note

A poster is a visual presentation of information. A research poster is a visual presentation of your research (information) and should be designed as such – do not simply reproduce a written paper in poster format.

Academic posters are typically created for display at academic conferences and they should be understandable to readers/ viewers without verbal comment – someone might look at it when you are not there to explain.

A research poster is used to:

  • catch the reader’s attention - potentially useful contacts who are working in the same or related reserach area

  • tell them what researh question you are trying to answer

  • tell them what you found out - if you are at the first stages of your research, then what you expect to find out.

A poster is a visual presentation of information. A research poster is a visual presentation of your research (information) and should be designed as such – do not simply reproduce a written paper in poster format.

Academic posters are typically created for display at academic conferences and they should be understandable to readers/ viewers without verbal comment – someone might look at it when you are not there to explain.

A research poster is used to:

  • catch the reader’s attention - potentially useful contacts who are working in the same or related reserach area

  • tell them what researh question you are trying to answer

  • tell them what you found out - if you are at the first stages of your research, then what you expect to find out.

Table of Contents

Creating your poster

Plan on paper first: Let the technology serve the message, not dictate it.

Once you have planned your layout, you can use Microsoft PowerPoint or Word to create your poster. These are not graphical layout applications, but they are adequate in most cases and available to anybody with an LSE network account.

Content of your poster

Design Suggestions

Images and PDF conversion

When converting your poster to PDF, take care that your images are not degraded in the process. They may look fine on-screen but then look blurry or pixellated when printed as A1 or A0.The following process, in Word or PowerPoint, will ensure that images retain their resolution up to A1 size (provided that they were sufficiently high-resolution in the first place – 300 pixels per inch should be sufficient).First, set the page size:

If using PDFcreator or Adobe Acrobat to convert to PDF, check the print resolution before converting:

Embedding fonts

You should embed the fonts within the PDF document you create. If you do not, there is a danger that one or more of the fonts you have used will not be present on the printer’s system, and in which case the font you chose will be replaced by a substitute, and that can mess up the layout of your poster.

How you do this depends on the way you convert to PDF; instructions for PDFCreator and Adobe Acrobat are:

Getting your poster printed

Although LSE Reprographics only has facilities to print up to a size of A3 (42cm x 30cm), they can send work out to be printed by an external bureau. If you have a budget code (staff, PhD students with research grant), this is the simplest option.

You can use external printing bureaux. Most companies will accept your poster as a PDF file, and there are many such printers online. Do an online search for the best (and/or cheapest) options. Note the time it may take for delivery, so don’t leave it to the last minute.

If they ask what weight of paper you require, weights around the 170gsm (grams per square metre) will be sufficiently high quality.