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The Scroll blog, written by content designers
for content designers
What to expect from Scroll’s modular content design training
Scroll’s content design training is not your off-the-shelf, box-ticking standard. It’s based on what your content design team needs. That means we do a big dollop of content strategy together to uncover what challenges your team is actually facing, and what changes they need to make to succeed.
How to design accessible hint text
We all need to design good, accessible hint text in our services. Good hint text is short, made up of words only, and based on evidence. Bad, inaccessible hint text is long, includes elements like bullets and links, and isn’t always based on evidence.
What does accessible really look like?
A website can pass an accessibility audit with flying colours, yet still not be accessible to a considerable number of the people who need to use it. Don’t let your accessibility audit become a compliance tick-box, it’s not enough.
What I learned delivering Scroll’s modular content design training
Content design training at Scroll is modular and bespoke. It can be modified to fit the needs of different content and comms teams. This is what we learned delivering the content design training to a team in local government.
How Scroll keeps you safe if you work ‘outside IR35’
Contractors have to be careful to understand whether they are working 'inside IR35' or 'outside IR35', to comply with HMRC's rules on tax. But working this out can be complicated. Here's how Scroll keeps you safe if you work outside IR35.
A crit of design crits
A ‘crit’ - or critique - is a fundamental part of the content design process. How do you run a design crit that is fair, productive and effective for everyone on your team?
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