Infographic Or Data Visualization–How To Choose The Right Approach

One of the most exciting challenges designers face in an increasingly data-rich world is how to translate data so that it can be easily understood by a wide audience. The ways we collect data and the tools we use to analyze it are constantly evolving as our world becomes more and more data driven, especially in the financial services industry. 

Infographics (short for information graphics) are a powerful storytelling tool that makes it easy for the audience to comprehend, analyze, and explore data. An infographic is a multimedia graphic aiming to present complex information and data in a way that is easy to understand.

Infographics often include data visualizations, more on these below, but must also provide context in the form of illustrations, facts, quotes, and captions. An infographic can stand on its own as a separate piece of content.

The most successful infographics are developed and designed with the viewer/user in mind, and follow these basic rules:

Words
Spell them out, avoid abbreviations
• Should read left to right rather than vertically, diagonally or in different directions 

Type
Is clear and uses upper and lower case
Fonts are readable rather than decorative
Fonts scale well

Color
Avoid elaborate color coding or shadows
A few distinct colors are more visually inviting and focus attention better than many colors
Select colors that are usually easily readable for color blind or color deficient viewers (5 to 10% of the population)

 Labels
Should be part of the graphic making a legend unnecessary

 Illustrations
Use only simple illustrations that support the overall message of the piece but do not directly interpret the data

Data visualizations, graphical representations of a set of data, can be a component of an infographic. Although they are often confused with infographics, they are not the same. A data visualization on its own is not an infographic.

The challenge for graphic designers is to choose the most appropriate visual vehicle to effortlessly communicate the point of the story. Each of the different styles – charts, diagrams, geospatial, plots and tables – offer a distinct visual arrangement that can be used to communicate comparisons, trends over time, correlation, and geographical data.

In a chart the data is represented by symbols, such as bars in a bar chart, lines in a line chart, or slices in a pie chart.

Stacked Area Chart

Stacked Area Chart

Bar Chart

Bar Chart

Donut Chart

Donut Chart

 

diagram is a drawing that shows the arrangement and relationships of parts.

Sociogram

Sociogram

Flow Chart

Flow Chart

Arc Diagram

Arc Diagram

 

Geospatial is defined as geographic data and information that has an implicit or explicit association with a location relative to Earth.

Topographic Map

Topographic Map

Dot Density Map

Dot Density Map

Connection Map

Connection Map

 

plot is a graphic technique representing a data set to show the relationship between two or more variables.

Counts Plot

Counts Plot

Scatter Plot

Scatter Plot

Line Graph

Line Graph

 

A table is an arrangement of data in rows and columns, or possibly in a more complex structure.

Heat Map

Heat Map

SWOT Analysis

SWOT Analysis

Comparison Chart

Comparison Chart

 

Here’s a great reference resource to help you decide the best way to illustrate and communicate a set of data

In summary, because the human brain processes visuals better than text, infographics are highly effective when used in the right way to present data and tell stories.

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