Photos, Images and Other Files
Photos, images and other files are content, too, so the same guidelines about brand, voice, tone, strategy and ease of understanding apply. If an image or file isn鈥檛 easy to understand or doesn鈥檛 add meaning, don鈥檛 use it.
Which files to use
As with everything we produce and publish, quality matters. Don鈥檛 create your own photos, images or files for upload unless doing so is part of your role within the content production process and workflow.
Always look for photos and images within Hope鈥檚 first. You can be confident that these files meet all quality standards and formatting requirements. Before you include an image, check to make sure that the image isn鈥檛 already in use.
If you can鈥檛 find an image you need, contact Public Affairs & Marketing for assistance.
How to make files easier to understand
All file types
Write intelligible file names. Instead of 鈥淔H03006.jpg,鈥 use something like 鈥減helps-dining-hall-construction-2014-05-08. jpg.鈥 Similar to titles or headlines, file names should use words that clearly and uniquely identify the content the file contains (e.g., subject, topic, department, building, people) and/or notable attributes of the file (e.g., date created or modified). Separate words in file names with dashes, not underscores.
Photos and images
Always include alt text. Alt text is a short sentence or phrase that describes an image. It鈥檚 hidden from the average user, but is critically important for search engines and for users with vision impairments. Alt text should meaningfully describe the photo or image as if to a blind person in 100 characters or less.
Only include a caption if one is required. Captions are content. All rules apply.
Audio and video
Include a text alternative. Provide a text transcript for those who are hearing impaired. Every video on the 换妻社区 website must have captions. See our video guidelines for more information.
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