Data Visualization: How (2 of 2)
The short answer, as you know, is that it's impossible to tell you how
to be insightful and imaginative in a single blog post. All I can do is
point you in the general direction, and (hopefully) ignite a little
spark.
What's the Goal? and, Where to Begin?
I
previously talked about
the growing calls for effective data visualizations; we have access to
all this great information, and there are insights in there somewhere -
but we need just the right point of view to rise above the cloud of data
and see the real opportunity. It helps if you have experienced that rush
of insight when looking at a particularly impactful graphic; not just a
good looking slide, it calls out something important in a particularly
effective way. Haven't we all watched that earnest TV lawyer pull the
winning argument out of the blue [right before the final commercial
break] and win the big case?
Of course, it's not enough just to want it - you have to have a little
reverse-engineering in your soul. You need confidence & bravado (
I can and should be able to create those killer pictures
), hunger & curiosity (
how did they do that?
), and confidence to know that you can - with a little hacking. It also
helps to have the blissful ignorance to assume that it's within your
technical grasp.
Step 1: Find Someone who Knows - and Follow them Around!
I'm a big fan of the "
follow him around
" method for learning new technology - not classroom instruction, more
like a series of specific examples of applied technology. I had seen
plenty of examples of presentations that I thought were very effective,
but I didn't understand what was happening, what exactly was making them
so effective. I had to find someone that could talk about putting
together effective presentations - and had the good fortune to attend a
seminar
by Edward Tufte
. Sure, you get some nice books, great to page through - but like most
technical manuals, they don't really make sense until you've watched
Tufte deconstruct the graphics. I learned the importance of taking
extraneous ink off the page, and how scale, color and shape can
illustrate and/or obfuscate. I didn't walk away from that experience
with specific skills as much as clarified ideas - and a hunger and
curiosity for more.
Step 2: Find Lots of Examples - and Steal some Inspiration!
Over the past few months, I've been following a number of blogs
dedicated to ideas around information visualization - more skilled
practitioners to follow around! The links below to take you to
particularly interesting examples; your task is to subscribe to them all
and regularly scan for ideas ...
Information is Beautiful
Cool Infographics
Flowing Data
EagerEyes.org
Chart Porn
- Haiti This blog is just a non-stop source of
interesting examples
New York Times
Step 3: Get Your Coding Hands Dirty!
Remember, after you are done being wowed by the presentation - figure
out how you could build one.
- The old stalwart Excel comes with an ever growing list of
graph types. Can't find the one you want? Try to hack at the standard stuff using VBA!
- Sometimes a blog post will point you to some utilities.
No, I never heard of Gource, but you can bet I'm looking for a
project to use it with!
- Open source has a lot of interesting tools out there - from
jQuery addins to full-blown BI suites - lots of tools to load
up with your data.
Remember - get inspired, find some starting points, and get building!
the only way to really understand how to create insightful, impactful
visualizations is to do a lot of experimentation.