| DAY ONE — March 21
Where
beauty and brains come together. Successful
Web design is a marriage of design and technology, a combination
of aesthetic vision and well-crafted code. On opening day
of Web Design World, you'll explore both. |
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| 9:00 a.m. |
Keynote:
The Nine Pillars of Successful Web Teams
Jesse James Garrett, Adaptive Path
Every Web team has its own take on dividing up roles and
responsibilities and implementing processes for design and development.
Formal titles, job descriptions, and reporting structures can vary
widely. But the best teams have one important thing in common: their
team structure and processes cover a full range of distinct competencies
necessary for success.
Jesse James Garrett has developed a model for defining these best practices in his widely adopted Nine Pillars Of Successful Web Teams.
Jesse will explain how you can quickly and clearly identify which team
members have which of these competencies, and where these competencies
come into play in the design and development processes.
This session will help you develop your own strategy to ensure that
you aren't missing any competencies that are essential to your site's
success.
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| 10:15 a.m. |
The
Marriage of Presentation and Structure
Molly E. Holzschlag
and Dave Shea
You hear it all the time in
the world of HTML and CSS: separate structure from presentation.
That's true in theory, but in the real world, presentation and
structure are often strongly related. Without understanding
the relationship of a document's structure to the style sheets
that enable you to create beautiful designs, you're at a disadvantage
when attempting to resolve conflicts, use advanced CSS selectors
effectively, and gain better control over every aspect of your
work. Learn the right way to marry presentation and structure
— and get the power you need to move your CSS designs
forward in creative, compelling ways. |
| 2:00 p.m. |
No More Tables: CSS Layout Techniques
Douglas Bowman
Creating complex multi-column layouts used to mean having to nest multiple HTML tables — a technique that's cumbersome and introduces accessibility and compatibility problems. You've heard it's possible to eliminate those layout tables by using Cascading Style Sheets, but you haven't made the jump yet. In this session, CSS guru Doug Bowman will walk you through the steps of a real-world conversion. Learn the advantages of doing away with tables, and see how to avoid common pitfalls. |
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Design
Track
Inspiration and insight. In the Web world,
design isn't just about making pages that look good. You also
need to create effective, intuitive user interfaces. You need
to take global cultural differences into account. And you need
to consider the growing number of Web users who have physical
challenges. In the Design track, our expert speakers share insights
and techniques for interface design, accessibility, global design
challenges, and more. Take your design skills — and your
sites — to the next level. |
| 11:30 a.m. |
How
to Put the Design Back into Web Design
Bob
Slote
Many visual designers feel that they've been pushed
aside and are now relegated to a "paint by numbers" role,
coloring wire frames created by a user-interface design team.
In this session, you’ll learn some tips on how to work
with the UI team. Design veteran Bob Slote will talk about why
writing a creative brief shouldn’t be torture. He'll also
cover some fundamental design issue, including using color harmonies;
Gestalt theory in design; and using typography to all tell a
story about brand, value propositions, voice and vision. This
is a session that just might bring the two teams together. |
| 3:15 p.m. |
Effective Blog Design: Speed, Accessibility, Transparency, and Clarity
DL Byron
Good content is a requirement on any Web log, but there¹s a lot more to a
good blog than just the posts. Standard templates are fine, but there are
many reasons why you¹ll want to customize and enhance with a unique layout.
Proper blog design can insure your branding, position, and message are
optimally projected. Beautiful, cross-device, navigable, and fast loading
sites that search engines love are a must. This session will cover what top
bloggers do to get the best of all possible worlds. |
| 4:30 p.m. |
Interface
Design Insights: The Building of Basecamp
Jason
Fried
Your visitors and customers don't care about back-end technologies,
server platforms, "scalability," or "robustness"
— they care about the interface and what it allows them
to do. They want something that's easy to use, useful, quick,
flexible, and respectful of their busy lives and hurried tasks.
In this session, you'll journey inside the mind of one of the
lead interface designers of the popular Basecamp Web-based project
management tool. Learn practical interface-design tips and techniques,
and get an inside look at the design philosophies behind a product
that's been called "astonishingly elegant." |
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Coding
Track
Coding the next-generation Web. If you're like
most Web designers, you're already using Cascading Style Sheets
(CSS) to specify typographic attributes. It's time to take the
next step. It's now practical to use CSS to create menus and
other interface elements, and to replace awkward tables for
page layout. In the Coding track, you'll learn modern markup
techniques from designers and CSS gurus who have helped to blaze
the trail. Say goodbye to awkward workarounds, and learn how
to create sites that are fast, reliable, compatible, and gorgeous. |
| 11:30 a.m. |
Creating
Beautiful Interfaces with CSS
Douglas Bowman
Drop-down menus and sophisticated interface elements have traditionally
been implemented using JavaScript and kludgy coding workarounds
that often don't work. It's increasingly practical to deliver
rich, beautiful, functional interfaces using semantic markup
and CSS. Learn how modern markup can deliver great Web interfaces
that are fast and reliable |
| 3:15 p.m. |
XML:
What a Designer Needs to Know
Joe Marini
XML is becoming more common in mainstream Web development every
day. In this session, you'll learn how XML works, what it's
good for (and not good for), and what you need to know about
it as a designer to put it to good use. You'll see how XML can
be used to separate content from layout, drive dynamic interfaces,
and be transformed for display in different ways. |
| 4:30 p.m. |
From
HTML to XHTML
Molly E. Holzschlag
XHTML is, according to the World Wide Web Consortium, "the
next step in the evolution of the Internet." By migrating
to XHTML, you can gain XML's benefits while retaining strong
backward and future compatibility. Whether you're ready to make
the move to XHTML or you're just curious about the differences
between HTML and XHTML, this session is for you. Learn the rationale
behind XHTML, how to author it properly, how well it's supported
across today's software, and how to get started using it today. |
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DAY TWO —
March 22
Strategy and usability. Should
you use Flash on your site? Will a blog increase your traffic?
How can you error-proof your site? And how can you tailor
your site to your visitors' preferences? Web designers ask
themselves these and similar questions every day, and our
experts are here to answer them. They'll help you make the
strategic decisions that will maximize your Web budget, and
answer the critical usability questions that will make for
satisfied visitors and customers. |
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| 9:00 a.m. |
Keynote
— Web Redesign: Workflow Redefined Kelly
Goto
Streamlined budgets and reduced timelines have created a need
for a more flexible, results-oriented workflow. With increased
audience expectations, focusing on the user experience is mandatory.
Learn how to integrate an iterative development strategy into
your existing workflow, and see how to create a strategic roadmap
and utilize online tools to assist in measuring success. No
one knows or teaches workflow and Web project management like
Kelly Goto, author of the best-selling book Web Redesign: Workflow
that Works, now in its second edition. |
| 4:30 p.m. |
Deconstructing...
You! Kelly
Goto, Steve Mulder
, Jim Heid
Top Web designers join Conference Chair Jim Heid in critically
evaluating several of our attendees sites. Bring your pencil!
Your site may be among the ones we examine in this lively wrap-up
session. |
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Strategy
Track Strategy is money.
Web budgets are stretched thin, but the expectations of users,
bosses, and clients haven't changed. See how to best leverage
the latest Web technologies and trends, and learn easy, low-cost
ways to improve your site. |
| 10:15 a.m. |
Search
Engine Marketing: State of the Industry
Barbara Coll
Whether you're selling directly on your site or gathering sales
leads, you need visitors. And you need to be doing search engine
marketing -- it provides the highest return on investment for
marketing dollars. But what are your options? Who are the players?
Where are smart companies putting their money now? In this session,
Barbara Coll provides an overview of the search engine marketing
industry, with an emphasis on why search engine marketing should
be taken into consideration during every phase of web site design
and implementation. You'll also get Barbara's predictions for
the future as Google spends its new money and MSN emerges as
a big player. |
| 11:30 a.m. |
Web
Writing: Seven Steps for Success Kelly
Goto
Writing for the Web is different from copywriting. Veteran Kelly
Goto takes you through the tried and true practices of content
development, from outline to integration. Learn how to integrate
best practices for web writing including the development of
a communication brief, audience profiles and a realistic workflow. |
| 2:00 p.m. |
A
Business Plan for Site Architecture
Barbara Coll
When most Web searchers are looking for products or services,
they click on "free" search engine listings most of
the time. That means you need to make sure your site is indexed
and ranks well. Learn to successfully architect your site for
search engines, and find out how specific page elements and
design technologies may impact your ability to gain good rankings.
Barbara Coll will talk about strategies and tactics for traffic
generation through search engine results — tactics that
you can put to work as soon as you leave the conference. |
| 3:15 p.m. |
The How and Why of Blogging
Molly E. Holzschlag
Web logs, or "blogs," aren't just for personal sites — not by a long shot. Sites of all kinds can employ blogs and blog-creation tools to keep visitors informed and up to date. Learn what blogs can do for your site and for your business, and see the best tools for creating and maintaining them. |
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Usability
Track Designing for users.
In the Usability track, top designers and usability
experts share their secrets. Learn how to identify and fix "crisis
points" that can trip up your site's users. Find out how
users really surf by examining the results of actual user-testing
studies. And get practical tips for enhancing your site's usability
with JavaScript and CSS. |
| 10:15 a.m. |
How Users
Surf: What Usability Tests Reveal Steve
Mulder
How do real people use websites? Are there patterns in user
behavior that we can learn from and design for? Yes and yes.
We’ll cover how users move around a site, how they scan
pages, what they see and don’t see, and much more. You’ll
get the findings of hundreds of usability tests -- without having
to sit through them. |
| 11:30 a.m. |
Defensive
Design for the Web Jason
Fried
Let's admit it: things go wrong online. No matter how carefully
you design a site, people will still encounter errors or make
mistakes. How you handle these breakdowns is critical to the
overall user experience. Learn how to use defensive design to
prevent errors and help get your visitors back on track if problems
do occur. |
| 2:00 p.m. |
Improving
Usability with JavaScript and CSS Joe
Marini
Today's modern, standards-compliant browsers provide whole new
ways of improving your site's usability. In this session, we'll
explore ways of using CSS and JavaScript together to create
pages that are responsive, intuitive, and user-customizable.
You'll see how these technologies can allow users to control
display properties like fonts and colors, create forms with
better navigation and validation, and build pages with automatic
features like table formatting and sorting. Best of all, you'll
see how to make use of these technologies so that even if the
user disables them, the page content remains accessible. |
| 3:15 p.m. |
Personas:
Making Your Users Real Steve
Mulder
Personas are an effective tool for focusing decision making
and design process on the goals and behaviors of real users.
We'll discuss why personas are valuable and how to create them,
including research techniques, user segmentation, and the details
that make these fictional characters come to life. Then we'll
look at how personas can be useful throughout the site creation
process, from prioritizing features through information architecture
and visual design. |