Best Way Waves of data visualization In Business Intelligence (BI) Fast forward to today. There are many more tools for analysts to leverage, but our community still falls into a familiar trap. Instead of seeing data visualization as a universal medium, we split the data visualization community into categories:
Analysts using BI tools for reporting
Developers using code to make custom data visualization
Journalists creating data-driven stories
Data scientists leveraging exploratory data analysis
These categories of practice map directly to particular tools and modes that have, as of late, begun to transform. In this post, I’ll provide an overview of the waves of data visualization throughout recent history—and share how this history has culminated in a third wave of data visualization, characterized by the convergence of tools, audiences, and modes. >> tableau custom portal development for BI data visualization
Footage of analysts operating Excel 2.0 to make pie charts c. 1988
First wave: Clarity There was, in the modern sense of data visualization, a first wave of data visualization centered on the work of Edward Tufte who emphasized clarity, simplicity, and direct one-to-one mapping of data points. From this era, we see the rise of spartan color schemes — often focused on neutral or desaturated colors with one standout color — the importance of labels and natural language titles, and a sort of idealization of the perfect chart that is immediately readable, accessible, and actionable. This is a sort of chart-assentence with clear structures and rules like you might see in The Elements of Style.