Document Design
Determines the look of a page, the arrangement of words and visuals
Page Design in Workplace Writing
- Technical documents are designed differently from most other forms of writing
- Designed to be scanned rather than read as a whole
- Technical documents rarely get users' undivided attention
- People read work-related documents only because they have to
- As computers generate more and more written messages, both electronic and hard copy, any document competes for audience attention
Desktop Publishing
- Text can be typed or copied into the program and then edited
- Page highlights and orienting devices can be added
- Images can be drawn or imported
- At any point in the process, entire pages can be viewed and evaluated for visual appeal, accessibility, or emphasis and then revised
- All work at all stages can be stored in the computer for later use, updating
Some Principles of Usable Design (though organizations may prescribe specific design rules)
- Shaping the page
- Consider look, feel, and overall layout
- Use the right paper and ink
- Use high-quality type or print
- Use consistent page numbers, headers, and footers
- Use a grid
- Use adequate white space
- Provide ample and appropriate margins
- Keep line length reasonable
- Keep line spacing consistent
- Tailor each paragraph to its purpose
- Make lists for easy reading
- Styling the words and letters
- Use standard type sizes
- Select appropriate fonts
- Avoid sentences in full caps
- Highlight for emphasis
- Using headings for access and orientation
- Decide how to phrase your headings
- topic headings
- statement headings
- question headings
- Make headings specific as well as comprehensive
- Make headings grammatically consistent
- Make headings visually consistent
- Lay out headings by level
- Guidelines for Headings
- Ordinarily, use no more than four levels of heading
- To divide logically, be sure each higher-level heading yields at least two lower-level headings
- Insert one additional line of space above each heading
- Never begin the sentence right after the heading with "this," "it," or some other pronoun referring to the heading
- Never leave a heading floating as the final line of a page
- Use different type sizes to reflect levels of headings
- Decide how to phrase your headings
- Use running heads or feet in long documents
Audience Considerations in Page Design
- If people will use your document for reference only, use plenty of headings
- If users will follow a sequence of steps, show that sequence in a numbered list
- If users will need to evaluate something, provide a checklist of criteria
- If users needs a warning, highlight the warning so that it cannot possibly be overlooked
- If users have asked for a one-page report or résumé, save space by using 10-point type
- If users will be facing complex information or difficult steps, widen the margins, increase all white space, and shorten paragraphs
Designing On-Screen Pages
- Sentences and paragraphs are shorter and more concise than in hard copy
- Sans serif type is preferred for on-screen readability
- The margin point usually appears closer to the top of each screen
- Each "page" often stands alone as a discrete "module," or unit of meaning
- Links, navigation bars, hot buttons, and help options are displayed on each page