Book Image

The Tableau Workshop

By : Sumit Gupta, Sylvester Pinto, Shweta Sankhe-Savale, JC Gillet, Kenneth Michael Cherven
Book Image

The Tableau Workshop

By: Sumit Gupta, Sylvester Pinto, Shweta Sankhe-Savale, JC Gillet, Kenneth Michael Cherven

Overview of this book

Learning Tableau has never been easier, thanks to this practical introduction to storytelling with data. The Tableau Workshop breaks down the analytical process into five steps: data preparation, data exploration, data analysis, interactivity, and distribution of dashboards. Each stage is addressed with a clear walkthrough of the key tools and techniques you'll need, as well as engaging real-world examples, meaningful data, and practical exercises to give you valuable hands-on experience. As you work through the book, you'll learn Tableau step by step, studying how to clean, shape, and combine data, as well as how to choose the most suitable charts for any given scenario. You'll load data from various sources and formats, perform data engineering to create new data that delivers deeper insights, and create interactive dashboards that engage end-users. All concepts are introduced with clear, simple explanations and demonstrated through realistic example scenarios. You'll simulate real-world data science projects with use cases such as traffic violations, urban populations, coffee store sales, and air travel delays. By the end of this Tableau book, you'll have the skills and knowledge to confidently present analytical results and make data-driven decisions.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
Preface

Introduction

In the last chapter, you explored distributions and relationships in a dataset and learned how to identify patterns within a given dataset. This chapter will focus on the geographic aspect of data and how location affects those distributions and relationships.

Understanding geographic patterns is critical for many datasets, whether they are revenue patterns around the world for a global corporation or local purchase patterns for a small business. This type of data is especially useful for explaining patterns to internal or external customers with maps, in which you can show patterns at the region or country level all the way down to postal code or even smaller geographic levels, depending on how the data is collected. This can be highly useful for visualizing purchase, voting, or demographic patterns, as just a few examples.

One of the most powerful aspects of using geographic data and maps lies in the intuitive understanding of location data many users are...