Five Tools That Help You Create Awesome Charts and Infographics

Let’s face it: visual content is hotter than ever on the web. And since people’s attention span gets lower each year, it is quite clear that movies and data presented in an attractive form are here to stay. Let us take a look at five tools that will help you become a great designer without having to go to art school.

The first tool on our list is Desygner. According to its creators, it is supposed to help you design professional graphics within minutes. And, believe it or not, it looks like the product actually lives up to its promise. Desygner supports a large array of graphics templates that range from social posts, web adverts, e-mail and blog templates, social headers, events and cards, marketing materials, and the list goes on. The online app comes with many templates, so you will never have to start from scratch. And if you need fresh ideas for your children’s party, for example, you will be glad to find out that Desygner also includes a “fun” section, which will allow you to easily create “Best Mom Awards” certificates and “Most Wanted” posters, for example.

desygner

 

Snappa brands itself as “everything you can ask from a graphic design tool”. It comes with over 10,000 photos and patterns, over 3000 shapes, and over 200 fonts and typefaces. Snappa helps you get started fast with your projects, because it has hundreds of predesigned templates for blog posts, social media posts, newsletters, and ad networks. And to help you save time, the app makes sure that each image type is fully optimized for social media. If you think that 10,000 photos aren’t enough, you will be pleased to find out that the app creators add new photos to the library each day. An interesting feature allows you to schedule your image posts on the main social media sites by making use of Buffer’s power scheduler.

snappa

 

Canva has an impressive set of features that make it easy to convert your ideas into great looking charts and designs. It integrates with various third party graphics libraries, allowing you to add them to your own projects. But Canva can also work with your own images, of course, and it’s got several tools that will make your life much easier. We have been impressed with its photos straightener, which allows you to rotate poorly taken images and see the rotation effect in real time. Canva’s image cropper will not only help you crop images, but will also allow you to add great frames and other graphics elements to them. Many online tools help you add text to your photos, but Canva also incorporates speech bubbles, helping you add dialogs to your pictures within seconds.

canva

 

Piktochart is an online graphics editor that takes drag-and-drop and point-and-click to the next level. Piktochart comes with a library of over 400 professionally designed templates, which will help you create banners, charts, reports, presentations, and a vast selection of infographics. The app’s image library comes with over 4,000 images and icons, and incorporates lots of ready to use text frames and photo frames. We are all about charts here at ChartBurst, of course, so we were excited to find out that Piktochart can import data straight from spreadsheets, no matter if they are created by Microsoft’s or Google’s tools.

piktochart

 

The last app on our list is Prezi, and its main goal is to make it easy to create beautiful presentations. It’s also got the ability of importing PowerPoint slides into your presentation, of course. In fact, you could create your entire presentation in PowerPoint, and then use Prezi to beautify it. You can also embed videos, either from your computer or YouTube, or add sound and narration, making your presentation more powerful by using a dynamic soundtrack. You can also have an entire team working at the same presentation online, due to Prezi’s fantastic cooperation abilities.

prezi

These are some of the best charts and infographics makers that are available online today. Watch this space, because we may add more fantastic charts / graphics / infographics maker tools as we discover them.

 

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Microsoft buys LinkedIn: how will it affect designers?

Microsoft has recently announced that it has bought LinkedIn for a hefty amount of money: $26.2 billion. It looks like Microsoft will not interfere with LinkedIn’s company culture, though, and – surprisingly! – LinkedIn’s top management team will not change at all. Satya Nadella talks about integrating its professional cloud services with LinkedIn’s professional network, in an email addressed to Microsoft’s emplyees.

So why has Microsoft taken this decision? Recode lists three reasons why that may have happened. Several industry analysts think that Microsoft is at a stage where it is doing its best to diversify its assets, and having access to LinkedIn’s huge database will help it attract more people towards its own products and services.

microsoft-buys-linkedin

But how will this transaction affect designers? If you have problems trying to get new business because cold calls and leads are… cold, Microsoft’s new acquisition may simplify the process of turning a cold lead into a warm one. My guess is that the software giant will find a clever way of incorporating LinkedIn’s database into Windows 10, and then sell access to the data for a decent annual fee – probably lower that LinkedIn’s current prices. Sure, LinkedIn offers several premium packages, but they all make use of the same powerful database.

linkedin-premium-packages

If Microsoft decides to go this route, this means that you could find information about potential clients (and even other designers you may want to partner with) from within Windows itself. Simply click the “Start” button, and then type in your lead’s name. A small page would open, displaying detailed info that was taken straight from your lead’s LinkedIn profile.

Of course, Microsoft could go even further, creating highly targeted lead lists according to your keyword input, and thus putting most of the lead sellers out of business. It’s a daring move, that’s for sure, but it’s one that has the potential to be very profitable in the long run, according to Data Alliance’s CEO, George Hardesty.

Marc Schenker thinks that Microsoft wants to integrate LinkedIn’s data straight into Office 365, thus adding more value to the Office suite. It’s an entirely possible scenario, even though if this happens, Microsoft’s profits will not grow that fast. It may be one of the best strategies for the future, though.

 

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