/
I'd appreciate any ideas or examples of something similar.
Thanks!
Lacey Kruger
Senior Information Architect
Convio, Inc.
lkru...@convio.com mailto:lkru...@convio.com
512.652.7801
Convio. Move People. Internet software and services for fundraising,
constituent relationship and donor
if you're
interested:
http://www.convio.com/our-portfolio/our-projects/website-redesign-jewish-national-fund.html
http://www.convio.com/our-portfolio/our-projects/online-store-redesign-unicef.html
Lacey Kruger
Senior Information Architect
Convio, Inc.
lkru...@convio.com
512.652.7801
done forms in the past where the email is all that is
required upfront. Then, once they've supplied that, we ask for name,
and other applicable fields. The idea is that once we have the email,
we can communicate with the person - all the rest is just nice to
have.
Lacey Kruger
Senior Interactive
with non-profits and sometimes
participants show up b/c of the cause and not necessarily the
incentive. I'd be interested to know if they work as well for
others.
Lacey Kruger
Senior Interactive Architect
Convio, Inc.
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Posted
In my opinion, each persona should represent an audience group for the
website distinguishable by different sets of needs from your site. So,
for example, someone interested in volunteering has different needs
that someone looking for a news update. That being said, someone with
a disability isn't
I agree that it largely depends on the client personality and their
expectations. I work with non-profits and the report is often
something they need to justify the costs. That being said, I realize
that all relevant stakeholders won't read a long, drawn-out report.
My preference is to do the