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Layout of the MRU Recommendations publication: from Word document to readable PDF

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featured image of the layout of the MRU Recommendations publication with a real MRU logo

When the document is intended for municipal staff, it is not enough to simply put the text in a PDF. It needs to be reliable, clear and easy enough to read that people do not open it just to „use their eyes“. This is exactly what the layout of the MRU project publication has been about: from a simple Word document, to produce a PDF of professional guidance that maintains an academic and institutional tone but does not look like a dry bureaucratic file.

The publication was prepared for the DIGiRES project of Mykolas Romeris University „Strengthening the Crisis Resilience of Municipal Governance Institutions by Enabling Digital Government“. The official project description can be found at MRU website. The final document is intended for Lithuanian municipalities, so it needed structure, readability and a clear flow of information rather than decorative design for the sake of beauty.

What was the layout?

A 27-page recommendation publication „Recommendations for Lithuanian municipalities on how to strengthen crisis resilience by enabling digital governance processes“. The content was solid and dense: research context, methodology, insights, recommendations, quotes, implementation suggestions, project information.

The original document was in Word format. It contained clear content, but visually the file did not yet function as a publication. The aim of the layout was to create a reading system: for people to understand where a new paragraph starts, what a recommendation is, where an explanation is given, where a quotation is given and where a practical action for the municipality is given.

Comparison of the layout of the MRU Recommendations publication before and after PDF design
Initial Word document and visual system for the final PDF publication

The main challenge was to manage information

Such a document can easily become a hard-to-read collection of texts. Especially when there is more information on some pages and less on others, and the content needs to remain consistent from start to finish. The layout of the publication was therefore not only a visual exercise, but also an information management exercise.

A two-grid system has been developed. It helped to maintain uniform spacing, a clear hierarchy of text and an orderly rhythm of pages. When more space became available on the page, the solution was not to leave a void or to artificially stretch the text. Additional information was coordinated with the client to keep the page full but not cluttered.

For more on the general logic of publication layout, see layout for business publications. The MRU case is a good example of how professional layout becomes important when a document has to be not only handed over, but actually read.

Cover: professional but not bureaucratic

One of the bigger challenges was the cover. The document had to look professional and be in line with the theme of crisis resilience and digital governance, without being boring. Five different cover samples were prepared, from which the client chose the most suitable one.

The chosen cover is based on the mood of the digital network, movement and data direction. It links the theme of the publication to the technological context, but does not take all the attention from the title. This is very important in an institutional publication: the cover should raise the level of the document and not compete with its content.

Layout system: grid, blocks and rhythm

The layout was prepared with Affinity. This allowed precise control of margins, text flow, page rhythm and visual blocks. The document used separate information blocks: recommendations, quotes, explanations and „How to implement in the municipality?“ sections.

Each type of block had its own visual role. Recommendations were highlighted in one direction, quotes in another, practical implementation parts in yet another. This system helps the reader not to read everything at the same pace. It is quicker to understand where the point is, where the context is, and where the concrete action is.

The colours were aligned with the direction of the MRU identity. Orange accents helped to maintain a link with the university's visual language, while neutral backgrounds and light blocks allowed the text to remain legible. It was important not to overdo it here. Too much colour in such a document would quickly create noise.

Visualisations that help but don't overwhelm

The publication has created visualisations based on the cartoons and examples provided. They have been adapted to the overall colour palette, unified and integrated in a way that helps the reader but does not obscure the text. In an institutional document, an illustration should not look like a random image. It must have a clear function.

A diagram is also created based on the timeline example given. Such elements are important because they make a long explanatory text into a more readable structure. When people read guidelines, they are not only looking for sentences but also for landmarks.

Interactive PDF and ease of reading

The content of the final PDF is interactive. The reader can click on a content item and be taken immediately to the relevant part of the document. It seems like a small thing, but in a longer PDF it changes the user experience. Not only does it make the document more beautiful, it also makes it more practical.

Appropriate margins, text density and writing style were also followed. The publication must look neat both on screen and when printed. There is no room for random spacing, uneven headings or quotations that look different. Such things may not be noticeable on their own, but together they create either confidence or a sense of disorder.

Workflow and client feedback

There were three rounds of corrections during the work. The process was smooth: first the visual direction was clarified, then the specific pages were coordinated and finally the details were sorted out. In this kind of work, the process itself is very important, as the layout changes along with the content adjustments.

„We have a very quick, simple workflow. We have fine-tuned the final layout several times and there were no problems.“

Customer review, left Google reviews

The review also stressed that it was not only the final work that was important, but also the journey to the result. This is particularly true for this project, as the layout of the publication was not a one-off „design-build“. It was a total bringing together of text, structure and visual system into one clear document.

Why is this layout important?

The guidance document has a real function. It is shared with people who need to quickly understand the information, go back to a specific part and use it in practice. If such a document looks like a simple Word export, its value is visually diminished, even if the content itself is strong.

Good layout helps the text to be read. It does not decide the content for the author, but helps that content reach the reader. In the case of MRU, this meant combining academic rigour, a topic of relevance to municipalities, and a visual rhythm that was clear enough to make the document user-friendly.

If you have a Word document, guidelines, catalogue, report or PDF material that needs to look more professional and be easier to read, please get in touch. We can assess the scope of the content, the visual direction and prepare a layout for the publication that not only looks neat but also helps the information work.

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