Less is often more when it comes to content. Reduce users’ cognitive load, increase retention, and reduce content management costs by applying content mindfulness and digital minimalism principles.

How to improve user understanding, speed up information retrieval, and reduce cognitive load.

“Clear to users” may sound subjective and difficult to quantify, but there are some key methods to identify if a label resonates.

Four examples of Hierarchy, Friction, Tone, and Naming in action.

Why companies build product taxonomies, where to start, how to structure the spreadsheet, and ways to adapt your product taxonomy to company…

What’s behind an unfindable feature for hotel management software?

HOKA has had a meteoric rise. Here’s how their website information architecture helps them meet growing consumer demand.

Company A has acquired Company B, C, and D. How do we organize their sites, for multiple products with different audiences, while…

Some fun news: I’ve finished the first draft of my e-book, Accessible IA Fundamentals – A Beginner’s Guide to Intuitive Information Architecture.

A common point of tension between stakeholders is the fate of the content. People have ideas, fears, and dreams about what will…
![[Interview] This Is Why Adding More Content Makes Things Worse](https://littlelanguagemodels.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/two-types-of-information-architecture-interview.png)
In the latest Technical Writing Uncensored interview, we break down what an information architect actually does and the role of IA in…