With clearly defined roles and responsibilities and an execution plan, teams can quickly grasp the vision and execute it efficiently.
Break through the scanning barrier
With so much information at our fingertips, weâve been trained to scan information instead of taking time to synthesize it. As part of a study, the Nielsen Norman Group examined 60,000 website page views to determine how long people spend on average reading the content on the page. The result? Most people only read 20-28% of the words on the page.
As web reading habits bleed into email reading habits, itâs no wonder that project details quickly get lost in a sea of text. Visuals can help people get to the point faster and can prevent details from being lost.
Help people see both details and the big picture
In the study Learning from Diagrams: Theoretical and Instructional Considerations by Winn and Holliday, Â the researchers concluded that visuals, specifically diagrams, can help:Â
- Direct attention to important information.
- Associate concepts.
- Generalize information.
- Discriminate between information.
To understand how diagrams impact the workplace, we spoke to Gabe Gloegeâš, Director of Learning and Development at Pearson Publishing. At Pearson, sales reps create mind map diagrams that provide a quick overview of course content and how courses are linked together. Gabe describes the results as follows:
âItâs powerful, being able to see all that information at a glance, and the visual way that it changes your understanding and your perception of the content itself. Each course, when mind mapped, had a fingerprint that was unique to the knowledge of that course. And people started to remember and access it in that way. When you close your eyes and think back, âWhat is the information that I need to pull up in my head?,â you see that mind map in your head. You go right to where it is. I think itâs a very powerful way for us to remember the information, access the information, and have a different relationship to it."âš Â
Gabeâs experience closely aligns with the research, showing that visuals clearly have a significant impact in helping people connect the dots and remember both the details and the big picture of a plan.
How this research stacks up against our findings
With clear external evidence for the power of visual communication, we wanted to see how diagramming stacks up as a visual communication method. We wanted to determine whether weâd see business-specific gainsâsuch as increased innovation, productivity, and transparencyâthat supported external research on the effectiveness of visual communication.
In a survey, we asked 377 Lucidchart users about the benefits theyâve seen from using diagrams to convey ideas, information, and processes. These users confirmed that visual communication improves innovation, productivity, and transparency.
Innovate faster
Across a wide variety of roles and organizations, people said that they could innovate 40% faster when they used Lucidchart diagrams to communicate vs. traditional communication methods.
How would you explain those results? After further interviews with customers, we found that when people can map out a process or a system, itâs much easier to make connections between seemingly unconnected thoughts and find new and better ways to solve problems.