Module Guide
instance one
instance two
Available Modules
- Hero
- Text/Image Halves (default)
- Text (ex: Privacy Policy)
- Text/Form Halves (ex: Get Started)
- Content Editor
- Icons + Text
- Columns, icon/text stacked (ex: Homepage, under hero)
- Columns, icon left/text right (ex: Solutions, above footer)
- Rows, icon left/text right (ex: Module Guide)
- Boxed Callouts
- Text Boxes (ex:
- Image Rollover Boxes (ex: Homepage)
- Tip Box (ex: Module Guide)
- Software (ex: Homepage, beneath Image Rollover Boxes version)
- Blue Arrow Callout
- Partner Logos (ex: Homepage)
- Image (ex: Module Guide)
- Accordions (ex: Solutions > Route Optimization)
- Testimonials
- Text Only (ex: Module Guide)
- Text + Image (ex: Company > Careers)
- Customer Story (ex: Solutions > Route Optimization)
- Photo Columns
Type: Image
Blue Arrow Callout
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc blandit auctor lacus id interdum. Etiam facilisis augue vitae turpis semper mattis.
Boxed Callouts (Tip Box): Talk to your processor about when you can expect changes in acceptable materials, if ever. Think about how you will communicate updates to participants in a timely manner to keep contamination low.
Rows, icon left/text right
Icons + Text
Add Intro: yes // Add Button Below Icon Blocks: no // Type: Rows, icon left/text right // Background: White
What goes in:
Encourage a mixture of half “greens” and half “browns.” Browns are generally yard debris, such as sticks and dry leaves. Greens are fruit and vegetable scraps, eggshells, coffee grounds, tea bags and other greens. Picturing these items on a “kitchen-catcher” decal will help people understand, regardless of the languages they speak.
What doesn’t go in:
Backyard compost piles don’t reach the high temperatures required to quickly and safely degrade foods like meat, bones and dairy products. Teach residents to keep them out by picturing them on your decal with a red “X” to show they’re a no-no.
How it works:
By mixing brown and green materials — and keeping the compost pile moist (never drenched) and aerated by flipping or mixing it up — organic materials break down into a rich soil amendment for the home garden. Composting this way works because water and air create the right environment for aerobic digestion of organic materials. (Inside an oxygen-starved landfill, materials break down anaerobically, a byproduct of which is harmful methane.)