A New Year, A New Look: Our Charts Have Revamped!

We have just launched a new design for our charts that is cleaner, fresher and more about you, your data, and your story.

We softened up colors of the borders around the chart so that your audience can more easily focus on your content. We have also organized our features into two areas. The top ribbon houses the go-to places for sharing, clipping and your chart view counter:

We now have one-stop-shop for public and personal sharing. 

Social Sharing: Your followers can tell their own social networks about your chart but simply clicking on their social network of choice or by copying the url of the chart over into either social network platform.

Embedding: If a blogger or journalist happens upon your chart and wants to feature it in their respective outlets, all they have to do is copy and paste the embed code into their content management systems (Wordpress, Blogger, etc).

Email: Chart viewers can also email your chart 

Custom URL: If you are an upgraded account user, you can also custom specify which URL your audience will share on their social networks or by email. 

The bottom ribbon is a designated area just for you.

More Information: You can detail more information about your data, your article, press release or very simply, more about you and your organization. Remember, your content in this area coupled with the keywords you specify optimize the SEO of your chart. 

Authorship: You can also brand your chart with your authorship if you are an upgraded account user. 

Authorship URL:  The authorship can also be hyperlinked to a website of your choice. Direct them to your blog, company website, or to your Twitter page. Its your choice!

As you can see, we've been working hard to think of new ways to highlight you and your data. Let us know if we're on the right track. 

 

 

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About the author

jackie antig's picture

I am fascinated by the constant and growing flow of data used to speak about our modern day existence. The museum nerd in me wonders how our collective culture will be collected and narrated in an anthropological context when the flow of our lives are defined by the near-ephemeral concept of data. As a perpetual student of data visualization, I live in the blurry line between data and art.

I am in love with Georges Seurat's lesser known drawings, haunted by the beautiful forms and shadows of Ruth Asawa's sculptures, and drawn to the the lure of the wild.