It’s easy to begin designing a digital library promising to keep an end-user, but how do you evaluate the project to ensure you are keeping to this goal? Library Science has reversed its focus on digital technology from having librarians interact with complex databases on behalf of end-users to designing databases that end-users can manipulate naturally. Constructing a digital presence takes time and informational architects need to have tools to evaluate the design throughout the process. The authors of a 2006 article suggest using three methodologies throughout the design and construction process, functionality, usability, and accessibility.
Functionality is generally what is focused on the most during information architectural creation. Functionality focus on how each part of a digital library functions. Ensure that basic search, advanced search, thesaurus, and search limitations actually perform correctly in user trials. Usability can be assessed by repeating end-user trials during different phases of construction. When end-users interact with the digital library environment are they satisfied? Did they find the recourse helpful and intuitive to use? The final methodology recommended by the authors is accessibility. This is an important thing to keep in mind when designing digital library for a broadly diverse populations such as a public library, or designing a site for groups with special needs. By evaluating your project with these three focuses, building a user-centered digital environment will be easier and more successful.