Question
How do I practice progressive disclosure?
Quick Answer
Pick a document, note, or project plan you own that's longer than one page. Create three layers: Layer 1 — a single sentence that captures the whole thing. Layer 2 — one paragraph per major section (3-5 sections). Layer 3 — the full detail, accessible but not forced on anyone. Read only Layer 1.
The most direct way to practice progressive disclosure is through a focused exercise: Pick a document, note, or project plan you own that's longer than one page. Create three layers: Layer 1 — a single sentence that captures the whole thing. Layer 2 — one paragraph per major section (3-5 sections). Layer 3 — the full detail, accessible but not forced on anyone. Read only Layer 1 aloud. Does it stand on its own? If not, your hierarchy isn't encoding the right priorities at the top.
Common pitfall: Building a hierarchy that hides instead of discloses. If users can't find the detail they need because your structure buried it too deep or used opaque labels, you've created a maze, not a hierarchy. Progressive disclosure fails when the 'progressive' part requires guessing where things are. The antidote is predictable paths: every level should make the next level's contents obvious.
This practice connects to Phase 14 (Hierarchy and Nesting) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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