki, Friday 13 September 2013

Christiaan W. Lustig, senior consultant and strategist at Sabel Onlinemention me on Twitter: @ChristiaanWLstg

Photo by Acid Pix — http://www.flickr.com/photos/acidpix/5721934108/

“There is no mobile web.”— Stephen Hay

Photo by Indigo Skies Photography — http://www.flickr.com/photos/indigoskies/6523275513/

Photo by Rob Spots — http://www.flickr.com/photos/93388157@N07/9000563446/

Photo by UWW ResNET — http://www.flickr.com/photos/uwwresnet/6280880034/

Site stats are corrupted by how easy — or how hard! —

it is to find your content.@ChristiaanWLstg ;-)

Photo by Colin the Scott — http://www.flickr.com/photos/colinthescot/9480224893/

4-6 top tasks20% of votes40-60 bottom tasks = 20% of votes

Top task research for one of the 4 major University Medical Centres in the Netherlands

Photo by Yvo Pluymakers — http://www.flickr.com/photos/yvo-pluymakers/3743991184/

In which situation do you most often visit the UMC website? a. From homeb. From my office or practice, or from my

work place in the hospitalc. On my way to the hospitald. In the hospital for an appointment, visit or

admissionPhoto by Andrea Wren — http://www.flickr.com/photos/missus_mop/242292562/

In the hospital for an appointment, visit or admission

On my way to the hospital

From my office or practice, or from my work place in the hospital

From home

0 500 1000 1500 2000

208

7

615

1875

What does this mean?

Photo by Luke Redmond — http://www.flickr.com/photos/lukeredmond/2730035283/

‘Static context’# task c. % c. tasks

1 Treatment (how specific illnesses and conditions are treated) 4.6% 1.2%

2 Disease/condition (what does an illness involve) 8.9% 2.3%

3Contact details (address, e-mail, site phone numbers, departments, specialist fields)

13.2% 3.5%

4Viewing and updating my records (via the patient portal: personal details, treatment plans, results; notes, questionnaires)

16.7% 4.7%

5 Making, viewing, changing and cancelling appointments 19.9% 5.8%

6Scientific research at UMC Utrecht (results, publications, facts and figures, etc.)

22.9% 7.0%

7 Referrals procedure (regular, urgent) 25.9% 8.1%

‘Mobile context’# task c. % c. tasks

1 Making, viewing, changing and cancelling appointments 4.1% 1.2%

2 Admission (what can I expect before, during and after admission?) 8.3% 2.3%

3 Disease/condition (what does an illness involve) 12.2% 3.5%

4 Waiting times (appointment, examination, treatment) 16.2% 4.7%

5 Treatment (how specific illnesses and conditions are treated) 19.7% 5.8%

6Examination and diagnosis (how is a diagnosis made, what does an examination involve, when do I get the result)

23.0% 7.0%

7 Treatment teams (the people who are involved in a treatment) 25.9% 8.1%

# ‘static’ ‘mobile’ diff.

1Treatment (how specific illnesses and conditions are treated)

Making, viewing, changing and cancelling appointments +4

2 Disease/condition (what does an illness involve)Admission (what can I expect before, during and after admission?)

+28

3Contact details (address, e-mail, site phone numbers, departments, specialist fields)

Disease/condition (what does an illness involve) -1

4Viewing and updating my records (via the patient portal: personal details, treatment plans, results; notes, questionnaires)

Waiting times (appointment, examination, treatment) +15

5Making, viewing, changing and cancelling appointments

Treatment (how specific illnesses and conditions are treated)

-4

6Scientific research at UMC Utrecht (results, publications, facts and figures, etc.)

Examination and diagnosis (how is a diagnosis made, what does an examination involve, when do I get the result)

+4

7 Referrals procedure (regular, urgent)Treatment teams (the people who are involved in a treatment)

+15

Photo by Jack Amick — http://www.flickr.com/photos/spyker3292/6345953361/

1. What does my condition involve?2. Which treatment is usually

prescribed?3. How do I find a specialist doctor?

Photo by Jürg Stuker — http://www.flickr.com/photos/jstuker/9234603508/

1. Where do I need to report?2. What might I expect during admission?3. Are there any delays with my

appointment?

Photo by Nathan Meijer — http://www.flickr.com/photos/npmeijer/8272087462/

“How do you know a user’s actual context?”

Photo by Chris — http://www.flickr.com/photos/chrisinplymouth/7278110908/

Context ≠ device

Task + location + network + device ≈ context

Photo by Haags Uitburo — http://www.flickr.com/photos/haagsuitburo/7526290286/

@ChristiaanWLstg

Location

NetworkPhoto by Phil Dean — http://www.flickr.com/photos/phild41/6304672549/

How to adapt your content strategy?

Photo by Reuben Stanton — http://www.flickr.com/photos/absent/2157057475/

Content choreography

Photo by Mr T. in DC — http://www.flickr.com/photos/mr_t_in_dc/4541694713/

“One well-structured flexible reusable set of content that can be published to many places.”— Karen McGrane

Photo by Webdagene — http://www.flickr.com/photos/webdagene/6149952576/

“You need human judgment to decide what actually matters.”

Photo by sasa.mutic — http://www.flickr.com/photos/sas5/5418886939/

Monitor, optimise, test, repeat…Photo by International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons — http://www.flickr.com/photos/30835738@N03/7936242930/

Photo by Marco Bellucci — http://www.flickr.com/photos/marcobellucci/3534516458/

Kiitoksia paljon!

@ChristiaanWLstgChristiaanLustig.nl