What makes this page a BFD: Putting usefulness first.
Baseball's Hall of Fame, Bush's surge, politics and Apple's new iPhone dominated front pages today. For sheer impact, nothing topped RedEye.
The San Francisco Chronicle announced that "Apple wants a bigger bite." The Bakersfield Californian had the best headline: "Snowball's chance." The Chicago Sun-Times made it a trifecta with three terrific heads: "Marked off," "Is Al Gore right?" and "Is there only one scent for a woman?"
The Best Front Design wasn't the "prettiest" or highest impact, but it was tops in usefulness – which is what good design is all about. St. Paul's Pioneer Press turned its front page into a chart to clearly show the views of its congressmen and congresswomen on Iraq. This was the best way to present this information, allowing readers to compare the stands of their representatives in Washington.
And they didn't stop by merely informing. They went the next step by telling readers "What to expect" – which is what everyone really wants to know.
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ONLINE NEWSPAPER DESIGN Read Steve Outing's interview with Alan Jacobson and learn why newspaper web sites are seriously flawed. Then see alternatives.
EDITORIAL, CLASSIFIED & ONLINE NEWSPAPER DESIGN Our redesigns are catalysts for positive change. Visit the gallery to see how we've transformed publications and websites. EDITORIAL NEWSPAPER DESIGN
NEWSPAPER DESIGN WHITEPAPER A redesign is a waste of time and money if it doesn't deliver a return on investment. Download our report to learn how to make your redesign pay off, then see how four newspapers boosted readership and revenue by following our advice. TARGETED PUBLICATIONS
INTERACTIVE TOUR See in detail how a content-driven redesign did more than make a community daily look better – it made it a better paper. RADICAL STRATEGIES FOR CIRCULATION WOES
A newspaper war, that is. The Sunday Star Times, New Zealand's largest newspaper, faces fierce competition on the newsstand from two tabloids. So it was redesigned to improve its above-the-fold presentation. The complete story will appear here and in the next issue of SND's DESIGN.
The Californian's redesign earned it a spot on Editor & Publisher's list of “Ten That Do it Right.” According to E&P, Bakersfield is appealing to its “really, really conservative market with a really, really radical redesign.”
And its working.
Circulation stops are down and revenue is up – over a thousand inches in the redesigned real estate section alone.
See before and after, see more pages and read the stories.
The Eureka (CA) Reporter was just a 6,000-circ. weekly in 2004. Our radical yet elegant redesign helped this startup weekly grow to a daily in less than two years. The Reporter goes head-to-head with an established daily owned by Dean Singleton, who told The San Francisco Chronicle last month that his competitor, “does some good design things.” The Society of News Design agrees – they cited this redesign as one of the best in the world. See more pages.
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