Book Image

Learn Power BI - Second Edition

By : Gregory Deckler
5 (1)
Book Image

Learn Power BI - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Gregory Deckler

Overview of this book

To succeed in today's transforming business world, organizations need business intelligence capabilities to make smarter decisions faster than ever before. This updated second edition of Learn Power BI takes you on a journey of data exploration and discovery, using Microsoft Power BI to ingest, cleanse, and organize data in order to unlock key business insights that can then be shared with others. This newly revised and expanded edition of Learn Power BI covers all of the latest features and interface changes and takes you through the fundamentals of business intelligence projects, how to deploy, adopt, and govern Power BI within your organization, and how to leverage your knowledge in the marketplace and broader ecosystem that is Power BI. As you progress, you will learn how to ingest, cleanse, and transform your data into stunning visualizations, reports, and dashboards that speak to business decision-makers. By the end of this Power BI book, you will be fully prepared to be the data analysis hero of your organization – or even start a new career as a business intelligence professional.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1:The Basics
4
Section 2:The Desktop
10
Section 3:The Service
15
Section 4:The Future

Understanding usage models

Power BI provides considerable flexibility regarding how organizations deploy and adopt it. There are nearly limitless ways to organize and use such things as workspaces, apps, and dataflows, as well as how organizations choose to share and distribute content. We call the overall architecture and plan for how organizations deploy and utilize Power BI usage models. Usage models encapsulate how an organization adopts and utilizes the various components of Power BI in order to provide governance and processes around the use of Power BI.

The following sections explore some of the more common usage models for Power BI. However, keep in mind that there are nearly unlimited usage models as organizations can combine aspects of different usage models in different ways in order to facilitate the particular needs of their organization. The usage models covered here can be thought of as archetypes, or base usage scenarios, that demonstrate particular desired outcomes...