Thursday, 3 July 2008

Silent Corridors

Posted at: 9:18 PM by Hammad

It's not often that I come across a bit of industry lingo that I haven't heard before, but whilst working with a partner agency recently, I came across just that.

A Silent Corridor.

Now apparently the phrase was coined by somebody at BT and it refers (at least in the world of Information Architecture anyway) to a column on a page that becomes completely empty under certain circumstances.

For example. It's commonplace to use a 3 column layout for a web site, with the right column used for related links etc. However, what happens if a page/template no longer needs to use this area as defined? It's not always as simple as allowing the central column to 'flow' into this open space, as it's often restricted by a series of inherited template definitions (especially if the site is developed on a Content Management System; aka CMS). This actually happens quite a lot, like on Privacy policies or Sitemap pages. It can also be relevant during an e-commerce/shopping process, when you want to strip back on the hard-sell and keep people focused on what happening on the core real estate.

The result is a silent corridor; a complete end-to-end column that is empty and has nothing to offer anybody wandering into it. If you try to use it, you will go unheard.

It's not actually a bad thing to happen though, despite the eerie name it has become Christened with.

Template and layout consistency is very important for a good user experience and so by using a silent corridor effectively, you can keep your users focused on the important content on a page, instead of ramming unnecessary links and promos in their face and making them claustrophobic.

(oh dear, I think the hospital connotations are starting to take over!).

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