Introduction to Infographic Design

Amanda Makulec
Amanda MakulecData Visualization Lead em Excella
DATA VIZ 105 INTRODUCTION TO INFOGRAPHICS 
This deck was designed as a guide for staff looking for resources about designing infographics. 
Jessica Dubow 
Amanda Makulec 
JSI Center for Health Information, Monitoring & Evaluation 
December 2014
2 
| 
TABLE OF CONTENTS 
. 
01 
›What is an infographic? 
›Why Visualize Information? 
›Design Team 
›Getting Started 
›Types of Infographics 
›Choosing a Tool 
›Tools 
›Best Practices 
›Sharing Your Infographic 
›Evaluating Effectiveness 
Introduction 
Building Your Infographic 
Disseminating Your Infographic 
02 
03
3 
| 
What is an Infographic? 
Information graphics, or infographics, are visual representations of information, data, or knowledge intended to present complex information quickly and clearly. They are designed manually and revisions to them can take time. They often contain data visualizations—graphs or charts generated by software using numerical data that can be easily tweaked and altered. 
Infographics are useful for sharing information because they can improve cognition (understanding and perception) by utilizing eye-catching design elements and concise language to enhance the human visual system’s ability to see patterns and trends. Infographics tell a data story and stimulate conversation around that story. Because their design packages content into visually- appealing, consumable chunks, infographics allow you to access a greater audience by sharing them on a website, including them in a newsletter, or posting them on social media.
4 
| 
Why Visualize Information? 
The use of visualized information has increased 400% in literature since 1990, 142% in newspapers between 1985 and 1994, and 9900% on the internet since 2007. This is because the human brain is visually wired—almost 50% of your brain is involved in visual processing, 70% of all your sensory receptors are in your eyes, and it only takes you 150 milliseconds to process a symbol and another 100 milliseconds to attach meaning to it. 
So where do infographics fit in? Since we now receive 5 times as much information as we did in 1986 and consume 100,500 words outside of work on an average day, infographics help counter information overload. They’re more engaging—researchers found that colorful visuals increase a person’s willingness to read something by 80%. They’re more accessible—people following directions with text and illustrations understand 323% better than people following directions without illustrations. They’re more persuasive—in a study, 67% of the audience were persuaded by a verbal presentation accompanied by visuals whereas only 50% of the audience were persuaded by a verbal presentation without visuals. And they’re memorable—people remember 10% of what they hear, 20% of what they read, but 80% of what they see and do. 
Source: http://neomam.com/interactive/13reasons/
Building Your Infographic 
Design Team 
Getting Started 
Types of Infographics 
Choosing a Tool 
Tools 
Best Practices
6 
| 
Design Team 
When you assemble your infographic design team, you should look for a diverse blend of skills: 
Technical/Program Expert: Someone who understands what the data means. This person should be able to help unpack the meaningful data story (amid a large amount of data) and be part of the audience mapping (which we’ll tackle on subsequent slides) to make sure the design will have the appropriate level of technical depth for the target audience. 
Data Analyst: Someone who can play with the data and present it in ways that make sense. This is often a monitoring and evaluation advisor / analyst or someone else adept at finding trends and stories in the data. 
Communications Specialist: Someone with reasonable design sensibility who can enhance readability, as well as share and disseminate the infographic to ensure it’s widely circulated after being published. 
These three points of view together have the potential to create something very well thought out and valuable.
7 
| 
Getting Started 
To decide if an infographic is the best way to showcase your data, ask yourself what information you have to share and what information you want to share. Though you may be tempted to pack as much information as possible into your infographic, choose only the most important data so that you don’t overwhelm your audience and render your infographic ineffective. Then, ensure consistency. Look at time frames, presentation, and categories (percentages, numbers, etc.), to make sure that they are consistent and can be placed on one unified infographic. 
Next, its time to think about your audience. For a comprehensive source on identifying your audience and tailoring your data story to them, review this slide deck. Overall, ask yourself: 
The information that you highlight will vary for different audiences and for different purposes. Consider your audience’s level of literacy, numeric literacy, technical skill, and their job function. Are they funders? Internal staff? Health workers? Different people will want different kinds of information, even about the same topic. For example, funders will want information about cost effectiveness, policy makers will want broad statistics, and health workers may want figures that motivate them by showing how necessary their work is. 
›WHO are the stakeholders? 
›WHAT information do they need? 
›HOW will they use that information? 
›WHY do they care?
8 
| 
The Storyboard Approach 
Once you have identified your audience and found a compelling story to tell in your data, start organizing your information. Specifically, create a content hierarchy. Find the piece of research or dataset that will lead your story and then arrange supporting elements around it. 
A picture of the final product will begin to emerge with the interesting facts you have selected and arranged. This should be a visual representation of how your infographic will look so it should be clear to understand and stand on its own. Before beginning to design, it may be useful to review this structure with your team or hand it to a colleague to make sure it is simple and easy to understand. 
Next you have to pick a format. Different types of infographics are explained on the next two slides. Think about the purpose of your infographic and the relationship between your data when you decide what type of infographic you want to make.
9 
| 
Types of Infographics 
Flowchart Is a path with possible options branching from a start point. It can answer a specific question by giving choices to your audience so they reach the right answer for their needs, so it can hook anyone who feels the question is important. Humor helps to popularize this kind of infographic. 
Comparisons Contrasts one item or topic “vs” another. Comparisons place the differences and similarities head-to- head for your audience to see visually. 
Timeline Is image-based with events and is often a left to right or top to bottom format or roadmap. Timelines take the audience on a journey in chronological order. 
Visualized Article Takes an otherwise lengthy piece of writing and divides content into blocks of varied and interesting text accompanied by many images. It relies on a strong title—like a journalistic article, the reader needs to be immediately engaged to continue reading.
10 
| 
Types of Infographics 
Big Numbers 
These types of infographics contain extensive data and statistics; they are usually image-heavy to aid the comprehension of those figures. The figures need to be impressive and the design must be engaging. 
Graphs and Charts 
Charts and graphs, as the centerpiece of an infographic or integrated into a larger visual, turn information into something visually creative and appealing compared to a list or table. 
Instructional Steps 
Also called “useful bait,” Instructional Steps explain something or answer a question by visually showing how to do it. These are popular on content sharing platforms like Pinterest and StumbleUpon because of their emphasis on usability, so be straightforward and stick to the topic at hand.
11 
| 
Choosing a Tool to Fit Your Needs All these options are open-source web-based tools. The tools are explained in greater depth on following slides. 
Easel.ly 
Piktochart 
Tableau 
Infogr.am 
•Flowcharts 
•Timelines 
•Visualized Article 
•Comparisons 
•Instructional Steps 
•Big Numbers 
•Flowcharts 
•Visualized Article 
•Comparisons 
•Instructional Steps 
•Big Numbers 
•Timelines 
•Data Visualization 
•Visualized Article 
•Big Numbers 
•Data Visualization
12 
| 
Tools: Easel.ly 
Useful For: Easel.ly is most useful for pictorial infographics like flow charts, instructional steps, comparison posters, highly illustrated timelines, and visualized articles. It features an intuitive interface that is simple to learn because it primarily relies on drag and drop functions. 
Limitations: Easel.ly does not allow you to upload data spreadsheets or enter data manually, so it is best used for infographics that are less data-based. 
Data Sharing Considerations: Though there is a public/private setting that allows you to protect your content from the general internet, other Easel.ly users will still be able to view and use any visuals that you publish. If you are using your own sensitive and private data, opt for taking a screenshot of your infographic rather than publishing it on Easel.ly. 
Shareability: You can download your completed infographic as a jpeg and link to it via web.
13 
| 
Using Easel.ly 
Easel.ly allows you to either create an original theme from a blank canvas or customize premade themes by replacing all text and data. The site refers to these themes as “vhemes,” or visual themes. 
When working with vhemes, you can change background colors, textures and sizes. Easel.ly contains an extensive graphic library that allows you to select scalable images from a number of categories. If you can’t find what you need, you can upload your own images. Double-click text to edit, and consider changing fonts and colors on pre-made templates to improve legibility. 
Tutorial: Easel.ly has an intuitive and simple interface that helps people unfamiliar with the tool successfully create infographics. By clicking the “start fresh” template you’ll see a quick intro to the interface. You can watch a video at the top of the home page for a brief explanation, or find a tutorial on YouTube like this one.
14 
| 
Tools: Piktochart 
Useful For: Like Easel.ly, Piktochart is most useful for pictorial infographics like flow charts, instructional steps, comparison posters, and visualized articles. Piktochart’s customizable editor lets you modify color schemes and fonts, insert pre-loaded graphics, and upload basic shapes and images. 
Limitations: Though you can start using Piktochart for free, your themes are limited, a watermark remains on all your infographics, images have a low resolution, and your number of image uploads is limited to 20. A pro account costs $29 per month/$290 per year. 
Data Sharing Considerations: Anything you publish on a free account is public, but if you pay for a pro account you can choose to keep your infographic—and your data—private. 
Shareability: You can download your infographic from Piktochart as a PNG or JPEG for web or print. If you publish your infographic to the site, you can access an embed link for websites. By publishing, you can also search for your infographic in search engines. If you want to make your data private again, you can “unpublish.”
15 
| 
Using Piktochart 
Start with a free or paid theme after creating an account. If you are using a free account, you can only choose themes without the “Pro” banner across the top right corner. 
Your layout is divided into “blocks” in which you can place your infographic elements. Select a block and then insert “tools” or “graphics” which are found on the left hand menu. You’ll find shapes, icons, and photos under the “graphics” menu, and videos, maps, and charts under the “tools” menu. You can search a large icon library by clicking “graphics” > “icons” and then either typing in a search or skimming through drop-down categories. If you can’t find what you’re looking for, you can make a request for it or upload your own images (SVG files are scalable, but others like JPEG and GIF will lose quality when enlarged). 
When an object on your layout is highlighted, you can use the menu at the top of the page to delete it, change its color and opacity, add a link, arrange objects, flip and rotate, and align objects. If you want to insert a chart, you can manually input your data or upload a CSV file (by saving your Excel doc as .CSV). You can select one of several different chart options which can be customized by clicking on the “Settings” tab in the top right corner. 
Tutorial: Piktochart’s home page contains a link to video tutorials,, samples, and FAQ.
16 
| 
Tools: Tableau 
Useful For: Tableau allows you to create graphs and interactive dashboards in which you can examine multiple visualizations at once, highlight specific variables, drill down into subgroups, change timelines, and embed maps. It is highly customizable, interactive, and inclusive of all types of data. 
Limitations: Tableau is best used for data-based infographics and not pictorial infographics because it doesn’t have the simple drag- and-drop interface of Easel.ly and Piktochart. 
Data Sharing Considerations: When your file is saved, your data becomes public. It can then be downloaded as an image or PDF. 
Shareability: Infographics in Tableau are created with JavaScript and HTML so they can be embedded on the web as interactive graphics.
17 
| 
Using Tableau 
Tutorials: Helpful training videos from Tableau available here. 
1.) Tableau imports your data from Excel and Access. Go to the top navigation and click Data > Connect to Data. You have to set it up so that the first row is your field names (each column represents a different variable like years or age) and the second row is where the data starts. There are two types of data: Measures are numeric whereas Dimensions are the title data. 
2.) To create a graph, select two field names/variables to compare, one from the dimensions category and one from the measures category. To add data to the same graph, drag other dimensions to “color” under “marks.” 
3.) Choose the kind of chart you want using the “show me” feature and this chart choosing tool. 
4.) To create more graphs that are derived from the same set of data, click the “create new worksheet” tab at the bottom of the page. To compare graphs on the same page, click the tab at bottom titled “dashboard.” 
New worksheet 
Dashboard
18 
| 
Tools: Infogr.am 
Useful For: Infogr.am offers you access to a wide variety of graphs, charts, and maps and also allows you to upload pictures and videos. Unlike Easel.ly and Piktochart, for which you can not upload or enter data, Infogr.am allows you to edit an Excel style spreadsheet to create more than thirty different kinds of charts (more than Excel) and update your data in real time. 
Limitations: There are free accounts, but some features are limited. You can upgrade to a Pro account for $18 per month/$180 per year or a White Label account for $50 per month/$500 per year. Formatting and text options on Infogr.am are more limited than other programs and charts don’t allow you to compare as many variables as Tableau. 
Data Sharing Considerations: By publishing your infographic on infogr.am, you publicize your data. You need to upgrade to a Pro or White Label account for private sharing capabilities. 
Shareability: When your infographic is completed, you can publish it to infogr.am where it becomes public. Once published, you can use an embed link to share it on social media or post it on your own website. You can also download it in PNG or PDF format to include in a presentation or email to a colleague.
19 
| 
Using Infogr.am 
Start by choosing a template—free templates do not say “pro” in the corner.” You can either create an infographic (which may or may not contain charts) or a stand alone chart. 
Using the menu on the right-hand side, you can add charts, maps, texts, pictures and video. To create charts, enter data directly into the sheet or upload your data from Excel as an .xls or .csv file. You can specify which features to show (gridlines, data points, smooth curves, etc.) 
Tutorial: There are many tutorials on YouTube like this one.
20 
| 
Infographic Best Practices 
These tools have many built-in themes that follow basic design principles, giving them an advantage over programs like Excel. 
As a general rule of thumb, keep your infographics simple and concise. Ask yourself, “why?” for every design decision you make to make sure that every choice, from font size to color to shapes and patterns is deliberate and serves to tell your data story. Avoid unnecessary visual clutter that might confuse your message. 
Color: The fewer the better, with 3 colors being an ideal amount. Colors in charts should compliment one another, but be easily differentiated. There are many websites that can help you create a color palette, like Adobe Kuler. Keep in mind the tone of your infographics—blue is often associated with medical subjects, yellow with food, etc. 
Shape: Stick to simple points, lines, or bars. Be careful with area bars and proportions as data can seem larger than it actually is. 
Font: The fewer the better. Choose something simple and legible. Sites like Font Picker can help. 
For more DataViz best practices, check out this slide deck. For more on design principles, review this slide deck.
Disseminating Your Infographic 
Sharing Your Infographic 
Evaluating Effectiveness
22 
| 
Sharing Your Infographic 
Once you’ve created your infographic, it’s time to make sure people see it. Most of the tools in this slide deck allow you to publish your infographic to their websites (if your data is public). Once published, you can access an embed code, but you can also just download your infographic as an image or PDF. 
Use social media. Post your infographic on your blog and/or website. Share it internally via email/newsletter, and encourage others to share it. Post it on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, StumbleUpon, SlideShare, Instagram and any other social media you use. Include hashtags so your infographic comes up in searches and you amplify your reach. Wherever you post it, give viewers one-click buttons to share it on their own social media. 
Don’t hesitate to post your infographic on social media sites multiple times using different formats, titles, and hashtags as this will help you get more traffic, access people in various time zones, and engage people with different interests. Post your infographic as a website, then as an image. It works. There are even websites like Hootsuite that will help you to manage your social networks by scheduling posts in advance. 
Here’s a step-by-step guide on using Facebook sponsored stories to promote your infographic.
23 
| 
Sharing Your Infographic 
Share your infographic on infographic directories like Visual.ly, Daily Infographic, Cool Infographics and DataVisualization.ch and more. These are places that collect and post interesting infographics, so you may reach an audience you’ve never accessed before. Make sure to include your website so interested viewers can learn more about your company and your topic. 
Use creative PR moves like identifying popular blogs and bloggers who have engaged in topics related to your infographic. Reach out to them and ask if they’d be willing to include your infographic in their posts. The same goes for Twitter—look for people with many followers who tweet about subjects covered by your infographic and ask them if they’d be willing to share your work or retweet you. 
Don’t forget old school communications and plan a press release or other launch announcement for your infographic.
24 
| 
“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.” --Albert Einstein
25 
| 
Evaluating Effectiveness 
Don’t just measure traffic (unique page views where you infographic is posted), but also consider level of engagement when evaluating your infographic. 
Are people sharing content? Commenting? And where are they coming from? Most web-based platforms let you track where your readers are connecting from, helping you understand if you have the global reach you might want. 
Don’t forget, not all numbers are equal. Your goal may be broad dissemination, but you also may want a refined plan that targets specific demographic groups, organizations, or donors.
Connect 
DataVizHub.co 
Questions, updates, ideas, or suggestions? Amanda Makulec | amakulec@jsi.com
1 de 26

Recomendados

4 Key Elements of Great Infographic Design por
4 Key Elements of Great Infographic Design4 Key Elements of Great Infographic Design
4 Key Elements of Great Infographic DesignAndrea Fryrear
12.4K visualizações24 slides
An Overview of Infographics por
An Overview of InfographicsAn Overview of Infographics
An Overview of InfographicsIllinois Central College Teaching & Learning Center
5.2K visualizações34 slides
Creating an infographic por
Creating an infographicCreating an infographic
Creating an infographicadamzurn
1.3K visualizações35 slides
Intro to infographics por
Intro to infographicsIntro to infographics
Intro to infographicsAndy Dorn
12.9K visualizações28 slides
An introduction to creating infographics por
An introduction to creating infographicsAn introduction to creating infographics
An introduction to creating infographicsSue Beckingham
4.7K visualizações12 slides
Teaching with Infographics por
Teaching with InfographicsTeaching with Infographics
Teaching with InfographicsStephanie Richter
9.6K visualizações43 slides

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

Visual Media por
Visual MediaVisual Media
Visual MediaJulius Memar Ngoho
4.3K visualizações58 slides
Its all about Infographics por
Its all about InfographicsIts all about Infographics
Its all about InfographicsAditya Krishna
56K visualizações23 slides
How to Create Infographics por
How to Create InfographicsHow to Create Infographics
How to Create Infographicslibrary_research_service
4.7K visualizações55 slides
What Are the Types of Infographics? por
What Are the Types of Infographics?What Are the Types of Infographics?
What Are the Types of Infographics?RRGraph Design
117 visualizações16 slides
Infographics introduction por
Infographics introductionInfographics introduction
Infographics introductionkjcmetzger
26.8K visualizações25 slides
Empowerment Technologies - Imaging and Design for the Online Environment por
Empowerment Technologies - Imaging and Design for the Online EnvironmentEmpowerment Technologies - Imaging and Design for the Online Environment
Empowerment Technologies - Imaging and Design for the Online EnvironmentLany Lyn Magdaraog
10.2K visualizações14 slides

Mais procurados(20)

Its all about Infographics por Aditya Krishna
Its all about InfographicsIts all about Infographics
Its all about Infographics
Aditya Krishna56K visualizações
What Are the Types of Infographics? por RRGraph Design
What Are the Types of Infographics?What Are the Types of Infographics?
What Are the Types of Infographics?
RRGraph Design117 visualizações
Infographics introduction por kjcmetzger
Infographics introductionInfographics introduction
Infographics introduction
kjcmetzger26.8K visualizações
Empowerment Technologies - Imaging and Design for the Online Environment por Lany Lyn Magdaraog
Empowerment Technologies - Imaging and Design for the Online EnvironmentEmpowerment Technologies - Imaging and Design for the Online Environment
Empowerment Technologies - Imaging and Design for the Online Environment
Lany Lyn Magdaraog10.2K visualizações
Empowerment Technologies - Principles of Visual Message and Design using Inf... por Lany Lyn Magdaraog
Empowerment  Technologies - Principles of Visual Message and Design using Inf...Empowerment  Technologies - Principles of Visual Message and Design using Inf...
Empowerment Technologies - Principles of Visual Message and Design using Inf...
Lany Lyn Magdaraog23.8K visualizações
Imaging and design for the online environment (empowermwnt technologies) por EricaVS
Imaging and design for the online environment (empowermwnt technologies)Imaging and design for the online environment (empowermwnt technologies)
Imaging and design for the online environment (empowermwnt technologies)
EricaVS1.7K visualizações
Empowerment Technologies Lecture 6 (Philippines SHS) por John Bosco Javellana, MAEd.
Empowerment Technologies Lecture 6 (Philippines SHS)Empowerment Technologies Lecture 6 (Philippines SHS)
Empowerment Technologies Lecture 6 (Philippines SHS)
John Bosco Javellana, MAEd.834 visualizações
5 Rules for Infographic Success por SoDA Speaks
5 Rules for Infographic Success5 Rules for Infographic Success
5 Rules for Infographic Success
SoDA Speaks14.9K visualizações
Online Platform Tools for ICT Content Development por Christine Joy Benedicto
Online Platform Tools for ICT Content Development Online Platform Tools for ICT Content Development
Online Platform Tools for ICT Content Development
Christine Joy Benedicto30.5K visualizações
Imaging and Design for Online Environment por Ped Barbosa
Imaging and Design for Online EnvironmentImaging and Design for Online Environment
Imaging and Design for Online Environment
Ped Barbosa3K visualizações
How To Build An Infographic Using Microsoft Powerpoint por Paul Wilson
How To Build An Infographic Using Microsoft PowerpointHow To Build An Infographic Using Microsoft Powerpoint
How To Build An Infographic Using Microsoft Powerpoint
Paul Wilson911 visualizações
Infographics por Jennifer Janviere
InfographicsInfographics
Infographics
Jennifer Janviere7.5K visualizações
Introduction to Layouts in Graphic Design por Casey Robertson
Introduction to Layouts in Graphic DesignIntroduction to Layouts in Graphic Design
Introduction to Layouts in Graphic Design
Casey Robertson40.5K visualizações
Infographics as teaching tools ppt por knespoli
Infographics as teaching tools pptInfographics as teaching tools ppt
Infographics as teaching tools ppt
knespoli4.4K visualizações
Basic Principles of Graphics and Layout por joypamor
Basic Principles of Graphics and LayoutBasic Principles of Graphics and Layout
Basic Principles of Graphics and Layout
joypamor20.6K visualizações
10 types infographics por eldavis44
10 types infographics10 types infographics
10 types infographics
eldavis441.8K visualizações
Basic principles of grapics and layout por GeovelSarmiento
Basic principles of grapics and layoutBasic principles of grapics and layout
Basic principles of grapics and layout
GeovelSarmiento195 visualizações

Destaque

Starkey introduction to_infographic_iste_sigms_2012 por
Starkey introduction to_infographic_iste_sigms_2012Starkey introduction to_infographic_iste_sigms_2012
Starkey introduction to_infographic_iste_sigms_2012Carolyn Jo Starkey
2.3K visualizações35 slides
Cách tạo infographic với Power Point por
Cách tạo infographic với Power PointCách tạo infographic với Power Point
Cách tạo infographic với Power PointOhay TV
37.7K visualizações24 slides
Saving the Infographic por
Saving the InfographicSaving the Infographic
Saving the InfographicJESS3
8.9K visualizações22 slides
Infografia por
InfografiaInfografia
InfografiaLucas Domingos
912 visualizações5 slides
How to Manage Your Infographic Clients por
How to Manage Your Infographic ClientsHow to Manage Your Infographic Clients
How to Manage Your Infographic ClientsJESS3
7.7K visualizações16 slides
How To Make Money Right Now As A Student por
How To Make Money Right Now As A StudentHow To Make Money Right Now As A Student
How To Make Money Right Now As A StudentPaul Wilson
723 visualizações100 slides

Destaque(20)

Starkey introduction to_infographic_iste_sigms_2012 por Carolyn Jo Starkey
Starkey introduction to_infographic_iste_sigms_2012Starkey introduction to_infographic_iste_sigms_2012
Starkey introduction to_infographic_iste_sigms_2012
Carolyn Jo Starkey2.3K visualizações
Cách tạo infographic với Power Point por Ohay TV
Cách tạo infographic với Power PointCách tạo infographic với Power Point
Cách tạo infographic với Power Point
Ohay TV37.7K visualizações
Saving the Infographic por JESS3
Saving the InfographicSaving the Infographic
Saving the Infographic
JESS38.9K visualizações
Infografia por Lucas Domingos
InfografiaInfografia
Infografia
Lucas Domingos912 visualizações
How to Manage Your Infographic Clients por JESS3
How to Manage Your Infographic ClientsHow to Manage Your Infographic Clients
How to Manage Your Infographic Clients
JESS37.7K visualizações
How To Make Money Right Now As A Student por Paul Wilson
How To Make Money Right Now As A StudentHow To Make Money Right Now As A Student
How To Make Money Right Now As A Student
Paul Wilson723 visualizações
How to Create a Narrative for Your Infographic por JESS3
How to Create a Narrative for Your InfographicHow to Create a Narrative for Your Infographic
How to Create a Narrative for Your Infographic
JESS38K visualizações
How Agile Marketing Kept Me From Sleeping Under My Desk por Andrea Fryrear
How Agile Marketing Kept Me From Sleeping Under My DeskHow Agile Marketing Kept Me From Sleeping Under My Desk
How Agile Marketing Kept Me From Sleeping Under My Desk
Andrea Fryrear890 visualizações
Módulo Google Analytics - Maio 16 por Marcelo Ribeiro
Módulo Google Analytics - Maio 16Módulo Google Analytics - Maio 16
Módulo Google Analytics - Maio 16
Marcelo Ribeiro1.5K visualizações
Infografía por José D. Castro
InfografíaInfografía
Infografía
José D. Castro815 visualizações
Apostila Microsoft Office Word 2016 por Cibele Kanegae
Apostila Microsoft Office Word 2016Apostila Microsoft Office Word 2016
Apostila Microsoft Office Word 2016
Cibele Kanegae35K visualizações
Presentación1 infografia por juanjose205
Presentación1 infografiaPresentación1 infografia
Presentación1 infografia
juanjose205932 visualizações
Infographic Thinking Workshop por Perus Saranurak
Infographic Thinking WorkshopInfographic Thinking Workshop
Infographic Thinking Workshop
Perus Saranurak1.9K visualizações
Infografía por Jhoan Oropeza
InfografíaInfografía
Infografía
Jhoan Oropeza528 visualizações
Infografia na era da cultura visual por Editora Pandion
Infografia na era da cultura visualInfografia na era da cultura visual
Infografia na era da cultura visual
Editora Pandion3.4K visualizações
INFOGRAPHICS: The Good and The Bad por Didit Marketing
INFOGRAPHICS: The Good and The BadINFOGRAPHICS: The Good and The Bad
INFOGRAPHICS: The Good and The Bad
Didit Marketing 104.8K visualizações
Data Visualisation and Infographic Design: 'State of the Union' por Andy Kirk
Data Visualisation and Infographic Design: 'State of the Union'Data Visualisation and Infographic Design: 'State of the Union'
Data Visualisation and Infographic Design: 'State of the Union'
Andy Kirk15.7K visualizações
Infografía. Pasos para elaborarla por Mtra. Zoraida Gpe. Mtz
Infografía. Pasos para elaborarlaInfografía. Pasos para elaborarla
Infografía. Pasos para elaborarla
Mtra. Zoraida Gpe. Mtz909 visualizações
How to Create Infographic Masterclass by Venngage por Venngage
How to Create Infographic Masterclass by VenngageHow to Create Infographic Masterclass by Venngage
How to Create Infographic Masterclass by Venngage
Venngage4.7K visualizações
Infographic Marketing: Better Creation, Better Promotion por Scott Cowley
Infographic Marketing: Better Creation, Better PromotionInfographic Marketing: Better Creation, Better Promotion
Infographic Marketing: Better Creation, Better Promotion
Scott Cowley11K visualizações

Similar a Introduction to Infographic Design

How to Communicate Effectively via Infographics - ColorWhistle por
How to Communicate Effectively via Infographics - ColorWhistleHow to Communicate Effectively via Infographics - ColorWhistle
How to Communicate Effectively via Infographics - ColorWhistleColorWhistle
16 visualizações9 slides
Hello Data! por
Hello Data!Hello Data!
Hello Data!Tridib Ghosh
673 visualizações19 slides
Aftros por
Aftros Aftros
Aftros Sezzar
56 visualizações4 slides
Infographics_101_Training_June_2019_1-min_1.pdf por
Infographics_101_Training_June_2019_1-min_1.pdfInfographics_101_Training_June_2019_1-min_1.pdf
Infographics_101_Training_June_2019_1-min_1.pdfStitpragyaTechnologi
9 visualizações18 slides
DESIGNING APPEALING INFOGRAPHICS.pptx por
DESIGNING APPEALING INFOGRAPHICS.pptxDESIGNING APPEALING INFOGRAPHICS.pptx
DESIGNING APPEALING INFOGRAPHICS.pptxTumwine Edward
50 visualizações16 slides
Principles of data visualisation 2020 por
Principles of data visualisation 2020Principles of data visualisation 2020
Principles of data visualisation 2020Marié Roux
394 visualizações42 slides

Similar a Introduction to Infographic Design(20)

How to Communicate Effectively via Infographics - ColorWhistle por ColorWhistle
How to Communicate Effectively via Infographics - ColorWhistleHow to Communicate Effectively via Infographics - ColorWhistle
How to Communicate Effectively via Infographics - ColorWhistle
ColorWhistle16 visualizações
Hello Data! por Tridib Ghosh
Hello Data!Hello Data!
Hello Data!
Tridib Ghosh673 visualizações
Aftros por Sezzar
Aftros Aftros
Aftros
Sezzar56 visualizações
Infographics_101_Training_June_2019_1-min_1.pdf por StitpragyaTechnologi
Infographics_101_Training_June_2019_1-min_1.pdfInfographics_101_Training_June_2019_1-min_1.pdf
Infographics_101_Training_June_2019_1-min_1.pdf
StitpragyaTechnologi9 visualizações
DESIGNING APPEALING INFOGRAPHICS.pptx por Tumwine Edward
DESIGNING APPEALING INFOGRAPHICS.pptxDESIGNING APPEALING INFOGRAPHICS.pptx
DESIGNING APPEALING INFOGRAPHICS.pptx
Tumwine Edward50 visualizações
Principles of data visualisation 2020 por Marié Roux
Principles of data visualisation 2020Principles of data visualisation 2020
Principles of data visualisation 2020
Marié Roux394 visualizações
Infographics and I.C.T Project por Dennis Morales
Infographics and I.C.T ProjectInfographics and I.C.T Project
Infographics and I.C.T Project
Dennis Morales8.3K visualizações
Infograph Power! por introtodigital
Infograph Power!Infograph Power!
Infograph Power!
introtodigital687 visualizações
Infographics por Shannon Henry
InfographicsInfographics
Infographics
Shannon Henry108 visualizações
August Designstorm: Alternative Reporting Formats por Amanda Makulec
August Designstorm: Alternative Reporting FormatsAugust Designstorm: Alternative Reporting Formats
August Designstorm: Alternative Reporting Formats
Amanda Makulec754 visualizações
All about Infographics por Renee Hobbs
All about Infographics All about Infographics
All about Infographics
Renee Hobbs247 visualizações
How-To Guide -Infographics por Demand Metric
How-To Guide -InfographicsHow-To Guide -Infographics
How-To Guide -Infographics
Demand Metric1.7K visualizações
LM555 ID UNIT BIG6LESSON INFOGRAPHICS LINEAR EQUATIONS por suzannesullins
LM555 ID UNIT BIG6LESSON INFOGRAPHICS LINEAR EQUATIONSLM555 ID UNIT BIG6LESSON INFOGRAPHICS LINEAR EQUATIONS
LM555 ID UNIT BIG6LESSON INFOGRAPHICS LINEAR EQUATIONS
suzannesullins730 visualizações
Intrographics and ict projects por Charlotte Quemada
Intrographics and ict projectsIntrographics and ict projects
Intrographics and ict projects
Charlotte Quemada10.8K visualizações
Principles of data visualisation 2021 por Marié Roux
Principles of data visualisation 2021Principles of data visualisation 2021
Principles of data visualisation 2021
Marié Roux1.6K visualizações
Lesson 5 Manipulating Text, Graphics, and Images por Juvywen
Lesson 5 Manipulating Text, Graphics, and ImagesLesson 5 Manipulating Text, Graphics, and Images
Lesson 5 Manipulating Text, Graphics, and Images
Juvywen18.1K visualizações
Infographic Guide of Guides ACCESSIBLE2 por KBHN KT
Infographic Guide of Guides ACCESSIBLE2Infographic Guide of Guides ACCESSIBLE2
Infographic Guide of Guides ACCESSIBLE2
KBHN KT946 visualizações
Storyboarding for Data Visualization por Amanda Makulec
Storyboarding for Data VisualizationStoryboarding for Data Visualization
Storyboarding for Data Visualization
Amanda Makulec3.2K visualizações
Data Visualization Resource Guide (September 2014) por Amanda Makulec
Data Visualization Resource Guide (September 2014)Data Visualization Resource Guide (September 2014)
Data Visualization Resource Guide (September 2014)
Amanda Makulec17.2K visualizações

Mais de Amanda Makulec

Adapting Agile for MERL por
Adapting Agile for MERLAdapting Agile for MERL
Adapting Agile for MERLAmanda Makulec
422 visualizações25 slides
Why No One is Using your Dashboard por
Why No One is Using your DashboardWhy No One is Using your Dashboard
Why No One is Using your DashboardAmanda Makulec
682 visualizações26 slides
Developing Dashboards with User-Centered Design por
Developing Dashboards with User-Centered DesignDeveloping Dashboards with User-Centered Design
Developing Dashboards with User-Centered DesignAmanda Makulec
2.1K visualizações63 slides
The Simpsons, Design, and Data Use por
The Simpsons, Design, and Data UseThe Simpsons, Design, and Data Use
The Simpsons, Design, and Data UseAmanda Makulec
1.2K visualizações95 slides
Visualizations with Empathy por
Visualizations with EmpathyVisualizations with Empathy
Visualizations with EmpathyAmanda Makulec
1K visualizações41 slides
Nurturing Data Visualization por
Nurturing Data VisualizationNurturing Data Visualization
Nurturing Data VisualizationAmanda Makulec
994 visualizações30 slides

Mais de Amanda Makulec(20)

Adapting Agile for MERL por Amanda Makulec
Adapting Agile for MERLAdapting Agile for MERL
Adapting Agile for MERL
Amanda Makulec422 visualizações
Why No One is Using your Dashboard por Amanda Makulec
Why No One is Using your DashboardWhy No One is Using your Dashboard
Why No One is Using your Dashboard
Amanda Makulec682 visualizações
Developing Dashboards with User-Centered Design por Amanda Makulec
Developing Dashboards with User-Centered DesignDeveloping Dashboards with User-Centered Design
Developing Dashboards with User-Centered Design
Amanda Makulec2.1K visualizações
The Simpsons, Design, and Data Use por Amanda Makulec
The Simpsons, Design, and Data UseThe Simpsons, Design, and Data Use
The Simpsons, Design, and Data Use
Amanda Makulec1.2K visualizações
Visualizations with Empathy por Amanda Makulec
Visualizations with EmpathyVisualizations with Empathy
Visualizations with Empathy
Amanda Makulec1K visualizações
Nurturing Data Visualization por Amanda Makulec
Nurturing Data VisualizationNurturing Data Visualization
Nurturing Data Visualization
Amanda Makulec994 visualizações
Designing Data Visualizations to Strengthen Health Systems por Amanda Makulec
Designing Data Visualizations to Strengthen Health SystemsDesigning Data Visualizations to Strengthen Health Systems
Designing Data Visualizations to Strengthen Health Systems
Amanda Makulec1.4K visualizações
Visualizations with Empathy: Developing Audience Personas por Amanda Makulec
Visualizations with Empathy: Developing Audience PersonasVisualizations with Empathy: Developing Audience Personas
Visualizations with Empathy: Developing Audience Personas
Amanda Makulec1.3K visualizações
Are Dashboards the Magic Bullet? por Amanda Makulec
Are Dashboards the Magic Bullet?Are Dashboards the Magic Bullet?
Are Dashboards the Magic Bullet?
Amanda Makulec864 visualizações
Designstorm How-to: Dot Plots por Amanda Makulec
Designstorm How-to: Dot PlotsDesignstorm How-to: Dot Plots
Designstorm How-to: Dot Plots
Amanda Makulec1.7K visualizações
A Pixar Twist on Presenting Data por Amanda Makulec
A Pixar Twist on Presenting DataA Pixar Twist on Presenting Data
A Pixar Twist on Presenting Data
Amanda Makulec1.2K visualizações
Data Dinner Parties por Amanda Makulec
Data Dinner PartiesData Dinner Parties
Data Dinner Parties
Amanda Makulec782 visualizações
The Human Element por Amanda Makulec
The Human ElementThe Human Element
The Human Element
Amanda Makulec938 visualizações
Designing Usage Dashboards for mHealth Program Monitoring por Amanda Makulec
Designing Usage Dashboards for mHealth Program MonitoringDesigning Usage Dashboards for mHealth Program Monitoring
Designing Usage Dashboards for mHealth Program Monitoring
Amanda Makulec776 visualizações
Data Visualization Design Best Practices Workshop por Amanda Makulec
Data Visualization Design Best Practices WorkshopData Visualization Design Best Practices Workshop
Data Visualization Design Best Practices Workshop
Amanda Makulec2.1K visualizações
Making Data Meaningful por Amanda Makulec
Making Data MeaningfulMaking Data Meaningful
Making Data Meaningful
Amanda Makulec1.2K visualizações
Chart Makeover: A Women's Nutrition Bar Chart por Amanda Makulec
Chart Makeover: A Women's Nutrition Bar ChartChart Makeover: A Women's Nutrition Bar Chart
Chart Makeover: A Women's Nutrition Bar Chart
Amanda Makulec1.4K visualizações
A Data Viz Makeover: Approaches for Improving your Visualizations por Amanda Makulec
A Data Viz Makeover: Approaches for Improving your VisualizationsA Data Viz Makeover: Approaches for Improving your Visualizations
A Data Viz Makeover: Approaches for Improving your Visualizations
Amanda Makulec9.4K visualizações
Alternative Reporting Formats por Amanda Makulec
Alternative Reporting FormatsAlternative Reporting Formats
Alternative Reporting Formats
Amanda Makulec1.6K visualizações
Creating Functional Art in Excel por Amanda Makulec
Creating Functional Art in ExcelCreating Functional Art in Excel
Creating Functional Art in Excel
Amanda Makulec1.4K visualizações

Último

Short Story Assignment by Kelly Nguyen por
Short Story Assignment by Kelly NguyenShort Story Assignment by Kelly Nguyen
Short Story Assignment by Kelly Nguyenkellynguyen01
19 visualizações17 slides
[DSC Europe 23] Predrag Ilic & Simeon Rilling - From Data Lakes to Data Mesh ... por
[DSC Europe 23] Predrag Ilic & Simeon Rilling - From Data Lakes to Data Mesh ...[DSC Europe 23] Predrag Ilic & Simeon Rilling - From Data Lakes to Data Mesh ...
[DSC Europe 23] Predrag Ilic & Simeon Rilling - From Data Lakes to Data Mesh ...DataScienceConferenc1
9 visualizações18 slides
shivam tiwari.pptx por
shivam tiwari.pptxshivam tiwari.pptx
shivam tiwari.pptxAanyaMishra4
5 visualizações14 slides
PRIVACY AWRE PERSONAL DATA STORAGE por
PRIVACY AWRE PERSONAL DATA STORAGEPRIVACY AWRE PERSONAL DATA STORAGE
PRIVACY AWRE PERSONAL DATA STORAGEantony420421
7 visualizações56 slides
[DSC Europe 23] Rania Wazir - Opening up the box: the complexity of human int... por
[DSC Europe 23] Rania Wazir - Opening up the box: the complexity of human int...[DSC Europe 23] Rania Wazir - Opening up the box: the complexity of human int...
[DSC Europe 23] Rania Wazir - Opening up the box: the complexity of human int...DataScienceConferenc1
5 visualizações17 slides
Ukraine Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdf por
Ukraine Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdfUkraine Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdf
Ukraine Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdfAnastosiyaGurin
1.4K visualizações3 slides

Último(20)

Short Story Assignment by Kelly Nguyen por kellynguyen01
Short Story Assignment by Kelly NguyenShort Story Assignment by Kelly Nguyen
Short Story Assignment by Kelly Nguyen
kellynguyen0119 visualizações
[DSC Europe 23] Predrag Ilic & Simeon Rilling - From Data Lakes to Data Mesh ... por DataScienceConferenc1
[DSC Europe 23] Predrag Ilic & Simeon Rilling - From Data Lakes to Data Mesh ...[DSC Europe 23] Predrag Ilic & Simeon Rilling - From Data Lakes to Data Mesh ...
[DSC Europe 23] Predrag Ilic & Simeon Rilling - From Data Lakes to Data Mesh ...
DataScienceConferenc19 visualizações
shivam tiwari.pptx por AanyaMishra4
shivam tiwari.pptxshivam tiwari.pptx
shivam tiwari.pptx
AanyaMishra45 visualizações
PRIVACY AWRE PERSONAL DATA STORAGE por antony420421
PRIVACY AWRE PERSONAL DATA STORAGEPRIVACY AWRE PERSONAL DATA STORAGE
PRIVACY AWRE PERSONAL DATA STORAGE
antony4204217 visualizações
[DSC Europe 23] Rania Wazir - Opening up the box: the complexity of human int... por DataScienceConferenc1
[DSC Europe 23] Rania Wazir - Opening up the box: the complexity of human int...[DSC Europe 23] Rania Wazir - Opening up the box: the complexity of human int...
[DSC Europe 23] Rania Wazir - Opening up the box: the complexity of human int...
DataScienceConferenc15 visualizações
Ukraine Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdf por AnastosiyaGurin
Ukraine Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdfUkraine Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdf
Ukraine Infographic_22NOV2023_v2.pdf
AnastosiyaGurin1.4K visualizações
[DSC Europe 23] Luca Morena - From Psychohistory to Curious Machines por DataScienceConferenc1
[DSC Europe 23] Luca Morena - From Psychohistory to Curious Machines[DSC Europe 23] Luca Morena - From Psychohistory to Curious Machines
[DSC Europe 23] Luca Morena - From Psychohistory to Curious Machines
DataScienceConferenc15 visualizações
LIVE OAK MEMORIAL PARK.pptx por ms2332always
LIVE OAK MEMORIAL PARK.pptxLIVE OAK MEMORIAL PARK.pptx
LIVE OAK MEMORIAL PARK.pptx
ms2332always7 visualizações
Product Research sample.pdf por AllenSingson
Product Research sample.pdfProduct Research sample.pdf
Product Research sample.pdf
AllenSingson29 visualizações
CRIJ4385_Death Penalty_F23.pptx por yvettemm100
CRIJ4385_Death Penalty_F23.pptxCRIJ4385_Death Penalty_F23.pptx
CRIJ4385_Death Penalty_F23.pptx
yvettemm1007 visualizações
Infomatica-MDM.pptx por Kapil Rangwani
Infomatica-MDM.pptxInfomatica-MDM.pptx
Infomatica-MDM.pptx
Kapil Rangwani11 visualizações
Listed Instruments Survey 2022.pptx por secretariat4
Listed Instruments Survey  2022.pptxListed Instruments Survey  2022.pptx
Listed Instruments Survey 2022.pptx
secretariat431 visualizações
Data about the sector workshop por info828217
Data about the sector workshopData about the sector workshop
Data about the sector workshop
info82821716 visualizações
Employees attrition por MaryAlejandraDiaz
Employees attritionEmployees attrition
Employees attrition
MaryAlejandraDiaz5 visualizações
[DSC Europe 23][AI:CSI] Dragan Pleskonjic - AI Impact on Cybersecurity and P... por DataScienceConferenc1
[DSC Europe 23][AI:CSI]  Dragan Pleskonjic - AI Impact on Cybersecurity and P...[DSC Europe 23][AI:CSI]  Dragan Pleskonjic - AI Impact on Cybersecurity and P...
[DSC Europe 23][AI:CSI] Dragan Pleskonjic - AI Impact on Cybersecurity and P...
DataScienceConferenc18 visualizações
6498-Butun_Beyinli_Cocuq-Daniel_J.Siegel-Tina_Payne_Bryson-2011-259s.pdf por 10urkyr34
6498-Butun_Beyinli_Cocuq-Daniel_J.Siegel-Tina_Payne_Bryson-2011-259s.pdf6498-Butun_Beyinli_Cocuq-Daniel_J.Siegel-Tina_Payne_Bryson-2011-259s.pdf
6498-Butun_Beyinli_Cocuq-Daniel_J.Siegel-Tina_Payne_Bryson-2011-259s.pdf
10urkyr346 visualizações
VoxelNet por taeseon ryu
VoxelNetVoxelNet
VoxelNet
taeseon ryu16 visualizações
[DSC Europe 23] Spela Poklukar & Tea Brasanac - Retrieval Augmented Generation por DataScienceConferenc1
[DSC Europe 23] Spela Poklukar & Tea Brasanac - Retrieval Augmented Generation[DSC Europe 23] Spela Poklukar & Tea Brasanac - Retrieval Augmented Generation
[DSC Europe 23] Spela Poklukar & Tea Brasanac - Retrieval Augmented Generation
DataScienceConferenc117 visualizações
4_4_WP_4_06_ND_Model.pptx por d6fmc6kwd4
4_4_WP_4_06_ND_Model.pptx4_4_WP_4_06_ND_Model.pptx
4_4_WP_4_06_ND_Model.pptx
d6fmc6kwd47 visualizações

Introduction to Infographic Design

  • 1. DATA VIZ 105 INTRODUCTION TO INFOGRAPHICS This deck was designed as a guide for staff looking for resources about designing infographics. Jessica Dubow Amanda Makulec JSI Center for Health Information, Monitoring & Evaluation December 2014
  • 2. 2 | TABLE OF CONTENTS . 01 ›What is an infographic? ›Why Visualize Information? ›Design Team ›Getting Started ›Types of Infographics ›Choosing a Tool ›Tools ›Best Practices ›Sharing Your Infographic ›Evaluating Effectiveness Introduction Building Your Infographic Disseminating Your Infographic 02 03
  • 3. 3 | What is an Infographic? Information graphics, or infographics, are visual representations of information, data, or knowledge intended to present complex information quickly and clearly. They are designed manually and revisions to them can take time. They often contain data visualizations—graphs or charts generated by software using numerical data that can be easily tweaked and altered. Infographics are useful for sharing information because they can improve cognition (understanding and perception) by utilizing eye-catching design elements and concise language to enhance the human visual system’s ability to see patterns and trends. Infographics tell a data story and stimulate conversation around that story. Because their design packages content into visually- appealing, consumable chunks, infographics allow you to access a greater audience by sharing them on a website, including them in a newsletter, or posting them on social media.
  • 4. 4 | Why Visualize Information? The use of visualized information has increased 400% in literature since 1990, 142% in newspapers between 1985 and 1994, and 9900% on the internet since 2007. This is because the human brain is visually wired—almost 50% of your brain is involved in visual processing, 70% of all your sensory receptors are in your eyes, and it only takes you 150 milliseconds to process a symbol and another 100 milliseconds to attach meaning to it. So where do infographics fit in? Since we now receive 5 times as much information as we did in 1986 and consume 100,500 words outside of work on an average day, infographics help counter information overload. They’re more engaging—researchers found that colorful visuals increase a person’s willingness to read something by 80%. They’re more accessible—people following directions with text and illustrations understand 323% better than people following directions without illustrations. They’re more persuasive—in a study, 67% of the audience were persuaded by a verbal presentation accompanied by visuals whereas only 50% of the audience were persuaded by a verbal presentation without visuals. And they’re memorable—people remember 10% of what they hear, 20% of what they read, but 80% of what they see and do. Source: http://neomam.com/interactive/13reasons/
  • 5. Building Your Infographic Design Team Getting Started Types of Infographics Choosing a Tool Tools Best Practices
  • 6. 6 | Design Team When you assemble your infographic design team, you should look for a diverse blend of skills: Technical/Program Expert: Someone who understands what the data means. This person should be able to help unpack the meaningful data story (amid a large amount of data) and be part of the audience mapping (which we’ll tackle on subsequent slides) to make sure the design will have the appropriate level of technical depth for the target audience. Data Analyst: Someone who can play with the data and present it in ways that make sense. This is often a monitoring and evaluation advisor / analyst or someone else adept at finding trends and stories in the data. Communications Specialist: Someone with reasonable design sensibility who can enhance readability, as well as share and disseminate the infographic to ensure it’s widely circulated after being published. These three points of view together have the potential to create something very well thought out and valuable.
  • 7. 7 | Getting Started To decide if an infographic is the best way to showcase your data, ask yourself what information you have to share and what information you want to share. Though you may be tempted to pack as much information as possible into your infographic, choose only the most important data so that you don’t overwhelm your audience and render your infographic ineffective. Then, ensure consistency. Look at time frames, presentation, and categories (percentages, numbers, etc.), to make sure that they are consistent and can be placed on one unified infographic. Next, its time to think about your audience. For a comprehensive source on identifying your audience and tailoring your data story to them, review this slide deck. Overall, ask yourself: The information that you highlight will vary for different audiences and for different purposes. Consider your audience’s level of literacy, numeric literacy, technical skill, and their job function. Are they funders? Internal staff? Health workers? Different people will want different kinds of information, even about the same topic. For example, funders will want information about cost effectiveness, policy makers will want broad statistics, and health workers may want figures that motivate them by showing how necessary their work is. ›WHO are the stakeholders? ›WHAT information do they need? ›HOW will they use that information? ›WHY do they care?
  • 8. 8 | The Storyboard Approach Once you have identified your audience and found a compelling story to tell in your data, start organizing your information. Specifically, create a content hierarchy. Find the piece of research or dataset that will lead your story and then arrange supporting elements around it. A picture of the final product will begin to emerge with the interesting facts you have selected and arranged. This should be a visual representation of how your infographic will look so it should be clear to understand and stand on its own. Before beginning to design, it may be useful to review this structure with your team or hand it to a colleague to make sure it is simple and easy to understand. Next you have to pick a format. Different types of infographics are explained on the next two slides. Think about the purpose of your infographic and the relationship between your data when you decide what type of infographic you want to make.
  • 9. 9 | Types of Infographics Flowchart Is a path with possible options branching from a start point. It can answer a specific question by giving choices to your audience so they reach the right answer for their needs, so it can hook anyone who feels the question is important. Humor helps to popularize this kind of infographic. Comparisons Contrasts one item or topic “vs” another. Comparisons place the differences and similarities head-to- head for your audience to see visually. Timeline Is image-based with events and is often a left to right or top to bottom format or roadmap. Timelines take the audience on a journey in chronological order. Visualized Article Takes an otherwise lengthy piece of writing and divides content into blocks of varied and interesting text accompanied by many images. It relies on a strong title—like a journalistic article, the reader needs to be immediately engaged to continue reading.
  • 10. 10 | Types of Infographics Big Numbers These types of infographics contain extensive data and statistics; they are usually image-heavy to aid the comprehension of those figures. The figures need to be impressive and the design must be engaging. Graphs and Charts Charts and graphs, as the centerpiece of an infographic or integrated into a larger visual, turn information into something visually creative and appealing compared to a list or table. Instructional Steps Also called “useful bait,” Instructional Steps explain something or answer a question by visually showing how to do it. These are popular on content sharing platforms like Pinterest and StumbleUpon because of their emphasis on usability, so be straightforward and stick to the topic at hand.
  • 11. 11 | Choosing a Tool to Fit Your Needs All these options are open-source web-based tools. The tools are explained in greater depth on following slides. Easel.ly Piktochart Tableau Infogr.am •Flowcharts •Timelines •Visualized Article •Comparisons •Instructional Steps •Big Numbers •Flowcharts •Visualized Article •Comparisons •Instructional Steps •Big Numbers •Timelines •Data Visualization •Visualized Article •Big Numbers •Data Visualization
  • 12. 12 | Tools: Easel.ly Useful For: Easel.ly is most useful for pictorial infographics like flow charts, instructional steps, comparison posters, highly illustrated timelines, and visualized articles. It features an intuitive interface that is simple to learn because it primarily relies on drag and drop functions. Limitations: Easel.ly does not allow you to upload data spreadsheets or enter data manually, so it is best used for infographics that are less data-based. Data Sharing Considerations: Though there is a public/private setting that allows you to protect your content from the general internet, other Easel.ly users will still be able to view and use any visuals that you publish. If you are using your own sensitive and private data, opt for taking a screenshot of your infographic rather than publishing it on Easel.ly. Shareability: You can download your completed infographic as a jpeg and link to it via web.
  • 13. 13 | Using Easel.ly Easel.ly allows you to either create an original theme from a blank canvas or customize premade themes by replacing all text and data. The site refers to these themes as “vhemes,” or visual themes. When working with vhemes, you can change background colors, textures and sizes. Easel.ly contains an extensive graphic library that allows you to select scalable images from a number of categories. If you can’t find what you need, you can upload your own images. Double-click text to edit, and consider changing fonts and colors on pre-made templates to improve legibility. Tutorial: Easel.ly has an intuitive and simple interface that helps people unfamiliar with the tool successfully create infographics. By clicking the “start fresh” template you’ll see a quick intro to the interface. You can watch a video at the top of the home page for a brief explanation, or find a tutorial on YouTube like this one.
  • 14. 14 | Tools: Piktochart Useful For: Like Easel.ly, Piktochart is most useful for pictorial infographics like flow charts, instructional steps, comparison posters, and visualized articles. Piktochart’s customizable editor lets you modify color schemes and fonts, insert pre-loaded graphics, and upload basic shapes and images. Limitations: Though you can start using Piktochart for free, your themes are limited, a watermark remains on all your infographics, images have a low resolution, and your number of image uploads is limited to 20. A pro account costs $29 per month/$290 per year. Data Sharing Considerations: Anything you publish on a free account is public, but if you pay for a pro account you can choose to keep your infographic—and your data—private. Shareability: You can download your infographic from Piktochart as a PNG or JPEG for web or print. If you publish your infographic to the site, you can access an embed link for websites. By publishing, you can also search for your infographic in search engines. If you want to make your data private again, you can “unpublish.”
  • 15. 15 | Using Piktochart Start with a free or paid theme after creating an account. If you are using a free account, you can only choose themes without the “Pro” banner across the top right corner. Your layout is divided into “blocks” in which you can place your infographic elements. Select a block and then insert “tools” or “graphics” which are found on the left hand menu. You’ll find shapes, icons, and photos under the “graphics” menu, and videos, maps, and charts under the “tools” menu. You can search a large icon library by clicking “graphics” > “icons” and then either typing in a search or skimming through drop-down categories. If you can’t find what you’re looking for, you can make a request for it or upload your own images (SVG files are scalable, but others like JPEG and GIF will lose quality when enlarged). When an object on your layout is highlighted, you can use the menu at the top of the page to delete it, change its color and opacity, add a link, arrange objects, flip and rotate, and align objects. If you want to insert a chart, you can manually input your data or upload a CSV file (by saving your Excel doc as .CSV). You can select one of several different chart options which can be customized by clicking on the “Settings” tab in the top right corner. Tutorial: Piktochart’s home page contains a link to video tutorials,, samples, and FAQ.
  • 16. 16 | Tools: Tableau Useful For: Tableau allows you to create graphs and interactive dashboards in which you can examine multiple visualizations at once, highlight specific variables, drill down into subgroups, change timelines, and embed maps. It is highly customizable, interactive, and inclusive of all types of data. Limitations: Tableau is best used for data-based infographics and not pictorial infographics because it doesn’t have the simple drag- and-drop interface of Easel.ly and Piktochart. Data Sharing Considerations: When your file is saved, your data becomes public. It can then be downloaded as an image or PDF. Shareability: Infographics in Tableau are created with JavaScript and HTML so they can be embedded on the web as interactive graphics.
  • 17. 17 | Using Tableau Tutorials: Helpful training videos from Tableau available here. 1.) Tableau imports your data from Excel and Access. Go to the top navigation and click Data > Connect to Data. You have to set it up so that the first row is your field names (each column represents a different variable like years or age) and the second row is where the data starts. There are two types of data: Measures are numeric whereas Dimensions are the title data. 2.) To create a graph, select two field names/variables to compare, one from the dimensions category and one from the measures category. To add data to the same graph, drag other dimensions to “color” under “marks.” 3.) Choose the kind of chart you want using the “show me” feature and this chart choosing tool. 4.) To create more graphs that are derived from the same set of data, click the “create new worksheet” tab at the bottom of the page. To compare graphs on the same page, click the tab at bottom titled “dashboard.” New worksheet Dashboard
  • 18. 18 | Tools: Infogr.am Useful For: Infogr.am offers you access to a wide variety of graphs, charts, and maps and also allows you to upload pictures and videos. Unlike Easel.ly and Piktochart, for which you can not upload or enter data, Infogr.am allows you to edit an Excel style spreadsheet to create more than thirty different kinds of charts (more than Excel) and update your data in real time. Limitations: There are free accounts, but some features are limited. You can upgrade to a Pro account for $18 per month/$180 per year or a White Label account for $50 per month/$500 per year. Formatting and text options on Infogr.am are more limited than other programs and charts don’t allow you to compare as many variables as Tableau. Data Sharing Considerations: By publishing your infographic on infogr.am, you publicize your data. You need to upgrade to a Pro or White Label account for private sharing capabilities. Shareability: When your infographic is completed, you can publish it to infogr.am where it becomes public. Once published, you can use an embed link to share it on social media or post it on your own website. You can also download it in PNG or PDF format to include in a presentation or email to a colleague.
  • 19. 19 | Using Infogr.am Start by choosing a template—free templates do not say “pro” in the corner.” You can either create an infographic (which may or may not contain charts) or a stand alone chart. Using the menu on the right-hand side, you can add charts, maps, texts, pictures and video. To create charts, enter data directly into the sheet or upload your data from Excel as an .xls or .csv file. You can specify which features to show (gridlines, data points, smooth curves, etc.) Tutorial: There are many tutorials on YouTube like this one.
  • 20. 20 | Infographic Best Practices These tools have many built-in themes that follow basic design principles, giving them an advantage over programs like Excel. As a general rule of thumb, keep your infographics simple and concise. Ask yourself, “why?” for every design decision you make to make sure that every choice, from font size to color to shapes and patterns is deliberate and serves to tell your data story. Avoid unnecessary visual clutter that might confuse your message. Color: The fewer the better, with 3 colors being an ideal amount. Colors in charts should compliment one another, but be easily differentiated. There are many websites that can help you create a color palette, like Adobe Kuler. Keep in mind the tone of your infographics—blue is often associated with medical subjects, yellow with food, etc. Shape: Stick to simple points, lines, or bars. Be careful with area bars and proportions as data can seem larger than it actually is. Font: The fewer the better. Choose something simple and legible. Sites like Font Picker can help. For more DataViz best practices, check out this slide deck. For more on design principles, review this slide deck.
  • 21. Disseminating Your Infographic Sharing Your Infographic Evaluating Effectiveness
  • 22. 22 | Sharing Your Infographic Once you’ve created your infographic, it’s time to make sure people see it. Most of the tools in this slide deck allow you to publish your infographic to their websites (if your data is public). Once published, you can access an embed code, but you can also just download your infographic as an image or PDF. Use social media. Post your infographic on your blog and/or website. Share it internally via email/newsletter, and encourage others to share it. Post it on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, StumbleUpon, SlideShare, Instagram and any other social media you use. Include hashtags so your infographic comes up in searches and you amplify your reach. Wherever you post it, give viewers one-click buttons to share it on their own social media. Don’t hesitate to post your infographic on social media sites multiple times using different formats, titles, and hashtags as this will help you get more traffic, access people in various time zones, and engage people with different interests. Post your infographic as a website, then as an image. It works. There are even websites like Hootsuite that will help you to manage your social networks by scheduling posts in advance. Here’s a step-by-step guide on using Facebook sponsored stories to promote your infographic.
  • 23. 23 | Sharing Your Infographic Share your infographic on infographic directories like Visual.ly, Daily Infographic, Cool Infographics and DataVisualization.ch and more. These are places that collect and post interesting infographics, so you may reach an audience you’ve never accessed before. Make sure to include your website so interested viewers can learn more about your company and your topic. Use creative PR moves like identifying popular blogs and bloggers who have engaged in topics related to your infographic. Reach out to them and ask if they’d be willing to include your infographic in their posts. The same goes for Twitter—look for people with many followers who tweet about subjects covered by your infographic and ask them if they’d be willing to share your work or retweet you. Don’t forget old school communications and plan a press release or other launch announcement for your infographic.
  • 24. 24 | “Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.” --Albert Einstein
  • 25. 25 | Evaluating Effectiveness Don’t just measure traffic (unique page views where you infographic is posted), but also consider level of engagement when evaluating your infographic. Are people sharing content? Commenting? And where are they coming from? Most web-based platforms let you track where your readers are connecting from, helping you understand if you have the global reach you might want. Don’t forget, not all numbers are equal. Your goal may be broad dissemination, but you also may want a refined plan that targets specific demographic groups, organizations, or donors.
  • 26. Connect DataVizHub.co Questions, updates, ideas, or suggestions? Amanda Makulec | amakulec@jsi.com