Overview
Information architecture fails when it is designed to reflect how the product is built rather than how users think about it. A navigation structure organized by engineering team ownership, database schema, or product roadmap phase will make perfect sense to the team that built it and be completely opaque to the users who need to navigate it.
The Information Architecture Design Prompt builds a navigation structure from the user's mental model — defining the categories that match how users think about their tasks, the labels that use the user's language rather than the product's internal terminology, and the hierarchy depth that allows users to find anything in three clicks without requiring them to understand the product's internal organization.
What you get: - Mental model analysis: how to extract the user's organizational framework from research data - Hierarchy design principles: the rules that determine depth, breadth, and category boundaries - Labeling standard: the criteria that make navigation labels unambiguous to users - Content inventory method: how to audit existing content before designing the structure - IA validation: the research methods that confirm the structure works before design begins - Migration strategy: how to transition from an existing IA to a new one without breaking user habits
Built for: UX designers and information architects designing or redesigning the navigation structure for web or mobile products.