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Headings

Headings help to organise content so that it can be easily navigated and understood.

Here is an example from a supermarket. Each aisle is sign posted with what shoppers can find there. Then there are also signs on the shelves to say what it is on that section of the shelf. This signposting helps shoppers to navigate the supermarket floor to find the items they want.

Supermarket aisle with notices displayed on top about the content of the aisle and on the sides of the racks about the content in each shelf

Similarly, in a digital document, headings provide both visual and structural organisation to content. It is important to use styles rather than big, bold fonts to show that it is a heading. This is because styles communicate the associated structure to assistive technologies helping the user to navigate the content easily.

Watch this video to understand the difference between a document using heading styles and without. When the document uses heading styles, assistive technology users can navigate the heading structure to find the content they are looking for. This is so important because the user may not be able to see the content and may rely on assistive technology. 

Word documents

Use Microsoft Word’s styles or pre-defined styles of your template. Select styles from the Styles group of the Home tab. On Windows computers, Alt + Ctrl + Shift + S activates the styles dialogue. The list of different styles will let you format documents consistently. If you’ve never used styles before, view  article. Create the document structure using heading hierarchy Heading 1, Heading 2, Heading 3 and so on.

Where appropriate use available templates. 

Download the ºÚ¹Ï³ÔÁÏÍø Word templates (login required)

Microsoft Word heading styles

Visit Making documents more accessible for more accessibility advice.

Presentations

In presentations, the structure is given by slide titles. Give a unique title to each slide

Download the ºÚ¹Ï³ÔÁÏÍø presentation template (login required).

Visit Making presentations more accessible for more accessibility advice.

Web pages

HTML headings are defined with the <h1> to <h6> tags. <h1> denotes the most important heading and <h6> the least. Use the heading tags to structure the content on the page hierarchically so that it makes sense to the user.

If you are editing pages on Sitecore you can apply styles using the Sitecore styles dropdown.

Sitecore Rich Text editor styles

Summary

Use styles to create a heading structure.