History: Tiki_org_Homepage_content_ideas
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General approach of content
- Who is the most likely user of Tiki?
- Appeal to that person.
- What are Tiki's strongest points and unique or superior features?
- Highlight these.
- What is Tiki's niche, its best use cases?
- Showcase these.
- Who are Tiki's happiest/most-satisfied current users?
- Get quotes, testimonials, reviews from these.
Changing course
- "Tiki is the Free / Libre / Open Source Web Application with the most built-in features"
- "And this is important to me because....?" I think the standard "most-features" appeal isn't really so compelling. Most people don't need all these features, they need a subset, and then the question is does Tiki meet the specific need better than a more-specialized application. For many features such as a blog, portfolio site, brochureware, etc. the answer is probably no. So there's a danger that people might think that pattern is true for all of Tiki's features unless the superior features are put in the spotlight and not buried in a long feature list.
This bullet point and all of its explanatory subpoints being front and center displace more-relevant reasons for using Tiki.
The "web app with the most features" as a catch phrase diffuses rather than focuses. Nothing tangible is highlighted and attracts users.
What is a better statement that describes Tiki's raison d'être ?
What are Tiki's strongest points and unique or superior features?
- Trackers
- If the benefits can be described clearly, and trackers can be configured easily enough by new users. How should these be described for new users?
- Wiki
- Strong in itself, and benefits from connectivity to other features.
- Multi-language?
- This is weakened by low level of UI string translations for most of the languages.
- ...?
- ....
What is Tiki's niche, its best use cases?
Considering the strong points, what are the uses cases that would benefit most?
- Tiki is a useful "log-in" collaborative platform for organizations, etc.
- Being feature-rich is a plus if the user needs a combination of features which are tightly integrated.
- When can a Tiki consultant honestly recommend Tiki over other solutions?
- These use cases need to be described.
- ...?
- ....
Page flow through content
After deciding what information to show, and how to phrase it (at least as a first draft), then what is the best way to present the information on the page? Relevant points, IMO:
- Keep the page clean and relatively simple.
- Use white space and the visual organization of the page to help convey the message.
- Everything on the homepage should be focused on one goal: convey a good impression of Tiki to the visitor and give information that makes him/her want to find out more, in first steps toward using Tiki.
- Keep the tone professional and the quality of text and images at a high level (keep in mind the other websites people are comparing this one to).
About specifics
- The top of the page is important; make good use of it. About the big space containing the Tiki logo and small line of text, in the beginning I thought this was a good idea, but now I'm thinking maybe it's not the best use of the space. I think it would be good to increase its information content one way or another.
- We have to be sure the thin navbar and topbar work well (both in terms of design concept and hands-on functionality); otherwise, they're just gimmicky.
- I think it's a bad idea to clutter the page with extras like news feeds from the other project sites and lists or whatever from the community site. These overload the visitor with information that isn't really relevant to them (yet), and these things are often negative(bug reports, downtime notices, user questions, etc.) or otherwise distract from the message of a "marketing" page.
- Pages linked to from this Homepage, like "About Tiki", should be as clean and focused as the Homepage. They're part of the marketing info, not part of the community site. To have clean secondary pages might mean replicating some of the information on existing pages as new marketing-specific pages. These secondary pages should also be careful about linking to general community site pages. (Customers at a new car showroom can't usually open a door from the showroom and step into the mechanics' garage area.)