Card Sorting to Discover the Users' Model of the Information Space

By Jakob Nielsen, May 1995
Sidebar to article about usability testing for the design of Sun's website in 1995.

Card sorting study in progress: user has sorted several index cards with concepts from the website into piles.

Card sorting was done by giving users a bunch of index cards with concepts from the server written on them. The users were then asked to sort the cards into piles such that cards representing similar concepts were in the same pile. The users were also allowed to group piles to indicate looser levels of similarity, and we finally asked the users to name their piles. These names provided us with additional insights into the users' mental model of the information space and served as inspiration for the names we finally chose.

See also my article about how we designed Sun's intranet, SunWeb in 1994 for another example of card sorting and a photo of a variant of the method, where users are asked to sort cards onto existing categories. (Often called closed card sorting to differentiate it from the more common open sorting where users build their own categories without any constraints.)

See also article on How Many Users to Test for Card Sorting.

2-day, in-depth tutorial on information architecture (IA) and IA methods at my annual usability conference.