Simon Dickson, principal consultant at Puffbox, writes stuff about e-government, online news and politics. Some important people read it.

FT's bloggy new look

12 November 2008 , ,

Is it just me, or is the new Financial Times website design, being rolled out progressively this week, heavily influenced by blogs - and remarkably reminiscent of the Downing Street site?

Whilst other sites seem keen to cram ever more into their homepages, the new FT homepage makes the site feel really quite small. Just ten 'top stories' in a list, sorted in order of importance; headlines and very brief excerpts, with timestamps, categories and related articles. There are still plenty of sections and subsections; but the primary navigation is mainly hidden behind dropdowns (Javascript-enhanced HTML blocks rather than traditional form dropdowns, incidentally). The page layout is (broadly speaking) three columns: fat, thin, thin - a configuration we've grown familiar with in the blogosphere.

Gawker.com shares my take, and concludes: 'the online medium continues to assert its precedence over print; even the rich love blogs; and bloggers all deserve to be paid more money'. No argument on any front there. :)

It's further evidence, in my mind, that the divisions between 'blogs' and 'proper websites', 'blogging tools' and 'proper CMSes' have disappeared, if they were ever there to begin with. Let's just ignore the labelling. Blogs and blogging systems evolved as a means for writers to get news items up on the web quickly and efficiently. Guess what - journalists want to get their news items up on the web quickly and efficiently. So do (should?) press officers.

In my own work, once the decision is made to use a blogging tool (ie WordPress), certain design decisions are basically inevitable. But it's very interesting to see the FT choosing to make many of those same design decisions, without any (apparent) requirement to do so.

Stop wasting your time RSS feed

Let us tell you when there's new stuff to read at puffbox.com, by subscribing to the RSS feed.

Go on, show your face

If you want your photo to appear beside any comments you leave here, hop over to Gravatar and upload a picture of yourself. Otherwise, we'll just assume the machine-generated monster is a fair likeness.

Tag cloud

Puffbox.com archives

Search

Alan's comments feed

By popular demand: the comments feed

Ancient history

For posts during 2006 or 2007, Simon's old blog's archives are still available.