This document discusses responsive design and its importance for websites. It defines responsive design as a website that automatically adjusts based on the device being used. The document outlines the benefits of responsive design such as cost savings, improved user experience, and scalability. It provides tips for adopting responsive design including starting with the smallest device and focusing on key content. Examples of responsive design implementations at universities are also presented.
2. 22Make it responsive!
What's it all about?
Topics to discuss today;
• TERMINAL Who?
• Mobility Design
• ‘Responsive Design’…What Does It Mean For You?
• Why bother? The Stats.
• Why bother? Benefits of Responsive Design
• Responsive Design & Your Content Strategy
• Managing a Responsive Design Project & the
Project Phases
• Tips for Adopting Responsive Design
• Some examples
3. • Web Content Management Specialists
• Top 30 in Content Management Companies (Real Story Group)
• Drive towards supporting the best Digital Engagement Experience
• 300 clients
• Higher Education (130+), Commercial & Government
• Main growth US & Canada - recently Australia & New Zealand
• International reach:
• UK, Ireland, Middle East, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand
TERMINAL Who?
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We make it really easy for
organisations to deliver and manage
very large, highly devolved, multilingual
RESPONSIVE Websites, Mobile sites
Intranets and Extranets
5. • The Future Isn't About Mobile; It's About Mobility*
• It means, trying to eliminate the need for a
different design and development project every
time a new device comes out in the marketplace.
• Responsive is about future proofing your content
as much as possible for mobile devices
• One CMS – output to one/multiple site(s)
• And other channels (social etc.)
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Mobility Design
(*Source: David Armano - Harvard Business Review -
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/07/the_future_isnt_about_mobile_its.html)
6. 66Make it responsive!
„Responsive Design‟…What Does It Mean For You?
• As the user switches from one device to another,
and from one place to another, the website should
automatically ‘respond’.
7. 77Make it responsive!
„Responsive Design‟…What Does It Mean For You?
• Responsive web design is not mobile design.
• Responsive design is happening; it is not another
trend!
• It’s evolving….. responding not just to devices
• It’s not just a sausage dog
– http://rsd.joshemerson.co.uk/
9. Where are people using mobile devices?
• 84% at home
• 80% during downtime throughout the day
• 76% waiting in lines for appointments
• 69% while shopping
• 64% at work
• 62% while watching TV
• 47% during commute in to work
• Higher Ed Audiences are all the same!
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Why bother? The Stats.
(*Source:Luke Wroblewski. "Mobile Context Revisited."
http://www.lukew.com/ff/entry.asp?1333)
10. Make it responsive! 10
What is Responsive Design?
10
Source: http://viljamis.com/blog/2012/adaptive-vs-responsive-whats-the-difference.php
What is Responsive Design Today?
This is just the start! Still evolving
- Responding to more inputs
(hyper personalisation,
localisation, history`)
- Automatically matching
content to your activity
11. Examples
• Boston Globe
• Smashing Magazine
• Lancaster University
• Andersson-Wise
• http://www.sacredheart.edu/
• http://www.liv.ac.uk/
• http://drake.edu/
• http://www.port.ac.uk/
• http://www.mi.mun.ca/
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Responsive Examples
12. • Costs more initially but less in long run
• Allows you to re-use content and use the same
digital assets, saving time and development
costs.
• Same URLs for every device, improving SEO
Performance
• Unified analytics
• Enhanced Customer Experience – not just based
on device (can include location etc.)
• Scalability
• Unified Codebase
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Why bother? Benefits of Responsive Design
13. What Does Responsive Design Mean for Your
Content Strategy?
• Responsive design is not about getting all your
content in front of the reader.
• Content audit - Put your website on a diet.
• For many websites, only about 10% of a page is
essential content; putting that essential content
onto mobile is key for mobile visitors.*
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Responsive Design & Your Content Strategy
(*Source: UX MAGAZINE http://uxmag.com/articles/a-primer-on-responsive-design)
14. Approach;
• More agile approach – ‘Think agile vs. waterfall’.
• A CMS focusses on efficiency of the content
management aspects – not the design or
content aspects
Project Phases;
• Identifying Cross Functional Teams on both sides
• Research & Strategy
• UX - User Experience Planning
• Wireframing and Design
• Development
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Managing a Responsive Design Project & the Project Phases
15. Understand your breakpoints
• What are the key breakpoints? What do major
templates look like at each breakpoint? What do
the header and footer look like?
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Project Phases - UX - User Experience Planning
16. • Only web developers resize screens to show
their cool CSS - until we have very stretchy
phones
• You can cut down complexity by assuming:
• Most people use tablets in the same way
• Tablets = Desktop (landscape)
• Mobile = phone
• Can really focus on two options
• Desktop (but make sure touch works)
• Mobile (plus respond to location)
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Quick Hint….. Cutting down complexity
Analysis by UK partner Reading Room www.readingroom.com
17. Timeline and Budget Impact
• Redesign takes 20-30% longer than a desktop-
only site
• Reduces on-going maintenance costs
• Major milestones are unchanged, but a few new
ones are added (Breakpoint sign offs are key)
• Bulk of time increase is in development
• And testing….
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Project Phases - Development
18. • Remember the complexity
• Possible “media explosion” for all your
variants for various output devices
• Multiple layouts for each break point.
• Leads to growth for testing
• But end result is “one system”
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Project Phases - Development
http://www.port.ac.uk/courses/accounting-economics-and-finance/
19. 1) Plan for a change management phase and gain
stakeholder buy-in.
2) Start with the smallest device you plan to
design for – ‘stay simple’
3) Focus on key-content.
4) Remember, content that is hidden with CSS still
gets downloaded
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Tips for Adopting Responsive Design
20. 5) Testing - Two Options
• Test on as many real devices as possible and
from as many OS as possible - Apple family (iOS),
Android, Windows Phone, others to consider:
Blackberry, Nokia, Kindle Fire
• Mobile Emulators
Plenty of free ones around - Two quick & easy
browser based emulators TERMINALFOUR like:
http://www.mobilephoneemulator.com
http://www.responsinator.com
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Tips for Adopting Responsive Design
21. • It’s all about content
• Where to cut off long articles…
• Long titles, Content ordering (when rearranging)
• Context
• Slow loading sites…. Especially on slower links
• It might not be shown but it is loaded!
• Just converting menus to links won’t always work
• It’s not just about device rendering
• Remember the device features
• Smooth, performing, user experience
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Some “Gotchas” to look out for
22. • Outline of project
• “This wasn’t just a re-skin of an existing site we
wanted to completely re-make the website
based on audience needs and business aims” –
James Mellor, Project Manager
• Phases
1. External Top level pages – complete
2. Most visited pages (courses) - complete
3. All other sites – in progress
• Design by ClearLeft (UK)
• Initial Research by New City Media (Blacksburg VA)
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A worked Example: Portsmouth University, England
http://www.port.ac.uk
23. • We wanted our site to be
responsive and for us this meant
really focusing on our brand
messages and then incorporating
this as much as possible into our
content and with a responsive site
the challenge for us was always to
be brief and think mobile first. We
also went for a show not tell
approach so throughout our
course pages you will see small
chunks of copy, with photos of
student and tutor testimonials as
well as video wherever possible.
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Portsmouth University: The course Challenge
Rethought Subject
areas and cut them
down from 30 to 17.
Video commissioned
for each subject area
and selected
individual courses
http://www.port.ac.uk
24. • Selected info directed
to appropriate part of
page & reused across
multiple pages
• E.g. Common open day
• Common subject area
video
• System automatically
displays additional
information if available
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De-constructed course information into component parts
http://www.port.ac.uk
25. • Using Modernizer for feature detection & zepto instead
of jQuery
• Serves only correct size image for device in use
• Over 300 courses – each with separate image
• 3 variants of each image for responsive site
• Image, image-400, image-800 –
• Smallest always loaded first and JavaScript decides if others
are needed
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Some Complexity Introduced
320 courses x3 = 960 images uploaded just for the
header images, with potentially 320x9 for 3 unique
images in the slideshow is potentially 3,840 images
uploaded for the courses pages alone….. (did get
some reuse across course images)
http://www.port.ac.uk
26. • Content authors able to focus
on quality of content and
message
• Content appears as needed
• Reuse is automatic
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End Result: Fully responsive site with emphasis on courses..
http://www.port.ac.uk/courses/art-and-design/ba-hons-fashion-and-textile-design/
27. • Three main methods
• User Satisfaction (tricky)
• Usability Testing
• Task completion
• Option Feedback
• Analytics
• Device usage (desktop/mobile/browser)
• Retention time (mobile users way more “bouncy”)
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Measuring Success: University of Liverpool
http://www.liv.ac.uk
28. 1. Great design
• Factor in the situations YOU want to
respond do for optimal user impact
2. Well Planned Content strategy
• Target key messages to respond to
appropriate user (and appropriate content
length)
3. Great CMS
• Or one that doesn’t “get in the way” and
ideally supports your great ideas
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The three key requirements for success
29. Specsavers: Mobile Site as
opposed to app
• Find store & book
appointment
29
We Started with Separate Mobile Channels
http://m.specsavers.co.uk/ http://www.qub.ac.uk/sites/mobile/
• Queens University
Belfast
• jQuery mobile site
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Responsive Example: Marine Institute: Memorial University
http://www.mi.mun.ca/
Quick “responsive approach” added at last minute
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Responsive Example: Sacred Heart University
http://www.sacredheard.edu
Faculty & Staff directory auto populated
Using External content Syncer
http://www.sacredheart.edu/facultystaffdirectory/
32. Make it responsive! 32
Responsive Example: University College Cork
http://www.ucc.ie
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Responsive Example: Lancaster University
http://www.lancs.ac.uk
Winner of
EduStyle award
for best responsive
design
Also use CampusM app for
enhanced student experience
34. Make it responsive! 34
Responsive Example: Liverpool University
http://www.liv.ac.uk
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Responsive Example: University of Portsmouth
http://www.port.ac.uk
Over 300 separate courses – auto
populated and listed using various criteria
http://www.port.ac.uk/courses/accounting-
economics-and-finance/
37. Thank You
David Miller, COO
David.miller@terminalfour.com
twitter.com/terminalfour
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Editor's Notes
Responsive web design is not mobile design but an approach to tackling the ever increasing challenge of delivering the best experience to your users, via the extensive list of devices and browsers.
Subset of Adaptive Design referring to Layout only. Coined by Ethan MarcotteResponsive Design = Fluid Layouts (Grids, Images and media Queries)Adaptive Layout = Fixed widths with breakpoints using media queriesAdaptive Design = Either Responsive Design, Adaptive Layouts or a combination of the two along with Progressive Enhancement (using Javascript to determine device capabilities and changing the UX based on these) eg. Using GPS if available to show directions, checking telephone capabilities etc..
Allows you to re-use content and use the same digital assets, saving time and development costs.Same URLs for every device, improving SEO Performance—A responsive design approach allows all views from all devices to register to a single URLEnhanced Customer Experience—Customers will experience optimal messaging, design, and function based on the specific device being used.Scalability—New devices can be accommodated much more easily than an app-centric approach.Unified Codebase—With responsive design, one set of changes is made into a single codebase and marketing messaging is automatically updated across all devices.
Responsive design is about putting the right content in users’ hands according to the context of their interaction.How can you deliver only what is absolutely necessary at the appropriate points in the user’s journey based on the device. A change in the way you plan and design experiences. Content audit, Put your website on a diet - Gedling Borough Council example – after redesign, they had 1700+, down to 700
Responsive design is different from the way traditional development teams are used to approaching digital projectsweb pages that respond to different devicesdelivers quality experience to desktop computers,netbooks, tablets, and mobile phonesusing new css techniques, fluid grids, flexible images and media queries
instead of building a web framework and fitting content to it, content comes first.
Responsive design is a little different from the way people are used to approaching digital projects. It’s important to plan for responsive design at the very beginning of the design process, not just at the implementation phase.Use stats to help understand how content is being consumed, by who, why, what content is missing. Terrible for performance. One of the biggest challenges of creating responsive web designs is the balancing act of delivering a full experience while still maintaining a snappy user experience across the board.