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Mar 17 2021

What is an Infographic?

So let’s not overthink this one.

Infographics are the result of asking graphic designers to illustrate data and other information. We can find examples across history of people mixing pictures and text to convey information. There is no singular style and an all encompassing definition is probably not all that useful.

For me, infographics are just a way to adapt a body of work (say a report or a paper) to meet the needs of a particular audience.

What is an infographic? Cartoon by Chris Lysy of Freshspectrum showing a Venn Diagram with Information and Graphics. "This" is shown in the overlap.

We live in a visual world. And visual reports are slowly becoming the norm, not an exception.

But for a lot of organizations, those fearful of stepping too far away from their normal practices, going all in on visual reporting is a lot to ask. Infographics offer a kind of stepping stone.

Cartoon by Chris Lysy of Freshspectrum.  So basically an infographic is just a poster with charts? Yeah, pretty much.

Infographic design as poster design.

The easiest way to think about an infographic is to look at it like a poster.

Posters are purposeful visual communication tools. Posters outside a movie theatre show you what’s playing. Posters outside a music venue tell you what artists are going to be appearing soon, and where else they are playing. Posters in the airport security line tell you how to prep for your turn through the metal detectors.

Yes, you can communicate some useful information. But rarely ever does a poster offer anything comprehensive. Comprehensive is just not the point. Speaking directly and efficiently to an audience is the point.

What tools should I use?

I would suggest using design tools for your infographics. Tools like Adobe XD, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Sketch, Canva, or even Power Point can be used to make nice infographics.

I would avoid trying to create infographics using analysis tools or dashboard tools (like Tableau, R, or Excel). Same with word processing tools like Word. You can create infographics using anything, but that doesn’t mean you should.

Cartoon by Chris Lysy of Freshspectrum. So the only requirement was that the infographic be printed one-sided. i was having trouble fitting everything until I remembered that a mobius strip is always one-sided.

Examples of Infographic Styles

Just because there isn’t one way to create an infographic doesn’t mean we have to start from scratch. There are all sorts of styles and examples on the web. The type you choose really depends on your information and your specific audience needs.

I’ll share some links where you can find good examples at the end of the post, but before that, here are some basic styles.

The “Kinda Like a Presentation” Infographic

These infographics used to be all the rage a decade ago. Basically you create your infographic like it’s a power point slide deck (or slide doc). Then you sequence the panels (slides) like you would with a presentation.

Just remember that you won’t be standing in front of the slides when you share it. So you want to make sure people can read it from top to bottom.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - Kinda like a presentation style.

The Timeline Infographic

It’s a timeline. You annotate it with words, dates, pictures, and charts. The timeline itself provides the narrative underpinning.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - Timeline style infographic

The “Map in the Middle” Infographic

It’s a map. You annotate it with words, pictures, and charts.

People like maps.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - Map in the Middle Infographic

The Annotated Chart Infographic

You start with an interesting chart. Then you annotate it with words, pictures, and other charts.

This is a nice infographic if you have some kind of marquee chart to feature.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - Annotated Chart infographic

The “Visual Report Index” Infographic

This is an infographic that pairs really well with a longer report.

You just take out quotes, graphics, and charts and put them with their page number. The person reading the infographic will know exactly where to go in the report if they want to dive deeper beyond the single fragment.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - Visual Report Index infographic

“Collage Style” Infographic

For the people really good at creating scrapbooks. You can pull together a bunch of information in the style of a collage.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - Collage Style infographic

The “Menu Style” Infographic.

With this style you basically just mimic a restaurant menu. But instead of pictures and descriptions of the food, you have charts and annotations.

You could also add page numbers to make index style.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - Menu Style infographic

Small Multiple Style Infographic

Small multiples make really solid infographics. You just start with one chart then repeat it over and over again. For example, if you have a program with 20 sites, you create the same chart for all 20 sites then put them together on the same page.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - Small Multiple style infographic

Simple Layering Infographic

Start with one chart.

Then for each of the categories shown in that first chart, you’ll create subsequent charts or share other specific information. This is similar to how you might create an interactive dashboard, showing multiple levels of data, but with an infographic you’ll just do that on one page without the required clicks.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - simple layering style infographic

“Dashboard Style” Infographic

This is usually what I suggest when a client wants a dashboard but the data doesn’t continuously update. You create a dashboard look, but then you can release once a month (or once a year).

What is an Infographic? Illustration - dashboard style infographic

Comic Style Infographic

So for this one you create your infographic like it’s a comic or a graphic novel. I really like this approach, and not just because I draw cartoons.

What is an Infographic? Illustration - comic style infographic

Some Example Infographics

I shared a bunch of styles, but there are tons more out there. Seriously, I could have kept going on and on (diagrams, pathways, flow charts, etc.).

But instead of that, at this point you’re probably just hoping to find some links with good examples. So here you go:

  • What is an Infographic? Examples, Templates & Design Tips
  • What Is an Infographic? Why They’re Great & How to Create Them
  • How designers do it: 15 easy steps to design an infographic from scratch

Written by cplysy · Categorized: freshspectrum

Mar 17 2021

Ask Nicole: Responding to Partnership Requests

Have a question you’d like to be featured? Let me know. I’ve touched on engaging with prospective clients here. Today, let’s focus on responding to partnership requests. Partnerships looks differently depending on your industry. For me, a partnership is working with someone or an entity to oversee a project for a client. Being co-investigators on […]

The post Ask Nicole: Responding to Partnership Requests appeared first on Nicole Clark Consulting.

Written by cplysy · Categorized: nicoleclark

Mar 17 2021

Adopting Inclusive and Non-Violent Language: Part 2

This 2-part post will share my experiences adopting more inclusive and non-violent language into my work. Part 1 will discuss inclusive and strengths-based language while Part 2 (this one) will discuss non-violent language.

The post Adopting Inclusive and Non-Violent Language: Part 2 appeared first on Elizabeth Grim.

Written by cplysy · Categorized: elizabethgrim

Mar 17 2021

Adopting Inclusive and Non-Violent Language: Part 1

This 2-part post will share my experiences adopting more inclusive and non-violent language into my work. Part 1 (this one) will discuss inclusive and strengths-based language while Part 2 will discuss non-violent language.

The post Adopting Inclusive and Non-Violent Language: Part 1 appeared first on Elizabeth Grim.

Written by cplysy · Categorized: elizabethgrim

Mar 15 2021

Evaluación del desarrollo de capacidades

 

Fuente

Siguiendo nuestra sección de “desarrollo de capacidades“, en el documento “Marco de evaluación del desarrollo de capacidades” de 2019 de la FAO, se indica que el desarrollo de la capacidades es una modalidad fundamental del apoyo de la cooperación internacional en los países en los que trabaja. La mayoría de las intervenciones brindan algún tipo de apoyo para el desarrollo de capacidades que abarca los niveles individual, institucional y del entorno propicio, mientras que aproximadamente una cuarta parte se centra en capacitaciones individuales. En los informes de evaluación, hay evidencias concretas de que se han desarrollado capacidades en determinados grupos destinatarios. Sin embargo, es más difícil identificar los impactos a largo plazo y de mayor nivel, como en el entorno de políticas, la mejora de la estructura institucional y los sistemas de conocimiento.

A. Algunos factores que hicieron que el proceso de desarrollo de capacidades fuera exitoso fueron:

(1) mayor uso de la experiencia local y las instituciones nacionales,

(2) trabajar en múltiples niveles de influencia,

(3) evaluación participativa de las necesidades a nivel individual e institucional,

(4) la creación de una masa crítica de personal capacitado junto con la creación de capacidad institucional, y

(5) actividades de seguimiento post-formación.

B. Por otro lado, las barreras o los factores debilitantes para el desarrollo de capacidades  incluyeron:

(1) focalización inadecuada,

(2) atención insuficiente a las necesidades de desarrollo de capacidades a nivel subnacional,

(3) centrarse en la formación técnica con atención limitada a los aspectos operativos y de gestión,

(4) centrarse en la formación de personas fuera del contexto institucional donde necesitan utilizar las habilidades adquiridas,

(5) falta de sinergias y vínculos con otras iniciativas y servicios, y

(6) recursos inadecuados previstos para el desarrollo de capacidades.

Referencia

FAO. 2019. OED Capacity Development Evaluation Framework. Rome

 

 

7 Seconds

Youssou N’Dour, Neneh Cherry

Boul ma sene, boul ma guiss madi re nga fokni mane

Khamouma li neka thi sama souf ak thi guinaw

Beugouma kouma khol oaldine yaw li neka si yaw

Mo ne si man, li ne si mane moye dilene diapale

Roughneck and rudeness

We should be using, on the ones who practice wicked charms

For the sword and the stone

Bad to the bone

Battle’s not over

Even when it’s won

And when a child is born into this world

It has no concept

Of the tone the skin is living in

It’s not a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

It’s not a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

I’ll be waiting

I’ll be waiting

J’assume les raisons qui nous poussent de changer tout

J’aimerais qu’on oublie leur couleur pour qu’ils esperent

Beaucoup de sentiments de race qui font qu’ils desesperent

Je veux les grandements ouvertes

Des amis pour parler de leur peine, de leur joie

Pour qu’ils leur filent des infos qui ne divisent pas changer

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

It’s not a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

I’ll be waiting

I’ll be waiting

And when a child is born into this world

It has no concept

Of the tone the skin is living in

And there’s a million voices

And there’s a million voices

To tell you what she should be thinking

So you better sober up for just a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

It’s not a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

It’s not a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

It’s not a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

It’s not a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

I’ll be waiting

It’s not a second

7 seconds away

Just as long as I stay

Written by cplysy · Categorized: TripleAD

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