How To Incorporate Graphics Into Your Document

 

pyramid

                 Photo Source: Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine

 

As useful and necessary as graphics are, it is not enough to just plop them into a document. Here are the steps you must take to correctly incorporate a graphic into your work.

Step 1: Label, number and title every graphic. In technical writing, all graphics are either “tables” or “figures” – “tables” are, well, tables (duh) and “figures” are everything else. The graphics should be numbered according to when they appear in your document (“Figure 1, Figure 2” – or “Table 1, 2” etc.). Also, every graphic should have an informative title that helps the reader understand the content.

Step 2: Place the graphic in the right spot. Usually, this means as close as possible to the text that refers to it. If the graphic is not directly relevant, OR if the graphic is so large that it interrupts the flow of your document, place it in the appendix (and reference it in the text).

Step 3: Introduce and explain every graphic. Don’t make your reader do all the interpretive work – explain what your graphic is doing and what the content means. Use legends, arrows, captions – anything that will help your reader understand. Also reference every graphic in the text – either before the graphic appears or, if you are wrapping text, next to the graphic. Avoid referencing a graphic for the first time after the graphic has already appeared.

Step 4: Document your graphics. If you didn’t create the graphic yourself (and your company doesn’t already own it), be sure cite the source. If you are publishing your work and the graphic is protected by copyright, you will have to get permission and possibly pay a fee. Most style guides recommend you cite the source in both a references section and in the caption of the graphic itself.

Step 4: Make your graphic stand out. Most graphics stand out anyway, but consider adding rules or boxes or additional spaces to distinguish your graphic from the text. If you are writing a document with several types of graphics, consider using colored screens or filters to separate the, say, marginal glosses from the charts and graphs.

Step 5: Make it easy to find your graphics. If your document includes 4 or more graphics, consider including a list of illustrations (just after your table of contents).

If you are looking for examples, our Technical Definition and Description student samples incorporate most, if not all, of these steps. Plus – you can always use our textbook as an example!

Leave a Reply