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Review: Foundations of UX: Content Strategy

Foundations of UX: Content Strategy

This is a review of the online course Foundations of UX: Content Strategy by Patrick Nichols.

This is part of our series of reviews of online UX courses.  Read some of our other reviews or see our full list of online UX courses.

Course Information

Review

That old cliche about not judging a book by it’s cover sprang to mind as soon as I hit play on this course. In this particular case, my first impression was underwhelming. It had nothing to do with the presenter or the topic, and everything to do with the slides. They are, to be blunt, monotonous. Taking a UX course on lynda.com evokes the feeling of deja vu, because they all tend to employ the live sketch-noting style of slide creation.

That being said, I recommend persevering because  this course does contain some hidden gems of wisdom and some very handy tips and pointers.

The slides are styled like sketch notes.

I did feel that the same-sameness of the slides bled over slightly into the general presentation. The presenter’s voice lacks inflection (except, ironically, in the two sentences when he is specifically talking about his voice and how recognisable it is) and at no point does he appear on screen – the entire course is delivered as a voice over.

The course is broken up into very short video lectures of no more than a couple of minutes each, which is masterful, as the jargon-heavy prose would be a bit hard to digest if that were not the case. I think this course would benefit greatly from pausing every now and then for a few questions or quick pop quizzes, or at the very least, periodic recaps to ensure a good level of ongoing comprehension.

Resources like this content matrix spreadsheet are provided and explained.

What this course does particularly well is lead the viewer step-by-step through the process of designing and executing a content strategy and then analysing the results. Good descriptions are given of tools and techniques, and their applications in real life cases are demonstrated. Towards the end of the course, exercise files are introduced along with demonstrations of how they are used and can be applied to different projects.

I would have liked to have seen an example exercise introduced at the beginning and woven throughout the course as I think it would have given each of the steps more context.

The Presenter

According to his Lynda.com bio, Patrick Nichols is a content strategist and communications professional with 15 years of experience working on some of the world’s biggest brands. Currently, he is focused on channel content strategy at virtualization pioneer VMware.

Previously, he was a content strategist at Razorfish, an Ad Age top-10 digital agency, and at AMD. Patrick lives in Austin, Texas, with his wife and two children.

 

Making Notes Look Pretty

I’ve always envied talented sketch-noters for their ability to make rapidly scribbled brain dumps looks like works of art. For the very same reason I am really impressed with Lynda.com’s new note taking facility. Although still in beta, it allows the viewer to take ongoing notes which are annotated with the point at which they were made in the video, along with a cute little diagram with thumbnails. Yup, I’m a sucker for a picture.

The new note-taking facility is still in beta but functions very well and is handy.

Pros

Cons

Summary

This course definitely has merit but needs to be consumed after a couple of coffees. If you let your attention wander, which it may well do given the lack of variation in content and tone, you’ll likely miss some very valuable tips. The content is solid, but the presentation is lacking. Patrick delivers a wealth of information and well explained techniques, but I frequently found myself feeling like I was reaching a point of content overload.

Take this course.

 

Foundations of UX: Content Strategy is hosted at lynda.comNote: This post contains affiliate links, so if you do decide to enrol in the course, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale, to help pay the hosting bills.