Monday, December 10, 2012
Oakdale Mall
I’m considering my local mall at Christmas time because malls and Christmas
shopping go hand-in-hand. The Oakdale Mall sits
on a small hill and the exits are well marked.
Each entrance has a directory map that tells each store location. The whole mall is decorated for Christmas, as
is each store. There is also a celebration of Hanukah. The celebration of Festival of Lights began
last Saturday night by lighting the first candle of the Menorah.
The store windows tell a story of what is available inside the store. Toys or books or shoes or sweaters or
hairstyles, the store window is your first invitation to come in the store and
look around.
Retail stores have to make it comfortable for a man to shop for a woman;
and a toy store will have the newest products at eye level. According the text Chandler Screven’s claims
that Gibson and Gibson’s research shows “design… needs to be pretested and
adjusted during the planning stage to improve the possibility that they
encourage… selective attention.” (C.G Screvens, 2000, p. 142)
Companies who design malls know all about aesthetics. The aisles are wide and open, with seating
through the middle to accommodate weary shoppers. There is plenty of lighting, the temperature
is comfortable, and there are a variety of stores situated throughout the mall.
I can plan my shopping trip online before leaving the house by using the
malls web site. This helps me to park in
a more convenient place.
The space is well planned; it’s easy to navigate from store to store. There is plenty of room, the displays are
appropriate for the size of the space.
Even during the Christmas rush, there is enough room for everyone to
move through the mall with arm loads of packages.
I honestly could not find an area
for improvement in the design of the mall.
There is a variety of stores, there are many stores, there is plenty of
room to move around and easy to navigate your way around, and there is lots of
seating and not mention restrooms available. Also, there are a variety of food
places to choose from. My local mall is
well cared for: there is very little garbage; there are security and maintenance
people who keep everything neat and orderly.
Reference:
Jacobson, R. (2000). Information Design. Massachusetts: MIT Press. Print.
The store windows tell a story of what is available inside the store. Toys or books or shoes or sweaters or
hairstyles, the store window is your first invitation to come in the store and
look around.
Retail stores have to make it comfortable for a man to shop for a woman;
and a toy store will have the newest products at eye level. According the text Chandler Screven’s claims
that Gibson and Gibson’s research shows “design… needs to be pretested and
adjusted during the planning stage to improve the possibility that they
encourage… selective attention.” (C.G Screvens, 2000, p. 142)
Companies who design malls know all about aesthetics. The aisles are wide and open, with seating
through the middle to accommodate weary shoppers. There is plenty of lighting, the temperature
is comfortable, and there are a variety of stores situated throughout the mall.
I can plan my shopping trip online before leaving the house by using the
malls web site. This helps me to park in
a more convenient place.
The space is well planned; it’s easy to navigate from store to store. There is plenty of room, the displays are
appropriate for the size of the space.
Even during the Christmas rush, there is enough room for everyone to
move through the mall with arm loads of packages.
I honestly could not find an area
for improvement in the design of the mall.
There is a variety of stores, there are many stores, there is plenty of
room to move around and easy to navigate your way around, and there is lots of
seating and not mention restrooms available. Also, there are a variety of food
places to choose from. My local mall is
well cared for: there is very little garbage; there are security and maintenance
people who keep everything neat and orderly.
Reference:
Jacobson, R. (2000). Information Design. Massachusetts: MIT Press. Print.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Scannabar System
Shrinkage is the gentle word that we use instead of
saying loss or theft. In the bar
business, shrinkage is about 25%. Losing
one quarter of my income over the bar could force me to lose my business. (Scannabar, 2012)
By using an inventory control system, like
Scannabar, I can keep my employees honest and protect my profits.
Scannabar can track and monitor every bottle of
liquor, beer and wine from the door until its empty. By using an inventory control system, I will
keep accurate records of my profit center.
Using inventory control also gives the perception to the staff that I have
every detail under control.
Each bottle is barcoded when it comes into the
facility. When it is opened at the bar
it is scanned again. During the
inventory process, all the open bottles can be measured and scanned. When the bottle is empty it is scanned one last
time and the system will tell me how much money that bottle made.
I can integrate the Scannabar system into my Point
Of Sale system. By doing that I can control
my inventory, track my sales dollars, and manage my business more efficiently.
Any new business needs to be managed. A new business that depends on employees is
especially vulnerable, so computer systems that help me control my business
expenses are invaluable.
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Concept Mapping
Concept mapping is something I would use to write a
business plan for my country bar. There
are many aspects to owning my own business like budgeting, marketing, location,
entertainment, food, building maintenance
and hours of operation. Business plans
have many forms, but they all have these basic sections.
In the Brainstorming phase I will be writing down
everything that has to do with owning a bar.
Second phase is organizing. Hal
White on the “How to construct a concept map” website suggests putting each thought
on a Post-It note. I can move these
thoughts around until each concept is within its group. In the layout phase I am going to put the
most important concept at the top or in the middle, and put the detail underneath
the heading or on the outside. (White,
2011)
By using lines and arrows, I will connect different
items that have a relationship. I can
also write a short explanation on the arrow line.
When I feel that I have covered all the information,
I will complete the map and give it a title.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Processes of Information Design
A goal that I have in the future would be opening my
own country bar. Along the way I will be
implementing information design for every step.
First I need to firmly decide how I want my bar to
look and who I want my bar to serve and then I have to design every single
detail.
In order to borrow money, I will need to write a
full business plan. Whether I build a
building or remodel an existing building, there will be construction and I will
need blueprints. I will also need a
marketing plan and an exit plan. All of
these things will entail a lot of research and a lot compromising.
The business plan includes my vision of my bar, and
it also includes all the financial, timeline, all my suppliers, all my codes and
licenses, employees, insurance and all the other details that I haven’t thought
of yet.
According to the SBA.gov website there are 9 parts to a business plan:
Executive Summary: My vision of my business
Market Analysis: Will be a SWOT analysis
Company Description: Country Bar
Organization & Management: The business
will most likely be a LLC
Marketing & Sales: I will need
the details on how I will present myself
Service or Product Line: Alcohol and non-alcohol
beverages and food and live bands and DJ
Funding Request: I will propose a financial statement
for five years
Financial Projections: I will explain
how I will make enough money to payback a loan if I were to get a business loan
Appendix: I will create an appendix that includes the licensing,
permits and regulations and laws
How to Make Your Business Plan Stand
Out: The business plan needs to sell the bar and to find a way to make it very
special to the bank
While I’m still in college there is no chance I have time
to write a business plan, but I could after graduation.
SBA.gov. (2012). How to write a business plan. Retrieved from http://www.sba.gov/category/navigation-structure/starting-managing-business/starting-business/how-write-business-plan
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Designing Maps
When I think of Information Design I think of road maps. In order to organize the layout of my state, somebody has to go from point A to point B and relate it to all the other locations around it. By using location as the organizer, a road map explains to me where I am and I can use it to direct me where to go. Should I turn right or left? Am I in the country or city? Will there be parking available? These are a few questions that need to be answered when you’re traveling to a new location. Maps also tell us the name of the roads, towns, and the distance between specific areas, they tell us the type of road, and it points out locations of interest.
Jacobson, R. (2000). Information design. (p. 2765& 276). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
Information involves time or numbers or continuum, and by organizing information by location, maps are created (Jacobson, 2000, p. 275, 276).
Monday, September 10, 2012
I think Information Design is a grouping of ramdom thoughts into a cohesive manner that tells a story or provides an explanation. Of the gazillion bits of information out there, I only want to know how to tie my shoe. The ability to collect that information in one place at one time, coherently, so I can follow the instructions has designed that information for my use.
PS: I know how to tie my shoe however, I am using this as an example on how to explain information and the way I understand it.
Kim Baer, from the Information Design Workbook explains that Information design is information without structure is a jumble of data, words, pictures, movements and sound. By designing that information for particular user or function, we can make all that information meaningful. (p. 12 & 13)
Baer, K. (2009). Information design workbook. (pp. 12-1). Beverly, MA: Rockport Publishers.
PS: I know how to tie my shoe however, I am using this as an example on how to explain information and the way I understand it.
Kim Baer, from the Information Design Workbook explains that Information design is information without structure is a jumble of data, words, pictures, movements and sound. By designing that information for particular user or function, we can make all that information meaningful. (p. 12 & 13)
Baer, K. (2009). Information design workbook. (pp. 12-1). Beverly, MA: Rockport Publishers.
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