Posts Tagged ‘Sketch beta’

Sketch takes over

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Sketch beta development is now dominating life for the product team here at Webstruxure. The Sketch beta plans we started on several months ago are now being turned into actual software by our developers. Aaron, the Sketch team leader, is juggling a multitude of priorities as he keeps the project on track. And I have recently finished getting in touch with as many of New Zealand’s 750 or so web design companies as I could to explain Sketch to them and ask them whether they would like to take part in the Sketch beta development process.

The response has been excellent. Over 10% of those companies have said that they would like to take part in the beta development process, and about another 10% have said that, although they don’t want to take part in the beta, they would like to be kept informed about Sketch.

We have received many extremely valuable comments about the features that designers would like to see in Sketch, and while many of these suggestions won’t be incorporated in the beta, we have taken careful note of them for future releases. And we’ve also got a lot of good feedback about how web design companies are likely to use Sketch, and where they look for information about such tools.

Because of this focus on Sketch, we are going to discontinue this general Webstruxure blog and replace it with a blog devoted specifically to the Sketch beta development process. Here you’ll be able to see detailed feedback on the progress of the Sketch beta. We hope you’ll look out for the launch of this new blog (which will be linked from this page), and follow us as we take the next steps on the journey to the full release of Sketch.

Sketch Update

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

On the surface, not much has changed with Sketch over the past couple of months. The alpha version of Sketch is still available to be tried out online. Some of the web companies we’ve talked with about Sketch are already using this alpha version to work with their clients on planning sites. Even though there are many features yet to be added, they’re finding that the ease of use outweighs the restricted feature set.

Behind the scenes, we’ve been conducting research to confirm that Sketch will meet the needs of a significant proportion of web companies and their clients. We’ve talked to as many Wellington companies as we can, and we’re now doing the same in Auckland.

Results so far confirm that the relationship between web designer and client is often strained, and suffers from poor communication; that content is often not provided until very late in the site development process; and that, when it is provided, this often results in late, and therefore expensive, changes being made to the site structure. A tool that:

  • makes it easy for designers and clients to communicate and collaborate
  • makes it easy to align the expectations of web designer and client, and
  • leads to early agreement on site structure and content

is likely to find a ready market if it’s priced correctly.

Our research is continuing, but we’ve gained enough data already to start moving ahead with a beta version of Sketch, built around the set of minimum functions that our research has told us Sketch needs.

Sketch_beta_logo_small.gif

We know that we can’t give everyone everything they want, all at once. We’re not even going to try! We’d rather start with something relatively small, something that’s going to give web designers and clients a huge amount of help just by itself, and make sure we’ve got that right. Then we’ll start adding to it bit by bit, testing usefulness with every step.

We figure this is a good way to build something that web designers and their clients are truly going to enjoy using.

So, a Sketch beta is on the drawing board!