DESIGN (OVERVIEW)

Design makes communications more engaging, easier to understand, quicker to digest, more memorable, and more meaningful.



Design for Humans

Think Like an Architect

Color

Contrast

Repetition

  • Be Strategically Repetitious
  • Repeat within Documents
  • Repeat Across Suites
  • Repeat around Spaces
  • Repeat Universals
  • Repeat Similarity
  • Create Visual Cues
  • Establish Consistency
  • Mimic What's Familiar
  • Follow the Guide

Arrangement

  • Align all Elements
  • Keep Related Items Close
  • Use Horizontals for Calm
  • Use Verticals for Energy
  • Use Diagonals for Tension
  • Know Top Versus Bottom
  • Use the Rule of Thirds
  • Use Space to Draw Focus
  • Use Space to Show Time
  • Bleed for Aesthetics

"Why"

  • Learn the Appeals
  • Provide Enough Details
  • Design Like Music
  • Empty to Show Value
  • Promote Propositions
  • Think Metaphorically
  • Make Advanced Yet Acceptable
  • Expose with a Purpose
  • Make Things Stick
  • Help Them Remember

Organization

  • Start with L.A.T.C.H.
  • Apply a Pattern
  • Know How Grids Work
  • Use Single Column for Text
  • Use Two Columns for Variation
  • Use Three Columns for Intrigue
  • Use Modulars for Complexity
  • Use Hierarchies for Emphasis
  • Organize Your Writing to Persuade
  • Organize Your Writing to Inform

Negative Space

  • Positive vs. Negative
  • Figure-Ground Relationship
  • Connect (or Don't...) the Dots
  • Count 'em Up: 1+1=3
  • Make Things Stable
  • Look in the Margins
  • Consider the Bleeds
  • Turn off the Noise
  • Put Blood in the Gutter
  • Put the Whole Before the Parts

Typography

  • Learn Some Terms
  • Study Anatomy
  • Classify the Types
  • Use Two Fonts
  • Find Unusual Pairs
  • Increase Legibility & Readability
  • Justify Your Means
  • Save the Orphans
  • Apply Pull Quotes
  • Punctuate with Purpose

Iconoography

  • Know the Signs of the Times
  • Separate Symbols from Signs
  • Use Metaphors as Signifiers
  • Think Similarity
  • Consider Examples
  • Ask What's Symbolic
  • Be Careful with Arbitrary
  • Use Lines as Icons
  • Use Logos to Brand
  • Help Them with Signposts

Photography

  • Learn a Few Terms
  • Recognize Your StyleKnow the Types
  • Crop for Closure
  • Know the Direction They're Headed
  • Apply the Face-ism Ratio
  • Make Sides Equal (or Not)
  • Crop with a Purpose
  • Watch the Depth of Field
  • Obtain the Rights

The A.S.C.E.N.D. Method for Telling Your Data's Story

  • The A.S.C.E.N.D. Method: An Overview
  • Analyze Data & Purpose
  • State Key Message
  • Choose the Best Chart
  • Emphasize for Clarity and Accuracy
  • Narrate Purpose & Details
  • Design for UXD & Accessibility

How to Use Common Charts and Graphs

  • 100% Stacked Bar
  • Area Graph
  • Back-to-back Graph
  • Bar Chart
  • Benchmark Line
  • Bullet Graph
  • Column Graph
  • Diagram
  • Donut Graph
  • Dot Plot
  • Faded Bar Graph
  • GeoMap
  • Histogram
  • Icon Array
  • Indicator Dots
  • Line Graph
  • Nested Area Graph
  • Numbers w/Icons
  • Pie Chart
  • Scatterplot
  • Single Number
  • Small Multiples
  • Stacked Bar
  • Stacked Column
  • Treemap

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