Louis Rosenfeld

Louis B. Rosenfeld (born c. 1965) is an American Information scientist, consultant and author, known as co-author of Information Architecture for the World Wide Web.

Louis Rosenfeld
Born
Louis B. Rosenfeld

c. 1965
NationalityAmerican
OccupationInformation scientist, consultant and author
Websitehttp://louisrosenfeld.com/biography/

Biography

Rosenfeld earned his B.A. in history from the University of Michigan in 1987, and his Master's in library science from the University of Michigan School of Information in 1990.

Along with Peter Morville, he was the co-founder of Argus Associates, one of the first firms devoted exclusively to the practice of information architecture. The consulting firm was at the forefront of the nascent field of information architecture until the Dot-com bubble of 2001. Rosenfeld became infamous in internet circles by prognosticating the impending "death" of his then-competitor Yahoo,[1] which then went on to IPO and a subsequent 40-fold price increase in the next 5 years.

With Christina Wodtke, Rosenfeld founded the Information Architecture Institute in 2002[2] and is a member of its Advisory Board. In 2005 he founded Rosenfeld Media, a user experience publishing house. He was also co-founder of the User Experience Network (UXnet)[3]

Selected publications

Books:

  • Morville, P., Janes, J., Rosenfield, L., Candido, G. A., Rosenfeld, L. B., & Decandido, G. A. (1999). The Internet Searcher's Handbook: Locating Information, People, and Software. Neal-Schuman Publishers, Inc..
  • Morville, Peter, and Louis Rosenfeld. Information architecture for the World Wide Web: Designing large-scale web sites. O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2002/2008.
  • Louis Rosenfeld. Search Analytics for Your Site: Conversation With Your Consumers. 2011

Articles, a selection:

  • Janes, Joseph W., and Louis B. Rosenfeld. "Networked information retrieval and organization: Issues and questions." Journal of the American Society for Information Science 47.9 (1996): 711-715.
  • Rosenfeld, Louis. "Information architecture: looking ahead." Journal of the American society for information science and technology 53.10 (2002): 874-876.

References

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