The Intern Part Two

With only fifty five minutes left as an employee of the Royal Order, I feel it appropriate to leave some parting thoughts.

I’ve not posted here in some time — the Tutor/Mentor Connection Project took over my workdays with increasing determination, right up until the end. Although the site development is still up in the air, I’m quite proud of how the project has turned out. The site looks great, if I say so myself, and is certainly the most stylish, navigable, and unambiguous nonprofit site I’ve seen throughout this process. What an upgrade from the current version of tutormentorconnection.org! It’s fantastic that (eventually) my work will actually be used by real people to satisfy their needs. That the site aims to improve the lives of impoverished children only adds another level of reward to this project.

Perhaps it would be helpful to post some of the current, near-finalized mockups. (To see these images at full resolution, right-click them and “Open Link in New Window”.) The best examples will be the first pages that any user will see when they start to use the site, “Get Involved” and its subpages, “Give Help” and “Get Help”. Here is the first of the three:

Get Involved Landing Page

Notice how we have simplified the user path into an extremely easy dichotomy: either you need help or have help to give. No more obscure “Hot Links” full of ambiguous, offsite tools. If you fall into the first category, you’ll see a page like this:

Get Help Landing Page-2.0

This simplified program list is filterable and offers convenient links to T/MC’s excellent mapping tool. On the other side of getting involved, we have Give Help:

Give Help Landing Page

With a solid grid, clean, hierarchical typography, and helpful icons, the site’s many resources become transparent. Their multitude of purposes is no longer confusing.

Finally, here is the Resources section of the site, a landing page from which visitors may pick from T/MC’s vast databases of articles and links:

Resources Landing Page

That’s where this project currently rests. Once again, I’m very proud of the progress, and I genuinely enjoyed working on developing this design. The icons in particular were fun to do— make sure not to miss the “T/MC Times”.

I’ve also been lightly working on a logo for Kyle McCarthy’s father-in-law, who owns a company that sells table pads. Concepts I tried to express were the product’s old-fashioned nature, the idea of quality and tradition, and the product’s structure of layers of protection. Here are some of the various stages of development of this identity.

QTP

So that is what I have been up to. Now I have only fifteen minutes left, and I must say that my time in the Royal Order has lived up to the promise that the firm’s name provides. I had as much fun as a king, or at least a prince, and I must have learned at least what I do in the course of a semester. Web design, it turns out, isn’t so bad after all. Yes, there is a lot of wrangling with the technology, and yes, clients will erode the quality of a designer’s work, but for all its hassles, the challenge of designing an interactive page is fun and fulfilling to take on. With the considerations of information architecture, user paths, fold lines, search engine optimization, and interactivity, it’s sure a step up from posters and book covers.

So to the Royal Order: thank you for taking me under your crown and making me one of your own for the past two months. Regal metaphors aside, I can’t imagine a better thing to do at this particular moment in my career, and I certainly can’t think of a better environment to work in. As I make the transition from the admin of this blog to just a lowly reader, I know I’ll recall this internship with nothing but fondness. All I ask is a little reciprocation: never forget Roy Mendelsohn.

2 Responses to “The Intern Part Two”

  1. Thank you for the work you’ve done on the Tutor/Mentor Connection project. I agree with your observations and hope that we can get the site up and running by the end of the year, or sooner.

    Because of the time you’ve spent on the site, you’re one of the most knowledgeable people in the country about what we do…and what we’re trying to do.

    I hope you’ll stay involved, and share that knowledge with people you meet every day, for the rest of your life. Who knows, you may be the person who moves the T/MC to the next level where it is you who received the Gold Medal of Freedom for what we’ve started.

    Good luck to you.

    Dan

  2. Sam says:

    Thank you Ray Mindleman, wherever you are.

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