Telling Stories with Maps

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Telling Stories with Maps Allen Carroll and David Asbury

Who We Are and Why We’re Here

The team •

Allen Carroll, David Asbury, Lee Bock, Stephen Sylvia

Our goals •

Showcase useful and important geographic information



Demonstrate the power of ArcGIS as a communication platform



Enable thousands of people to create and publish their own story maps

Traditional GIS



Decision support



Asset management



Planning and analysis



Field mobility



Situational awareness



Public awareness

The New GIS



Decision support



Asset management



Planning and analysis



Telling a story



Field mobility



Emancipating data



Situational awareness



Briefing colleagues



Public awareness



Involving constituents



Informing



Inspiring



Entertaining

and more…

The Customary Way of Thinking



What is my task?



How do I gather data?



How do I perform my analysis?



How do I represent my data, model, analysis?

A Different Way of Thinking

X



What is my task?



How do I gather data?



How do I perform my analysis?



How do I represent my data, model, analysis?



What is the story I want to tell?



Who is my audience?



How do I tell my story?



How do I combine my maps with text, graphics, and other content?



How do I enable others to tell their own stories with my data?

Assembling a story map

Raw Materials

Map services

Table

Desktop map

Base map

Multimedi a content

Web Map(s)

Apps/templates

Audience

Web

Tablet

Text

Mobile

Building a Story Map: The Process START •

Open ArcGIS Online, choose a basemap

BUILD •

Put up an ArcGIS desktop map as a service and/or…



Find existing map services and web maps



Add and combine maps



Add data from a table

REFINE

…through multiple iterations

SHARE

…via ArcGIS Online groups

PUBLISH

…using a storytelling template

Building a Story Map Case study: •

New York City Place Matters



Partnership with City Lore, a New York non-profit



User-submitted “special places” in the Big Apple

DEMO Building a Web map Using a template to publish a story map

Choosing a Basemap: pros and cons

World Topo

Streets

Nat Geo

Imagery

Light Gray

Oceans

Canvas

Titles and Text



Your web map’s “Description” page determines the title and text in your story map

Refining CSVs

Name for Description Type popup title for popup becomes text icon styles

Lat-Long for location

Image URL for photos

Links for “more info”

From CSV to Web Map & Popup

Name for Description Type popup title for popup becomes text icon styles

Lat-Long for location

Image URL for photos

Links for “more info”

Choosing a Template

Available in a public “Storytelling Templates” group on ArcGIS.com

Basic storytelling Viewer with dropdown legend

Swipe tool User can compare two layers of a web map

Side panel Text and legend in scrollable panel

Tabbed theme Put 3-5 thematic maps into a narrative

Time-enabled Text and legend panel plus a time slider

Multiviewer Put two or three maps next to one another

One Web Map, Two Stories •

text

Rich & poor zip codes With text and legend panel

Rich & poor zip codes + Income in side-by-side viewer

Quick tour of recent story maps/templates



http://storymaps.esri.com

Resources



ArcGIS.com



Storymaps.esri.com





“Workflows and Best Practices” document available via “What are story maps” page



“Telling Stories with Maps” white paper also available

How to reach us -

Allen

[email protected]

-

David

[email protected]

-

Lee

[email protected]

-

Steve

[email protected]

Telling stories with maps







Stay tuned for more templates -

Narrative

-

Series of swipe pages

-

Volunteered geographic information

Please let us know what you need -

New templates and platforms

-

Functionalities

-

Basemaps and map services

We want you to tell your stories

Join our email list

[email protected]

Questions?

Upcoming Events (www.esri.com/events)

March 8 -

MeetUp at Esri (Vienna, VA)

April 12 -

MeetUp in DC area (location TBD)

Mar 24-27 – Esri Partner Conference (Palm Springs, CA) Mar 26-29 – Esri Developer Summit (Palm Springs, CA) July 21-24 – Esri Homeland Security Summit (San Diego, CA) July 23-27 – Esri International User Conference (San Diego, CA)

Thursday Evening Reception •

6:30 – 9:30 pm



Smithsonian Air and Space Museum



Logistics: -

6:15 – 10:00 pm Buses transport between convention center and reception

-

Conference Badge needed for reception

-

Coat check – available at entrance

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Serving hot hors d’oeuvres and beverages

Friday Closing Session and Hosted Lunch •

Join conference attendees for lunch and closing session



11:30 am – 1:30 pm



Ballrooms A-C, Third Level



Closing Speaker – Chris Smith, United States Department of Agriculture



Wrap-up and request for feedback with Jack Dangermond

of closing session.

. .

Thank You Please complete session evaluation form