Bulletin sections
Bulletin sections separate the different types of content on the page. They reflect the user needs and priorities we have identified through research.
Section | Content |
---|---|
Other pages in this release (optional) | When publishing more than one bulletin in a release, use this section to link to them |
Main points |
Up to six bullets containing headline figures or trends in the data Can be followed by a statistician’s comment |
Analysis sections (split into numbered sections by topic) |
Commentary on what the majority of your users would find interesting, noteworthy or important about the new data Create a separate section for each topic covered in your analysis. Section headings should be short, descriptive labels. Use narrative subheadings to break up the analysis in each section Can include warnings to let users know about something that fundamentally affects the way they use your analysis |
[Name of bulletin] data | Links to the most relevant datasets referenced in this bulletin |
Glossary | Definitions of between three and six terms used in this bulletin |
Measuring the data |
A short summary of the data sources and collection method Can link to more detailed Quality and Methodology Information (QMI) reports, methodology articles, user guides and planned changes |
Strengths and limitations | Information to help users correctly interpret the data, including how the data should or should not be used. |
Related links |
Links to in-depth analysis or articles on this subject from the ONS Can include links to associated bulletins, such as revised or mid-year estimates Links to related publications or statistics that users might find useful Can include links to publications from other organisations |
Shorter releases
If there is not enough to say for a full bulletin, or there is little user engagement, consider streamlining your content or moving to a data-only release.