Freedom Communications
unit
breathes new life into Web sites
By Marcelo Duran
Associate Editor
Freedom
Interactive, the online arm of Freedom Communications, this month plans to cap a
company-wide redesign of all of its Web sites.
Freedom Interactive handles
Web sites for 33 daily and 77 weekly newspapers across the country, including
sites supporting The Orange County (Calif.) Register and The Gazette in Colorado
Springs, Colo.
The Monitor in McAllen, Texas,
kicked off its renovated site last fall and was one of the first papers to roll
out the new design.
“The new site is easier to
navigate and has a more pleasing look and feel than the previous version,” said
Ernie Rodriguez, The Monitor’s director of Internet operations. “It has a truly
interactive events calendar” — from Zvents —“and commenting tools on all
articles.”
Rodriguez said it took about
six weeks to launch the new look.
Better experience
“The hope is to provide our
users a more engaging experience, in a more pleasing environment that will
entice them to stay longer on our site,” he said.

The Monitor in McAllen, Texas, was one of the first Freedom
papers to roll out a revamped Web site.
Freedom Interactive Vice
President of Marketing Linda Fisk said among the most prominent features in the
redesign is a tabbed A-box that highlights the most requested and most-viewed
stories on each paper’s Web site.
“We created a fixed
promotional rotator to highlight special content features, contests, sweepstakes
and promotions,” she said. “This allows our audience to quickly see what’s new
and exciting on the site.”
Each site also includes a
community area that features photos, polls and online exclusive content.
Fisk said that this area is
especially popular with users and allows each paper to provide content with a
uniquely local focus.
The redesign also included
prominent placement of online classified information to help increase visibility
of marketers’ ad messages.
Fisk said the redesigns were
based on consumer research efforts designed to determine what customers were
seeking online.
“We implemented a network-wide
consumer survey asking representative samples of our users in every Freedom
market about their experience on each of our Web sites,” Fisk said. “We asked
about their visitation habits, the content they liked, what they thought was
missing and why they visit our sites.”
Based on that quantitative
research, Freedom Interactive conducted more qualitative research through a
series of usability tests where managers and site designers watched consumers
navigate through the sites and complete a series of tasks.
“We asked for the consumers’
opinions, their impressions and their recommendations,” she said. “We asked what
they liked and didn’t like about the design, the content, the products and
services, the navigation and more.”
Freedom tested the new look in
two markets before making final revisions and launching the final redesign
company-wide.