Info Graphic Design
Sat, 30 Jan 2010 22:11:50 +0000


Since our first two infographic projects (on making sense of the financial mess and CEO compensation) went so well, we've decided to make it a recurring feature. This will be the first in a monthly series of infographic design contests here at GOOD. The topics, judges, and prizes may vary from month to month, but we'll always be asking the brilliant creative members of our community to help in our quest to make the world's data more accessible. Here's this month's project:
the OBJECTIVE
Highlight the scope of the Haiti earthquake, as well as the aid given to help recover from the disaster.
the ASSIGNMENT
Create an infographic that explores some or all of the following: the toll of the earthquake, why the earthquake was so devastating, the recovery efforts, and the world's donations of money and aid. We're offering this contest in collaboration with Design for Haiti (a new site by Aaron Perry-Zucker, the man behind Design for Obama and the accompanying book Design for Obama—Posters for Change: A Grassroots Anthology), which is collecting information graphics about Haiti. The judging will be done by Perry-Zucker and the editors of GOOD.
the REQUIREMENTS
Send us an e-mail at projects[at]goodinc[dot]com with your infographic or post it to GOOD's Community Blog with the tag "February 2010 Transparency Contest." It can be in any image format, but it should be high enough resolution that it can be printed at 300 dpi. Make sure to include your sources, and a brief (one- or two-sentence) introduction to your concept. We’ll take submissions now through February 9. The winning entry will be announced on February 16, featured on our homepage and on the Design for Haiti site, and printed in the next issue of GOOD. We’ll send a GOOD T-shirt and a free subscription (or gift subscription) to the winner.
RESEARCH and INSPIRATION
Reliefweb has a constantly updated spreadsheet of where aid is coming from and to which organizations it's going. You can download the Google Earth satellite images of the damage from the quake. For comparison's sake, the Guardian's Data Blog offers this list of the deadliest earthquakes of the century. Here is a map of Haiti (full and half) built by Capac Roberts using Google Earth. The Earthquake Geospatial Research Portal also has lots of maps and images. Feel free to supplement this with any data you find yourself. And please, help each other. No one will get extra credit for using special data, so if you find something cool or helpful, please post it in the comments.
For inspiration, Take a look at our Transparency archive to see what we've done in the past, including yesterday's piece on aid to Haiti. You can also check out our Ffffound page, where we curate a selection of infographics from around the web. Make sure to take a look at Design for Haiti, as well.
A little more about Design for Haiti: Design for Haiti uses the same platform as Design for Obama, which allows users to upload, share, download, and print high quality posters. They are seeking two types of images: promotional graphics that call attention to an action (i.e. "help" or "donate") and infographics that create a better understanding of the situation.
We're a small advisory firm that works with start-up companies to develop their business model and financial projections. We put together their materials (a 12-20 page Executive Summary discussing the business, and 3-5 year financial projections) and we find private investors to fund the business and get it started. We also use this same basic approach/process to advise existing profitable businesses on the design/launch of new lines of business within/out their current operations.
We're looking to hire a part-time, per-project, work-from-your-home, graphic designer to create graphics for, and design/lay-out our Executive Summaries (12-20 page PDFs for email, and desk-top printing). You should be proficient in Photoshop, InDesign (we don't use Quark), and Google Docs. The booklets look corporate and professional, but not boring or cookie cutter. You should be comfortable and fluent creating graphics that stylistically look somewhere between W Magazine and the graphics for Equinox Fitness gyms.
We'd like to pay on a per-project basis.
Ideally we'd set up a billing scheme that looked like this: a base fee for creating the basic graphic treatment/look/motif/theme, and an additional fee per-page. The format of the books is fairly standard: cover page, legal-disclaimer page, table of contents, and interior pages. The interior pages contain text and sometimes a table/chart. Your job is to lay it out, add graphics, and rights-free photography.
As a follow on to the booklet design, we sometimes develop web-site versions of the book--creating a simple html website to display the information found in the book, with the same graphic look.
In your email, please send a url with samples of your work and your general availability--if you know it.
You would be working remotely, but ready to meet in the West Village in-person, at the beginning of each project, in order to discuss it in person.
Thanks!
- Posted in Design Gear Pump

