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McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin
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Chapter 8 Designing Documents Design Importance Designs and Conventions Levels of Design Page Design Guidelines Designing Brochures Designing Web Pages Usability Testing
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Why Design Matters Saves time and money Reduces legal problems Builds goodwill Looks inviting, friendly, easy to read Grouping ideas shows structure 8-3
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Design: Part of Writing Think about design at each step As you plan, think about audience Skilled or busy? Read straight through or skip around? As you write, use lists, headings Use visuals to convey numerical data clearly Get feedback from your audience As you revise, check the design guidelines that follow 8-4
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Design and Conventions Vary widely by audience, geographic area, industry, or department Change over time Violating is risky Presents incorrect interpretations Signals author is unreliable or unknowledgeable 8-5
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Levels of Design Intra—individual letters and words Inter—blocks of text Extra—graphics that go with the text Supra—entire document 8-6
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Page Design Guidelines 1.Use white space 2.Use headings 3.Limit words in all capital letters 4.Use no more than two fonts per document 8-7
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Page Design Guidelines, continued… 5.Justify margins selectively 6.Put key items at top left or bottom right 7.Use a grid for graphic unity 8.Use highlighting, decorative devices, and color in moderation 8-8
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Use White Space White Space—empty space on the page Makes message easier to read To create white space, use Headings Mix of paragraph lengths Lists of parallel items (same form) Bullets or numbers when order is exact XXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 8-9
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Use Headings Headings—words, phrases, or short sentences Group points; divide document Show organization Help audience; save audience’s time Make page look interesting 8-10
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Use Headings To create headings Make each specific Keep headings parallel Make sure they cover all material until next heading 8-11
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Limit Words in All Capital Letters Words in all capitals Lose their unique shapes Have same rectangular shape Lack ascenders and descenders Causes reader to slow down Causes more reading errors people PEOPLE 8-12
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Use No More Than Two Fonts Fonts—unified styles of type Serif font – letters have feet Easy to read; used for paragraphs Ex: New Courier, Times Roman Sans serif font – letters lack feet Harder to read; used for headings, tables Ex: Arial, Tahoma, Univers 8-13
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Use No More Than Two Fonts, continued… Most documents use just one font Create emphasis by using Bold Italics Varied sizes Font size 12-point ideal for most business documents Headings may be larger 8-14
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Justify Margins Selectively Full justification—text even at left and right margin Want formal look Want to use fewest pages Ragged right margin—text even on left, uneven on right Want informal look Use very short lines Want to revise selected pages XXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXX XX XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXX 8-15
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Put Key Items at Top Left and Lower Right Quadrants Reader’s eye moves in Z pattern Starts at upper left corner of page Reads to the right and down Quadrants in order of importance Top left Bottom right Bottom left Top right 1 2 8-16
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Use a Grid for Graphic Unity Grid—2 or 3 imaginary columns on page; may be subdivided All elements lined up in columns Creates pleasing symmetry Unifies long documents 8-17
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Use Decorative Devices in Moderation Use decorative devices sparingly Add interest/emphasis with dingbats, clip art Use color for main headings, not details In North America, red usually means danger 8-18
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Designing Brochures Use this process to create effective brochures 1.Determine your objectives 2.Identify your target audiences 3.Identify central selling point 4.Choose image you want to project 5.Identify objections; brainstorm ways to deal with them 8-19
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Designing Brochures, continued… 6.Draft text to see how much space it takes 7.Select visuals to accompany text 8.Experiment with different papers and layouts 9.Make every choice a conscious one Color – Font – Layout – Paper 10.Polish prose and graphics 8-20
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Brochure Design Principles Put central selling point on cover Use a visual that tells a story Use grid to align elements Repeat graphics; use contrasting sizes, shapes Use color effectively 8-21
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Brochure Design Principles, continued… Make text look appealing Use no more than two fonts Avoid italic type and underlining Use small tab indents Insert plenty of white space Use ragged right margin Don’t put vital points on back of reply coupon 8-22
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Designing Web Pages: Text Help surfing audience learn about Web page sponsor Offer contents list, link to each part Make clear what audience will get if they click a link Put most important info at top of page Start with important words 8-23
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Designing Web Pages: Visuals Use white or light background Keep graphics small Provide visual variety Unify pages; show sponsor on each Include link to homepage on every page 8-24
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Designing Web Pages: Visuals, continued… Use little animation; let audience control its use If page includes sound, put off button where users can see it at once Visit Xenogene, a Web design company. Thumbnails show sample Web page designs 8-25
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Designing Web Pages Common Web page design mistakes Audiences cannot read text Content that doesn’t answers questions Difficult navigation and search tools Complex and lengthy forms Bugs, typos, or corrupted data Outdated content 8-26
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Usability Tests Watch someone use document to do a task Ask user to think aloud during task Interrupt at key points to find out what user thinks Ask user to describe thought process afterwards Ask user to put + and - signs in margins to show likes and dislikes 8-27
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