![]() Pradeep Kumar is one of the absolute best and he has been doing it for a very long time. Incredible work, Tina!ĥ) HR Attrition Dashboard | VOTD | #IIBAwards'22 by Pradeep Kumar G And in our opinion, had this been entered into an Iron Viz competition, it could have won. This viz nails all of the Iron Viz criteria of analysis, design, and storytelling (dang the storytelling is good in this viz). She has such a great sense for design and the layouts of her visualizations are near perfection. In fact, she had two vizzes in our 2022 top 25. If you look through our favorited vizzes on Tableau Public, you'll see that Tina is certainly one of our favorite authors. ![]() We will do our very best to provide attribution and inspiration if applicable, but we did not create these vizzes so we simply don’t know where the author was inspired.ġ0) The Conditions of Minor League Baseball by Tina Covelli We love these so much, but for this list, we will be focusing on “pure” data visualizations only.Ģ) No Flerlages: We can't pick any of our own vizzes or each other’s.ģ) Adam McCann Rule: We will pick no more than one viz from any single author (previously we would allow for up to 2 for a given author).Ĥ) Attribution: we chose these vizzes because we love them. ![]() Some of these rules have been slightly modified from previous years.ġ) Data Visualizations Only: Throughout the year, people create some absolutely amazing and incredibly useful instructional workbooks on Tableau Public. Please note that although I am composing this blog post, all of the selections and commentary were developed as a team between Ken and me.īut before we press on, we do have some ground rules. For each, we will provide a small screenshot, but we encourage you to click on the links to see them in their full glory. In this blog post, we will show our top ten starting at number ten and moving down to our favorite viz of the year. In continuing that tradition, Ken and I each chose our personal favorites from 2022, then jointly trimmed that to our top 25, and finally agreed upon a top ten. Then in 2022, we started an annual tradition of choosing our favorite vizzes of the year, this time was for 2021. To get a link to share on social media or code to embed in a web page, display a view, and then click Share at the bottom of the view. (You can get links and embed code for other Tableau Public users’ views this way, too.In late 2021, Ken and I chose our favorite Tableau Public vizzes ever. There you can select Edit Details to customize metadata such as workbook name and description, add a, and change other settings. Hover the pointer over a viz and then select View to open the viz’s home page. Hover the pointer over a viz to get access to actions such as selecting it as your featured viz, or hiding, downloading, or deleting it. On your profile page on Tableau Public, do any of the following to customize your profile: Use a unique title that will help others find it when they search. (The title shown in the image is a good example of how not to name your workbook.)Īfter the workbook is published, you are redirected to your account on the Tableau Public website (Link opens in a new window). ![]() Tip: The title becomes part of your view’s metadata. When you save a workbook to Tableau Public, the publishing process creates an extract of the data connection. Type a name for the workbook and click Save. You don’t have an account, select the link to create a new one. Sign in using your Tableau Public account. Note: This option is available only if you’ve created a viz that contains at least one field. With your workbook open in Tableau Desktop, select Server > Tableau Public > Save to Tableau Public. For information, go to the Tableau Public website. On Tableau Public, anyone can interact with your views, or download your workbooks or data sources. ![]() If you want to share your data discoveries with the world outside of your organization, you can save your workbook to Tableau Public, a free cloud service. ![]()
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