Our long-planned redesign of ICANN.ORG just went live today, 27 February.
The new information architecture arranges the resources that ICANN.ORG offers in a more logical arrangement. More than 38,000 pages and files were carefully examined and migrated into the best locations following extensive consultation with the ICANN community, including:
- Nearly 300 responses to the site survey conducted by The Revere Group
- More than two dozen in-depth interviews with SO and AC members
- A series of live briefings (with Q&A) across two ICANN public meetings
- At least three briefings to Board Directors (via the Public Participation Committee)
- Two public webinars requesting input and concerns
On the home page, we’ve streamlined the main navigation from ten tabs, to six. When you’re seeking a file or page on our site, we hope we’ve ended the era of making you guess whether we considered it a Resource, a Document, or “In Focus.”
Some of the new features on the site include the following:
- All visitors can now move directly from ICANN’s home page to any SO or AC site in one click.
- The latest Board activity and the most recent topics open for Public Comment now show on the home page.
- The new Stay Connected bar provides site visitors with easier social media integration to ICANN than we’ve had before. When you click to expand Stay Connected, you’ll see a new resource called Planet ICANN. This feed aggregates almost every RSS and Twitter feed from ICANN in one ever-updating resource, providing a one-stop tool for monitoring ICANN broadly.
- Across HTML portions of the site, you can now hover your cursor over that puzzling acronym, and see what it stands for pop up as a “tool tip.”
- ICANN’s site can now auto-detect when it is accessed via a mobile device such as a tablet or smart phone, and present a view specifically tailored for the visitor’s type of device.
- On the home page’s multi-lingual bar, you can click your chosen language to immediately see an aggregation of all materials available in that language. The most recent documents top the list.
We developed those last two features with the global audience very much in mind. There are two billion Internet users on a planet of seven billion people. The next billion users are storming onto the Internet largely from developing countries, and predominantly by phone. More than one analyst has predicted that by 2015, more phones than computers will be connected to the Internet. We hope the new ICANN.ORG mobile views and improved multi-lingual access signals to such users that they are welcome, even encouraged, to participate in ICANN’s multi-stakeholder community.
Note that the changes affect, quite literally, ICANN.ORG, and not other ICANN sites such as gnso.icann.org, alac.icann.org, the wiki sites, and so on. We know we have plenty more to do, and more improvements are on the way across 2012.
If you’d like to provide feedback or ask questions about the new look and feel, please feel free to email communications@icann.org.
I also thank the community for your patience, support, and candid feedback during the careful process that brought us to this milestone. We’re far from done, but I hope you’ll see the newly redesigned site as a significant improvement in making ICANN’s work more understandable and inclusive.

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }
Jean-Jacques Subrenat 03.02.12 at 6:06 am
Hello Scott,
this redesign of icann.org has been in the making for some time, but it was worth waiting for.
As a former member (and first Chair) of the Public Participation Committee, I’d like to congratulate the people at ICANN: the CEO, senior management, members of the PPC, all the members of the Staff who made this happen.
This new presentation also makes more obvious some other changes, e.g. the greater share of languages other than English in the documents presented. It would be useful to have, in each language, a few lines of introduction about ICANN’s current linguistic policy, so that users can understand why, for instance, there’s more Russian than Japanese, less Korean than French (is it based on user demand, or some other criterion?).
Well done, Team ICANN!
Regards,
Jean-Jacques.
Scott Pinzon 03.02.12 at 4:53 pm
Jean-Jacques, the team is honored by your kind remarks; thanks so much! I intend to take action on your very practical suggestion. The latest version of ICANN’s Language Services policy has just been sent to the Public Participation Committee for review. As soon as it’s finalized, we’ll draw up a statement such as you suggest and post it on the home page of the non-English versions of the site.
In the short term, I will undertake getting at least a note of welcome added to the multi-lingual landing pages.
Thanks again for your constructive suggestions.
Scott Pinzon
Domain Name 03.04.12 at 5:39 pm
The New Top-level Domain and Top Domain name.
http://getyourbestdomain.blogspot.com/
About three months, the applications programmer process opens a newly top-level areas,which allows parties and other similar organizations to apply for domain extensions. It ‘been very much of buzz on the domains that is accepted, you bet this curriculum will vary the landscape from the Internet. In particular, many have mused that because of the potential value of marketing the business, we assure a lot from trademarked domain extensions. Possibility mesmeric TOLD are competing. Dot Com Domain is also thrown around quite often. Despite this, on fire. ‘Brand’ and the theory of extensions. Competing with, the accuracy is that residential district-based Tildes that combine special teams under a common love or interest (for example) can be successful and dynamics Domain site for the next.
http://getyourbestdomain.blogspot.com/
Paul Levins 03.11.12 at 7:38 pm
Scott
I’d like to particularly acknowledge the work of Marc Salvatierra – knowing how involved he was in the production of this new site but also keeping the old site ‘together’ for as long as he did.
It looks great. One thing though – it’s hard to find the blog from the front page. I think the blog is incredibly important. If it is there and I’m not seeing it – apologies. Then again if it is there, I’m looking for it and cant find it, then that’s a problem.
But congrats to all it looks great
Paul Levins
Cathy Dunham 04.09.12 at 11:03 am
The Inter-Registrar Transfer Policy links does not work. (Page not found.) I wanted more details about Transfer Authority.
A K-Kom employee (who was leaving) transferred a domain to a client, which should not have been. Even though it was transferred several weeks ago, we (K-Kom) are still listed as the Registered, Admin and Tech owners. Can K-Kom still reclaim authority ownership of the domain name?