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Published byMarvin Robinson Modified over 9 years ago
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Buy, Build, Automate: Why you should Buy Your Taxonomy Tom Reamy Chief Knowledge Architect KAPS Group Knowledge Architecture Professional Services http://www.kapsgroup.com
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2 Buy, Build, Automate – How to Decide? A hierarchy does not a taxonomy make. – Browse structures, categorization engines, file plans Taxonomies are infrastructure resources, not a project Subject matter is important – scientific standards – Mesh, etc. – Limited domain – wine, geography What is it used for? Indexing, browsing. How is it evaluated? Formal metrics, usability
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3 Automatic taxonomies aren’t Quality of automated taxonomies is poor. – Unusual hierarchy, uneven granularity, weird node names Expensive software that does only one thing – and does it badly Taxonomies are about meaning – and automatic taxonomies are about co-occurring chicken scratches. Don’t forget the cost of the programmers to install, maintain, customize – and the upgrades! Still need human categorizers – edit, sanity check
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4 Building a taxonomy is really hard Custom built taxonomies are the most expensive way to do it. Who Builds? – taxonomist wannabe, consultant – Taxonomy development is not for the faint of heart – it’s hard and requires special skills – Mercy of high price consultant Hard to maintain – user’s change, so taxonomy needs to – often! Representing user’s thinking – but users think so badly!
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5 The Solution – Buy Your Taxonomy Formal taxonomies are fixed resource – little or no maintenance Formal taxonomies support communication – Your content is not completely different Formal Quality Metrics – Corpus, coverage, nomenclature, dependency – No mixed classes, noun forms, proper speciation – Bell Curve, balance of breadth and depth Quality of taxonomy is high – teams of professionals, vetted over years with multiple customers
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6 Conclusion There is no such thing as “One size fits all” with taxonomies Building a taxonomy is expensive, hard to do and hard to maintain Automated algorithms don’t work with context, know the relationships between topics, or understand your business or application Classification on top of a formal taxonomy can represent users perspective, support multiple applications, and enhance communication within and between companies
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Questions? Tom Reamy – KAPS Group – tomr@kapsgroup.com Jim Wessely – Advanced Document Services - jwessely@adocs.com Wendi Pohs – InfoClear Consulting –wpohs@infoclearonline.com
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8 Real Conclusion – all of the above Buy a taxonomy or find taxonomic resources – for some subjects – Budget for customization Buy software that automates some of the process, especially categorization & content management Build taxonomies for some subjects – using software, existing taxonomies or other information structure resources Hire professionals – don’t try this at home Taxonomies are living, breathing, evolving structures – plan accordingly Taxonomies are not expensive – compared with search, CM, portals – and not finding/using content
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