How to Layout a Magazine or Newspaper

Page 1

How to Layout a Magazine or Newspaper Page Layout Designs and Tips for Newspapers and Magazines While outsourcing page layout and ad design is becoming popular with many publishers today, it is still important to understand some of the key factors underlying good newspaper or magazine design. This article offers some summary pointers if for nothing more than to help you communicate better with your designer.

PAGE LAYOUT FOR YOUR NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES Objects In an average 32-page newspaper or magazine there are 500+ ‘objects’, or elements, including article title, author, image, caption, text, category/section, page numbers, publication details, masthead, banners, ads and more. Every publisher’s nightmare is seeing a missing ad, a wrong caption under an image or spelling mistakes. The best way to avoid these traps is to manage your content well throughout your production cycle using a good CMS, or Content Management System. Only 4 years ago a CMS was out of reach of most internet users, tending to be exclusive to big media companies with deep pockets. Websites were run by techs and any updates to anything at all required a good understanding of website technology. Today 100’s of good CMS’s abound, some still excessively priced, but many free! WordPress is the world leading CMS and a great tool to help you manage your publishing content. Not only will it let you get your content up their quickly without hassle, it will also keep it all together, so that even 2-years later you (and your readers!) can find an article or image via a simple search. So, all content should always be ‘online-first’, don’t hoard it in buried Word docs with separate folders for images etc. You will only end up with a train-wreck come press time. Publishing Layout Software There are some great tools on the market, including free and commercial license products. See a comparative table of desktop publishing software. Of the open source free publishing software, we think Scribus is the best for page layout and Gimp for graphics. In the commercial space, Adobe Indesign, Illustrator and Photoshop are quite simply the leaders. EzyMedia uses the Adobe Suite. Obviously the simpler the system you choose to learn, the more reduced your options. Certainly if you are new to publishing and considering purchasing the Adobe Suite, we would strongly recommend you save those dollars until the business is up and running and in the meantime outsource your page layout. Even an experienced publisher with a full team spends around $35 – $50 per page on layout, once their graphic designer’s time, holidays and other overheads are considered.

1/5


EzyMedia offers page layout services from $25 per page – all you have to do is load your articles into our publisher portal and provide real-time commentary as the pages are produced. If you use an EzyMedia Website, our graphics team can export your articles from the backend, meaning the one and only time you ever handle content is when you (or your contributors) first type it into your website. Sit back and relax! Design This is the crux of your publishing business. If your newspaper or magazine looks bad, readers and advertisers will not look beyond an amateur cover design. You might have the best content, an enviable distribution model that gets your publication in front of potentially 1000’s of eyeballs, but it will fail if your design sucks. Important elements your newspaper or magazine design should consider include: Colours – just like a good outfit for a Saturday night, you must bring together the right combination of colours to stand out for the right reasons. You can visit plenty of colour swatch websites and even your Microsoft Word has suggested colour combinations under Page Layout >> Colors. Probably a good idea not to stray too far from recommended combinations in these early days. Typography – professional designers are always updating their knowledge in this area, some even specialise in typography alone! This is a vast area, too extensive for this synopsis. Suffice to say, keep your font clean, well-spaced, readily legible and relevant to your brand/stories. Don’t use more than 3 different fonts on any one webpage or more than 5 fonts on a tabloid size print/digital newspaper page. Don’t distract the reader with overly difficult or plain silly font. Don’t try to be too clever, but do have some fun. If you are writing for an elderly audience, use larger font and spacing. Left justified wider columns for easier reading, block narrow columns for hard-hitting ‘newsy’ flavour. Make online hyperlinks obvious. Don’t use Comic Serif for anything other than your jokes or children’s section. It is the favourite choice of novice publishers and that really shows! Blocking In addition to your font and line spacing consideration, also try to keep all article objects visually together and comfortably spaced from other articles and ads. Respect your advertisers with proper positioning and spacing. Build pages from starting with bigger ads at the bottom. Consider the spread, the two pages a reader will view and how they sit together. Scanning Dark areas will steal the readers’ attentions immediately, as will anything slightly vertically or horizontally skewed. Step into the eyes of your readers. The natural eye-movement process is right-hand middle, up, top left corner left page, middle then both pages broadly, settling on the most attractive element. You can run with this or guide your readers by design.

2/5


Advertisers These guys are your bread and butter, look after them! Higher paying ads deserver right-hand layout. EGN (Early General News) tends to be pages 1-9 and you can charge premium for positioning here. Publications with sports also have strengths up the back, as many readers will start the publication from the back page. Don’t let a little business-card size ad with outlandish colours and audacity steel attention from your quarter-page and half-page clients. If you have to, tuck those sort of ads on the left page of some section in the middle. Don’t fool around with ad design if you don’t know what you are doing. Your readers may forgive you for dodgy page layout in the early days as you establish the publication (your sales person probably won’t!), but an advertiser who ends up with a bad ad plastered all over town, or a good ad with a spelling mistake will be very hard to get back on board. And businesses talk, so one stuff-up can cost you $1000’s. Additionally, the process of the ad design is equally important. Your goal is to produce a good ad for your advertiser that works, but if that takes you 7 iterations over 2-weeks, they will probably ultimately say ‘Thanks’, but then take that ad to run in your competitor’s publication. Don’t give your advertisers any reason ever to consider going elsewhere – your competitors are in their face daily, it won’t take much to lose them. Sectioning We know this is a significant, because when we implemented this in one of our own publications in 2004, the big daily in the same town launched a complete makeover 2-weeks later! Choose sections that are flexible, allowing you to choose between two or three for most articles, eg. a change of season gardening article could go into Community, Homefront, Health & Lifestyle, but an article on getting fit this spring could not go into a section on Gardening. Make your sections standout with smart banners, titles and colours. Readers often have favourite sections and they want to get there fast. Proofing Even the most diligent page layout professional can make a typo or forget to link an image. With so many variables at play and under considerable pressures, mistakes happen. That’s why you must have a proofing and versioning process in place. EzyMedia tracks all changes and feedback on all pages in every production cycle. Customers can click on an area of the page and an arrow immediately links that to a comments box to the side of page, which then starts a dialogue between publisher and designer. All our designers also proof each other’s work before going to press. Printers

3/5


Make sure you know your printer’s detailed settings. Registrations, saturation requirements, half-shadow and any other filters that should be applied. These technical aspects of page layout are just as important to the final product as the printer’s machinery and stock. Most printers will have a pre-press department, so call them. Go in and introduce yourself. Tell them you are new to all this but ready to learn. Pre-press technicians always appreciate publishers play their part in a quality output. Your newspaper or magazine reflects well or poorly on all involved, so don’t be shy to reach out for help. Understand of course that they are also busy, often preparing publications for 24-hour printing cycles, so respect their pressures and don’t rock up late to your appointment! Concluding… Page layout for newspapers and magazines is your publication’s window to the world. You must get this layout process right if you are to succeed in publishing. If you are already feeling busy with setting up your website, building your email lists, bringing in content and selling ads, you really should consider now your page layout strategy. Don’t leave this bit until the end. I recall our first print run for a publication I launched in 2004. With $21,000 of advertising sold and 3-days before press, I decided it was time to put down the tools and see how his friend, a desktop-publisher, was coming along. When I arrived at her home, she was in tears and saying she just couldn’t do it. Around $4500 of the ads were time critical, so I sat with her and learned Indesign over the afternoon. By 7pm we were both working silently. By 11pm she quit. 5-days later, without ANY sleep, working day and night, I laid out that first newspaper as my partner Leonie designed ads and friends raced all over town picking up signed ad approvals or edited press releases to fit the limited space allotments. The publication was 2-days late onto the streets, but early enough to retain all advertising dollars. The next edition was 3-sleepless nights over 4-days of page layout. Then 2 sleepless nights, then 1 sleepless night, which is where is stayed for the next 4 years. These were the most stressful years of my life and probably one of the biggest drivers behind starting EzyMedia. If I had access then to the services, especially ad-design and page layout, that EzyMedia offers publishers around the world today, I might very well look 10-years younger today. Whether you are digital only or want to go to print, page layout for online page flippers and print publications will be highly relevant to your newspaper or magazine business. Professional page layout for newspapers and magazines is best done by professionals. No levels of enthusiasm or ‘born talent’ can outweigh the practical speed, proficiency and output of professional page layout designers with years of experience. An expert magazine or newspaper designer can produce 8 high-quality page layouts in less than 6-hours, or a 24-page publication in just two shifts! And the results? Eye-catching, professional and enticing to advertisers and readers.

4/5


We have all seen the committed efforts of a community minded individual or organisation that launches a local ‘newspaper’ cum newsletter to give their community a platform for sharing stories and events. The notion is merit worthy but obviously amateur. These publications don’t tend to last long in the bigger pond, because the loyalty that might have been sustaining the publication in the local suburb quickly dilutes in the broader regions, especially against a backdrop of other highly visible professional publications competing for the same advertising dollars. Trial EzyMedia’s newspaper and magazine page layout services today!

5/5 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.