HAAM Docs

Website documentation and glossary

This docs section explains how to navigate HAAM resources and defines the professional terms used across the website, from UX strategy to AI-search optimization.

How to use this site

Explore

Browse projects, blog posts, and service pages to understand the type of outcomes HAAM creates.

Match a need

Use service pages to match a business problem with a practical design, build, analytics, or accessibility engagement.

Clarify language

Use the glossary below when a professional term appears in proposals, audits, project plans, or service descriptions.

Services guide

Strategy and discovery

Use the strategy pages when you need a shared product direction, research synthesis, service blueprints, or a roadmap before design and build work begins.

Design and implementation

Use the UX, interaction design, design system, and development pages when the priority is turning ideas into reliable user interfaces and reusable front-end components.

Optimization and measurement

Use the analytics, CRO, accessibility, and AI-search services when an existing site needs clearer evidence, better conversion, broader reach, or lower usability risk.

Glossary

Concise definitions for professional words used throughout the HAAM website.

Accessibility audit
A structured review that checks whether a website can be used by people with disabilities, usually against WCAG success criteria and practical assistive-technology workflows.
AI search visibility optimization
Work that helps content become easier for search engines and AI answer systems to understand, cite, and summarize accurately.
AI UX audit
A usability and trust review for AI-assisted product journeys, including how clearly the system explains results, limitations, data use, and user control.
Analytics implementation
The setup of events, goals, dashboards, and reporting conventions so teams can understand how people actually use a website or product.
Conversion rate optimization (CRO)
A process for improving the percentage of visitors who complete an intended action, such as booking a call, joining a community, subscribing, or purchasing.
Data-driven design
Design decisions informed by qualitative research, analytics, experiments, and user behavior rather than assumptions alone.
Design system
A documented collection of reusable interface components, patterns, tokens, and guidelines that keeps product design and engineering consistent.
Experimentation
A disciplined way to compare product or content changes, often through A/B tests or smaller controlled releases, before scaling decisions.
Information architecture
The organization, labeling, and navigation structure that helps people find information and understand where they are in a digital product.
Interaction design
The design of how an interface behaves when people click, tap, type, scroll, search, submit forms, recover from errors, and move between states.
Localization
Adapting content, interface patterns, and product expectations for a specific language, culture, region, or platform ecosystem.
Performance
How quickly and smoothly a website loads and responds, including technical measures that affect user experience, search visibility, and conversion.
Product strategy
The connective plan that defines the audience, value proposition, priorities, constraints, and measurable goals for a digital product or service.
Prototype
A simplified version of a product experience used to test ideas, flows, content, or technical assumptions before full production work.
Service blueprint
A map of customer actions, frontstage touchpoints, backstage work, systems, and dependencies that must align for a service to function well.
UX writing
The short, purposeful interface copy that guides people through tasks, explains choices, reduces uncertainty, and supports the brand voice.
User journey
A step-by-step view of what a person is trying to accomplish across touchpoints, including motivations, friction, questions, and opportunities.
User persona
A research-backed profile that summarizes a key audience segment so product decisions can stay focused on real needs and behaviors.
WCAG
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines: the international standard commonly used to evaluate digital accessibility requirements.