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L**O
Teaches through examples
Very nice book. I liked the fact that it gives good examples as well as bad examples. The bad examples are well selected so that you learn what to avoid.
M**Y
Practical, Easy on the Eyes, Slight Overlap with Few
I just got mine in the mail and certainly have not read it, but I've skimmed every page.From a CFO's perspective, love it!Just a couple more observations which one reviewer has already addressed:1. You don't read this book. I suppose you could. It's a reference book. I'll be hitting several of the chapters that are very pragmatic and relevant to my situation.2. If you see Andy Cotgreave's name on this book, don't worry about it. Yeah, he's a beast and over the top like his co-authors, but there is something for everyone--novices, beginners, intermediates, and pros. There is something for everyone here.3. And that leaves me to a new, slightly controversial comment. No criticism aimed at Stephen Few. I own all of his books. But The Big Book of Dashboards is practical. Interested in visualizing your NPS data? No problem. Sales dashboards? Check. I only bring this up because I almost didn't buy the book since I owned all of Few's. There is some overlap, but you will not be disappointed.I only have one gripe while still giving 5 stars. I want sample files. It appears many visuals were completed in Tableau, right? Backup files, Please. That would be great.Otherwise, this book is an easy 5 stars.
S**Y
If you are stuck in a visualization rut, this book will help
This is a great book if you are stuck on bar charts and line charts and you know you can be doing better, but you just don't know how to do it. I can't say that the book was revolutionary and I didn't exclaim "Wow!" or "Ah!" at any point while reading it, but it gives some solid examples of dashboards and thoughtful insights.The book focuses on the construction and logic behind dashboarding using some standard examples (hospital activity, sales, financials), so if you are looking for the nitty gritty of how to build these visualizations you need to go back to your Tableau 101. This is about figuring out the best way to convey lots of information without overloading the reader. This will become a reference book in my department and I foresee pulling it out for users to give examples of dashboarding ideas.I only wish there would have been more before and after examples. It is helpful to see what people are starting with and the thought process that created the final product.Overall, it is a helpful book that will guide data visualizers to the next level.
L**C
This Crash Course Replaces Years of Trial and Error
I really enjoyed BBOD, and I am incorporating its many nuggets into my dashboards. Learning by example and counter-example is the best method (see Siegfried Engelmann fore more on that), and that's the format of this book. There are related webinars on the Tableau website that are definitely worth listening to.The thing to keep in mind about this book is that's it's not a step-by-step cookbook of how to technically achieve vizzes in Tableau. It's a book about design. It can quickly take you from making average, hum-drum (if not disorganized and confusing) dashboards to world-class material.Below are some thoughts on certain vizzes/chapters:· CH 2 and 20 - Course Metrics and Complaints - I would encourage Tableau to research gray text readability. Perhaps I have a genetic rod deficiency, or maybe it's because of my age, but I find the gray text to be hard to read. I think the effort to reduce contrast crosses a usability threshold. I'd like to see some tests of a type "solve a problem in this dashboard" with different gray scales in text. I'd wager darker equals a faster solution up to a certain point after which it doesn't matter. There are a lot of factors that contribute to this: monitor size, font size, bold, brightness, contrast, so you have to experiment with what works for you and the majority or your users.· CH 11 - Premier League Player Performance Metric. I think the applicability of this viz approach can be generalized even further to unit:subset:universe. For this football (soccer) viz, it's the most recent match, 5 next most recent, then all season. So the viz is by sets according to time. It could also be by organizational hierarchy as in employee: department: division for a fixed time period. In this same manner, Chapter 3 (speaker ratings) is conceptually equivalent, but it lacks the subset level. You could have speaker, topic area, and then all others. CH 12 - Rugby Dashboard - This is an interesting chapter. One option for a scoring viz us using Gantt Bars. t would be nice the book's dashboard were shaded between the lines to emphasize who is leading. I know this is a long-sought (by some) Tableau function, and maybe it's not too hard to implement if it's reimagined as a "Gantt Line", which would be identical to a Gantt Bar use case, except that it graphs lines while coloring the intermediate space. You can kinda do that with 3 levels of unstacked area charts... but not exactly.· CH 21 - Overall, I like the aesthetics of the Hospital Operating room dashboard, but I expected the screaming cat icon ("don't do this!") over the top of it. The calendar of the viz resembles the periodic table of elements, and the labels seem to be at odds with the "reduce clutter" guideline. The numbers are just a bit too much for me, but they could be exactly what the customer wanted in this case. Hey, chemists LIKE the periodic table! And some people don't want to hover for tooltip details, or they may have other motivations. I like to try to put myself in the shoes of the consumer and ask "Would the color itself be sufficient for me to make an actionable decision?" To me, the numbers don't have to be on the viz, and the calendars can be shrunken to show other information, but the dashboard isn't designed for me.Overall, this book is a "top shelf" selection on dashboard design that you can revisit over and over for best practices.
T**E
This Book is the Real Deal
I'm embarrassed to think about how many books I've purchased about presenting data and information visually. To be frank, visual storytelling is more important than having the right data. If people can quickly and easily consume the data, you likely have a winner. You'll lose them fast if it is just a bunch of graphs.The Big Book of Dashboards does a great job of showing you how to present data. It also does a great job of showing you how NOT to present the data. Finally, they show you how to combine multiple relevant datasets into one visualization in a very simple and easy-to-consume format.My company is in the business of telling stories with data. This book has and will continue to up our game. Thanks Steve, Jeffrey, and Andy for a great job.
A**Z
Excelente libro
Excelente libro, con ejemplos y paso a paso de como replicarlos
P**K
Good way to explain the best practices
I like the diverse examples they are very usefulIt's a little dense in some parts i would have prefered more examples instead of dense explanations.
O**G
I learned a lot!
Reads very well and you can see yourself designing dashboards as you go through it. You can see the thinking, how each dashboard is used in real life, and alternatives. Because the dashboards are real, you learn something about the domain too - from sports to medical offices.
W**N
Avaliação
O livro te dá uma visão de Dashboard. Mais não tem um material para você acompanhar os exemplos, e claro aprender também a fazer.Do meu ponto de vista o livro agrega pouco valor. Visão de resultado quem procura um livro de dashboard já possui essa visão, a pessoa não possui a técnica de fazer. Geralmente o que as pessoas querem é aprender a fazer e não a olhar figuras.Do meu ponto de vista para que esse livro fique bom precisa de material como por exemplo, planilhas de Excel para complementar os exemplos do livro.
D**A
Want to advance your Tableau skills?
I strongly believe that this book can seriously advance your Tableau skills.But, in order to profit most from this book, you probably should be a Tableau power user. In Tableau terms, that’s being comfortable with all levels (I, II and III).I made the “mistake” of buying this book in 2017. My Tableau skills were simply not at par to profit from this book. Thus, the book remained in my bookshelf for quite a while.Conclusion: If you are Tableau power user, this book can boost your skills.Highlights:- The focus is on useful and beautiful dashboards, not info graphics.- The screaming cat is really funny.- So far, I’ve only used about 10% of the book. But those 10% were really worth it.- I tried to replicate some dashboards. Expect challenging tasks.- Page 15: How to use color for sequential, diverging, categorical….wow!- Page 339: Want to engage people? Excellent ideas.- Page 357: Are there cyclical patterns in my data? Amazing!- Page 368: Visualizing time. Some seriously good ideas.- Page 419: I love the glossary of chart types.A fantastic book to push your Tableau skills.
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