Alerts Redesign: Prioritized, Simplified, Streamlined
We’ve redesigned our alerts experience to prioritize urgent updates, reduce user fatigue, and streamline general announcements across web and app platforms.
This redesign enhances usability, improves content efficiency, and ensures that critical alerts get the visibility they deserve — especially on smaller screens.
What's New:
-
Urgent Alerts
- Updated Types: Now includes Breaking, Weather, Radar, Live Events, School Closings, and new Election Results.
- UI Enhancements: Compact design for better visibility.
- Placement:
- Web / Mobile Web: Top of the page.
- Mobile Apps: Minimized bar at bottom (expandable by user).
-
General Announcements
- Reclassified: General alerts are now “Announcements.”
- Placement:
- Desktop: Right column, below first ad.
- Mobile Apps: Below Top News.
- Design: Supports up to 3 items, each with:
- Image
- Linked headline
- Secondary link
Storyline Updates: General Announcements, Elections Alert, and UI Changes
A few updates on the Storyline side: General Alerts have been renamed to General Announcements and will now appear in a different location on the audience view. The Town Hall alert type has been removed, and a new Elections alert type has been added.
General Announcements
General Announcements include a limited set of fields: an image, a linked headline, and one optional secondary link.
Audience View
Urgent Alerts
- The list of urgent alert types has been updated to include: Breaking, Weather, Radar, School Closings, Live Event, and Election Results (new).
- Urgent alerts now have a more compact and enhanced UI.
- On mobile, they will appear as a minimized bar by default, with an option for users to expand and view more information.
General Announcements
- General alerts/announcements are now displayed separately from urgent alerts.
- On desktop, they will appear in the right column below the first ad; on mobile, they will display below the Top News section.
- This new component supports up to three announcements and includes an image, a linked headline, and one secondary link.