It’s #FieldGuide Friday!
We make the Field Guides To Ensuring Voter Intent. They each hold 10 guidelines for doing good, simple design for elections.
Today, let’s do Vol. 07, Designing election department websites.
Ready?
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7/ Put the most important information in the main menu or the center section of the page. Studies show that more than 40% of US adults have low literacy.
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8/ Help voters find ballot information, especially if sample ballots are within a widget or a wizard. Polling place finders and voter information look-ups often hide ballot information that voters are looking for.
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9/ Use words that voters use in links, headings, and graphics. Avoid using election jargon such as “sample ballot” and “affiliation.” Instead of “sample ballot,” just say “ballot” or “example ballot” or “your ballot.”
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10/ Help voters see at a glance what each chunk of information is about. - Use clear, simple, headings in plain language. - Decide what’s most important and emphasize that. - Be as specific as possible. - Use bulleted lists rather than long paragraphs.
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That’s it! Check your work. Can voters find: - your election website? - what’s on the ballot? - where to vote? - how to get an absentee ballot and when it is due back? - dates for important deadlines, such as when to register?
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You can download
#FieldGuide 07 for free here: https://civicdesign.org/fieldguides/designing-election-department-websites/ … See all of them here: https://civicdesign.org/fieldguides/ Or write to us and, if you are a govie, we’ll send you printed copies for free: hello@civicdesign.org P.S. They are really beautiful.Show this thread
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