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Why do newspapers and bloggers use crossheads and sideheads?

Why bloggers should use sideheads and crossheads

A major casualty of design changes that were introduced in the 1980s and 1990s in Indian newspapers were crossheads and sideheads. To give pages a clean look, design editors removed crossheads and sideheads from newspaper pages.

Interestingly, bloggers and web writers turned to crossheads and sideheads because they realised that these two typographic tools can arrest the eye movement of the reader and keep them longer on the web page.

What are Crossheads

Crossheads are small headlines generally placed after five paragraphs. Each crosshead introduces a new or a different point in the story. The eye of the reader stops when it hits the crosshead, and may encourage the reader to browse the paragraphs right beneath the crosshead. The crossheads are set in a bigger point size than body copy so that they stand out on the page.

In the newspapers you see them on the edit page, op ed page and feature pages where writers are not constrained for space, and the story length is more than hard news stories. This leaves the Design Editors with no choice but to use crossheads to break the monotony of grey columns of running text.
Crossheads are also used as headlines for “garland” pieces that comprise of five or six items, such as those used in a political diary.

On the web, you can see them on blog posts and web pages. Besides holding readers’ attention, crossheads are used as a search engine optimisation tool. Web writers place keywords in crossheads to improve search engine ranking.

Interestingly, crossheads on the web are also known as H2 headlines. They are written in a point size that is smaller than the main headline, referred to as H1 headline, but still is several points bigger than body text.

Characteristics of Crossheads

Crossheads play an important role in improving readability. Their four key characteristics are:

The purpose of crossheads

Crossheads serve two important purposes:

Reuters in its Handbook of Journalism gives a good explanation as to how to use crossheads:

“Cross-headings are used in all stories of 500 or more words to break the mass of copy into more digestible morsels. Cross-heads are sub-headlines of two to four words, all in upper case. Aim for something simple, informative and unbiased. … One or two cross-heads are enough in a 500-600 word piece. Three or four will do in an 800-word story. Make sure the cross-heads don’t break the flow of the story, for instance by breaking up a speaker’s quotes.”

What are Sideheads

Sideheads are words that introduce a new point. Newspapers publish them in bold at the start of a paragraph to catch the eye of the readers. In newspapers, sideheads are set in the same point  size in which the body copy is composed.

On the web page, sideheads are set in a slightly bigger point size than the web copy. They are also referred to as H3 headlines.

 Characteristics of Sideheads

The purpose of sideheads

The Sideheads perform the same functions as Crossheads. These are:

Summary: Don’t treat crossheads and sideheads as poor cousins of headlines. They improve readability and visual appeal both in newspapers and web pages, and give reasons to readers to stay longer on the web page.

(This article has been updated to make it more relevant)

 

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