
In this TEDx style talk, recorded in Dubai in 2020, the author walks you through the six rules of data visualization. Can you remember all of them? Answer the quiz that follows the video.
Before visualizing, there is data. However, before working with data it is important to understand what knowledge is. What is knowledge to you? In this chapter, you will learn three things; (i) the difference between: data, information and knowledge; (ii) What wisdom is; and (iii) What the process to produce knowledge is.
To storytell well it is necessary to understand narratives
The DIKW model is the best model of information available today.
check point 1
How are charts you see in media made?
Review of key fail points of visuals
A key failure point of charts, and how to avoid the ensuing cognitive dissonance
An effective way to create knowledge is by using reference frameworks, summarization techniques and visual metaphors. Let’s see an example that uses age data from a survey.
Example of knowledge creation via the quantile 1% socio-economic framework and the piramid metaphor
Clustering example with BRICS economic framework
Introduction to meaning making with the prevalence framework
In this lecture you will learn about adding a second kpi to your chart with the Innovation ranking framework, about mean reversion and about forecasting
video meme exercise
Knowledge creation with clustering
How can chart influence the IQ of a group
Introduction to 5 important charts that influenced business, science and innovation thinking; the Share growth matrix
Disruptive innovation trend chart, the house of Shiva chart, planetary chart, 2D design spaces
Once strategy is visualized on a 2D space, the solution is obvious
Introduction to symbolic charts
How to visualize enormous differences
The quantization of the 2D design space, skill matrix, innovation matrix, the generalization of the gap matrix.
Overview of the process of Strategy mapping
The Tesla value chain mapped through a Wardley Map
How did Spotify (not his real name) use a strategy map to divest its cloud operations from the core
A3/PDCA, the secret japanese tool to efficient meetings
Learn how to make the biz canvas a truly powerful ally
Five tips to make your charts "pop"
A psychology perspective to understand the mechanisms of brain overload
How framing affects the outcome of a chart.
Useful when presenting with intent
An integrative case to show all what we have learnt
How to be more ethical
A case of framing
A case of political bias
perspective section
A case for everyone who cannot imagine that most of the data today is not online.
A checklist against blind spots that could save your career someday!
With its foundations rooted in statistics, advertisement, and data science, practitioners in medical, engineering, and business use "DataViz" to explore, understand and convince with data. This course shows you how to better understand your data, present clear evidence of your findings to your audience, and tell an engaging story. Based on the acclaimed textbook eponymous Amazon Bestseller[1], parts of this courseware have been used in universities and biz schools in Finland, Barcelona, USA, Korea, Canada, and the Middle East; and in executive training of companies like Halliburton TX, Agilent, Orange, and PropertyFinder, after this course, you are expected to be able to transform data into not just information, but valuable knowledge. You will learn by example how to visualize the fascinating topics of gender equality, inclusion, solar energy and bias. You will also learn, What is the role of a narrative in a graphic; The foundations of visual narratives and what is the relationship between data, information, and knowledge. The authors (a Kaggle master, a Bloomberg ex bureau chief, and a psychology professor) bring together concepts of Data Science, Design Thinking, and Strategy to take the student on a journey where the destination is nothing less than great visual storytelling. You might be an MBA candidate, an instructor, a strategy consultant or an entrepreneur, this course explains the visual fundamentals for building graphics that convince decisively. Designed as a series of Socratic exercises, this book is for you if you work with Excel, SPSS, or Tableau; no data skills or special math skills are required.
Main Outcomes
1. Identify the role of a narrative in a chart
2. Transform data into information
3. Synthesize knowledge by linking frameworks
4. Apply visual thinking tools for decision making
5. Select visual communication techniques to persuade
Praise from previous students
"I was going through the book and it looks great!" – Mauricio Zanotti – Director ONG La ruta Solar"Here in Argentina the community in data science is really growing, and I love visualizations and find the way to tell the story." – Agustin Blacker"
Along with greeting and thanking you for such a good contribution delivered through the book I am reading (now in its translated version)." – Rosa Velasques
"An eye-opener" – Benjamin Jon, Wales."A holistic approach to how to create knowledge with classic rhetoric." – Birgitta Edberg
About the authors
Jose Berengueres is from Barcelona and a doctor in robotics by TokyoTech. Since 2011 he works at the U.A.E University in the Emirates where he combines teaching design thinking and ethics in IT with mentoring startups. He is also a Kaggle master.
Bibliography
(extra materials included with this course)
when you enroll in this course you will get a free copy in English or Spanish of the following books:
Berengueres, J. (2019). Introduction to Data Visualization & Storytelling: A Guide For The Data Scientist.
Berengueres, J. (2020). Visualización de Datos & Storytelling. (B. Covarrubias, Ed.)
Reference books (not included in this course)
Now you see it, Stephen Few, 2009
Show me the numbers, Stephen Few, 2012
Storytelling with Data, Cole Nussbaumer Knafflic, 2015
Good Charts (HBR), Scott Berinato, 2016
DataStory, Nancy Duarte,2019
Fundamentals of Data Visualization: A Primer on Making Informative and Compelling Figures, Clause Wilke,2019
Storytelling with Data workbook, Cole Nussbaumer Knafflic, 2020