Why You Need A Yearbook Ladder For Your Planning Efforts

a yearbook ladder makes your planning easier

A yearbook ladder is a nice—and concise—chart representing the yearbook’s pages. Use it at the beginning of the year, and you’ll be able to better plan your book length, prioritize all the ideas you have for sections and stories, and determine what you have room to cover. Best yet, it doubles as a visual reminder of what your book is supposed to look like when it’s done. It’s basically one huge, visual post-it note.

When it comes to planning a yearbook, our favorite piece of advice for new yearbook advisers is this: Begin at the end.

It might sound counterintuitive, but knowing where you want to go before you start will help you get to that end goal a little faster—and a little happier. You can achieve most of that by picking your deadline, theme, and coverage goals, but there is one tool that will get you the rest of the way.

It’s the yearbook ladder.

Here’s what one looks like:

Our free ladder template makes it easy to plan and pivot your year(book).

A Ladder Makes Yearbook Planning Easier

Other yearbook planning tools, like project management spreadsheets, editorial calendars and deadline charts, might seem to do everything except make your morning coffee for you, but those tools miss a key element that yearbook ladders offer: a “big picture” view.

Have you ever struggled to remember where, exactly, your Halloween parade collage is set to go? Or how many pages you had reserved for prom night?

Your yearbook ladder will tell you right away.

Because a ladder can show you your book from the proverbial 50,000-foot view, you’ll never be more than a quick glance away from knowing where in your book you planned for each feature to go (and how much room you gave them).

The ladder is an especially useful device that can help you determine the layout and flow of the book, to make sure that you’re not forgetting anything, and to check and see that any multi-page features look as good as possible in the way they span the pages.

Tips for Using a Yearbook Ladder

To help you, we’ve compiled a quick list of things to do when you’re setting out to create your yearbook ladder:

  • Start with last year’s book. Of course, you’re going to want to mix things up and try some new ideas, but there’s no reason to reinvent the wheel. Just move certain sections around based on your new theme and ideas. (If you didn’t have a book, or are trying a new type of coverage, start by listing everything you plan to cover.)
  • Begin your ladder with your first page. Your first page on your ladder should be one that contains content. That means page one should be on the right side of the ladder, with no facing page. If you also list pages that don’t (or can’t) contain photos and text, you may confuse how many pages you actually need for your yearbook.
  • Adjust as you go. You don’t want to mess with your plan too much, but the beauty of the ladder is that it can be easily rearranged to determine what looks and fits best. (That’s why we like our digital!) It’s a fluid document, so, if things change, you can easily adjust while still sticking to your original plan.
  • Highlight pages on the ladder once they’re completed, and check them off once you’ve signed off those pages. Doing so will let you know exactly how close you are to finishing at all times.
  • Teach others about the ladder. Even if you’re planning to control the document, you’ll want everyone to be familiar with how to read it. Ideas can flow better when people see everything laid out right in front of them.
yearbook ladder template

Put Your Yearbook Ladder To Use

Yearbooks are usually designed in facing pages, also known as spreads, where you will have one “story” on each spread. Keep this in the back of your mind when planning your layout, so you can make sure the content on your pages flows as smoothly as possible.

If you find yourself with features that are one or three pages long, consider placing candid photos, quotes, or filler items on the opposite page to complement the feature. It’ll help keep each spread cohesive.

And you know a good tool to easily tell if you’re going to run into that issue, right? Of course you do. Grab a yearbook ladder and get to work. It’ll help you make an even better yearbook.

More Design

Tired yearbook adviser touching nose bridge, feeling pressure over mistakes, working with sticky papers, writing notes, tasks schedule, and proofing notes on a glass wall Design
7 Yearbook Mistakes to Avoid
Read Article
2024 design contest announcement with sample design Design
Layout Legends 2024 Design Contest
Read Article
Relaxed mom looking at printed copies of her yearbook PDF proofs from her home office Yearbook in 60 Days
Yearbook in 60 Days - Part 3: Yearbook Design
Read Article
Mom begining a yearbook while at work Yearbook in 60 Days
Yearbook in 60 Days - Part 1: Yearbook Quickstart
Read Article