By Asha Vyas
Is your library’s financial information inviting?
We don’t often think of financial information in terms of inviting the reader into the story of our community impact. Yet, understanding financial data is a crucial part of managing, planning, and promoting our public image. One great way to help our audiences understand financial data, and other quantitative data, is to visualize it in a graphic. Especially when combined with text, graphics can be highly effective at communicating essential information and conveying observations, discoveries, and recommendations to your board, donors, staff, and the public.
Any effective graphic serves a defined purpose. A static graphic, as opposed to an interactive or dynamic graphic, is one that is designed to tell a specific story explicitly, requiring minimal interpretation or exploration from the audience. Because static graphics help people receive and understand information quickly, especially quantitative information and comparisons, they can help us to raise an alarm, trumpet a success, or recommend an action.
At Your Part-Time Controller, LLC [YPTC] we have a standard for static graphics that requires five essential elements. We refer to this set of requirements as the JD Standard in honor of a graphic designer whose work we admire. These elements take information that might be foreboding – information that takes specialized skill to understand like financial statements – and formats it visually to invite the reader into the story. These elements tune out the noise allowing the reader to quickly interpret the information.
The five essential elements are:
- Headline – succinct messaging that gets straight to the point
- Interpretation – expanded messaging that orients the reader and fills out the story
- Graphic – a visualization of quantitative information
- Credit – identifies who prepared the graphic
- Source – identifies the origin of the data being visualized