MECE
Mutually Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive (MECE) is a problem-solving framework ensuring that categories are mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive, avoiding overlaps and gaps.
Mutually Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive (MECE) is a problem-solving framework ensuring that categories are mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive, avoiding overlaps and gaps.
A cognitive bias where people judge the likelihood of an event based on the size of its category rather than its actual probability.
A method for organizing information based on five categories: category, time, location, alphabet, and continuum.
Location, Alphabet, Time, Category, and Hierarchy (LATCH) is a framework for categorizing information.
A user research technique where participants organize information into categories to inform information architecture and design.
A structured classification of risks into categories, helping organizations identify, assess, and manage different types of risks.
The ability of consumers to remember a brand when prompted by a product category.
Portfolio Management is the process of overseeing and coordinating an organization's collection of products to achieve strategic objectives.
The Principle of Exemplars is an information architecture guideline that uses representative examples to illustrate content categories.