Headers and Sub-headers

Revision as of 05:34, 3 May 2013 by MarianGlyde (talk | contribs) (grammar)

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The header and sub header should always be used wisely, keeping in mind the goals and vision of the blog and its design.

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Why create it?

Organization

Headings and subheadings are a visual representation of how information is organized, and tells the reader what is in each section.

Scanability

Online readers are not very patient. A website has approximately three seconds to download properly and engage the viewer. [1] Your headline is the first impression you make on a reader. Without a captivating header and sub header that will turn a browser into a reader, the rest of the content might be irrelevant.[2] Sub-headers will make blog posts more readable. They allow readers to get a quick idea on what subjects you’re tackling and allow them to skip to the topics the readers are interested in.

How to create it?

Brevity

Both the heading and subheading should be short and straight forward. Use clarity and not creativity. Subheadings should be explanatory, pulling key words from the post. This will allow the reader to have an idea of what is coming up ahead.

Parallelism

When crating headers and sub headers the text, font, and sizes should be consistent. Headers should have a larger text than a sub header. Continue to use the same font throughout the header and sub header. If your first sub header is in italics, the next sub header should be italics as well. Headers should begin the same way. If the first header starts with “The”, the rest of the headers should also begin with “The”.

References

  1. Carroll, Brian. Writing for digital media. Routledge, 2010.
  2. "Page Titles, Headlines, and Subheaders, OH MY!" Writing Spaces. N.p., n.d. Web. 04 Apr. 2013. <http://writingspaces.org/wwsg/page-titles-headlines-subheaders>.

See Also