Document Creation Guidelines & Formatting Rules
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1. Overview: Who These Rules Apply To
These rules apply to all team members who create or contribute to documents related to Daniliants Ventures, client work, and internal projects. They include full-time employees, freelancers, and any external collaborators who help produce or finalize deliverables.
Key Requirements:
- All important documents — client-facing, branded, or integral to company operations — must be created and owned within the official Google accounts:
- [email protected] (mainly for internal and client documents)
- [email protected] (used for some client documents if the client specifically gave access to this account)
- Drafts and unimportant documents can be created from personal email accounts. However, if any draft or unimportant document becomes important, ownership must be transferred to [email protected].
How to Transfer Document Ownership
If you create an important document from your personal email by mistake:
- Share the document with [email protected] at the highest permission level.

In the Share settings, transfer ownership to that account by selecting “Transfer Ownership” from the drop-down next to the email address.

Make sure the new owner is shown as Primary Owner in the Google Drive share settings.

2. General Background & Rules
2.1. Creating Documents
- Use Google Docs/Sheets/Slides based on your document needs:
- Google Docs for textual documents like audits, strategies, marketing ideas, etc.
- Google Sheets for data-heavy or spreadsheet-type documents (time estimates, semantic core/SEO data, logs).
- Google Slides for presentations (monthly reports, special pitch decks).
- Styling & Consistency: Always adhere to the basic brand guidelines (detailed in Section 5) for logos, fonts, and color usage — especially for client-facing or branded documents.
- Document Language:
- All documents intended for the entire team or for sharing with clients must be written in English.
- However, some client-specific documents may be in Finnish or Russian, depending on the client’s requirements.
- Drafts and non-essential documents used internally among team members may be written in any language they are comfortable with.
- The only exception to this rule is translations, which can be created in the required language.
- Appropriate Naming Conventions:
- Start with the project or client name, followed by document title and, if applicable, version (e.g., "ClientName – Marketing Audit – v1.0").
- Include the date if time-specific or if it’s a repeating document (e.g., monthly report).
2.2. Document Structure & Layout Guidelines
Regardless of document type, here are universal guidelines:
- Structure the text logically: title page → table of contents → introduction → main part → summary/next steps → contact us.
- Follow a logical hierarchy (Title H1 → Heading H2 → Subheading H3).
- Include a Table of Contents for documents over 5 pages or multiple sections, auto-generated via Google Docs → Insert → Table of Contents.
- All body text should be width-aligned, and headings left-aligned. Titles, images, graphs and tables may be center-aligned.
- Use the default Google Docs settings for page margins and spacing:
- 1" (2.54 cm) margins on each side.
- Single or 1.15 line spacing for the body text.
- Ensure consistent spacing above and below headings and between paragraphs.
- Text should always be easy to read. Use bullet points and well-structured paragraphs (short, concise and informative) for clarity.
- In multi-page documents, pages may be numbered. Page numbers may begin on the second page and be placed in the header.
- Enhance clarity with visual elements:
- Use high-quality images, infographics, tables, and graphs with clear labels and explanations.
- Ensure graphs and tables align with brand color guidelines, including headlines and accent lines.
- If you reference external data or sources or need to mention another document, include a relevant link directly within the text (e.g., "Download the monthly report here").
- Each client-facing or external doc should end with a summary, next steps, or final remarks.
2.3. Brand & Formatting Essentials
- Fonts:
- Preferred Fonts:
- Titles/Headings: Montserrat SemiBold or Bebas Neue
- Preferred Fonts:
Bebas Neue is usually used in essential docs such as an annual report or large SEO audits.
