White paper

Which chart or graph is right for you?

Authors
Tracy Rodgers, Product Marketing Manager
Robert Bloom, Tableau Engineer

You’ve got data and you’ve got questions. You know there’s a chart or graph out there that will show you the data you want to see, but it’s not always easy knowing which chart or graph is best without some trial and error.

This paper pairs charts with the type of data you’re analysing and questions you want to answer to help you find the appropriate chart or graph for your needs. But it won’t stop there.

Stranding your data in isolated, static graphs limits the number and depth of questions you can answer. Let your analysis become your organisation’s centrepiece by using it to fuel exploration. Combine related charts. Add a map. Provide filters to dig deeper. The impact? Immediate business insight and answers to questions that actually drive business decisions.

So which chart is right for you? Transforming data into an effective visualisation (any kind of chart or graph) or dashboard is the first step towards making your data make an impact. Here are some best practices for conducting meaningful visual analysis:

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Bar chart

Bar charts are one of the most common types of data visualisation. With them, you can quickly highlight differences between categories, clearly show trends and outliers, and reveal historical highs and lows at a glance. Bar charts are especially effective when you have data that can be split into multiple categories.

Use bar charts to:

  • Comparing data across categories. Bar charts are best suited for data that can be split into several groups. For example, volume of shirts in different sizes, website traffic by referrer and percentage of spending by department.

Tips:

  • Include multiple bar charts on a dashboard. Comparing several bar charts at the same time is much easier than trying to spot patterns across multiple slides.
  • Add colour to bars for more impact. Colour adds a quick visual identifier that makes deep comparisons easy.
  • Use stacked bars or side-by-side bars. Stacked and side-by-side bar charts let you break down your data even further, giving more depth to your analysis.
  • Combine bar charts with maps. Maps are a powerful and intuitive way to visualise data. Using a map as a filter lets viewers drill down and find detailed answers.
  • Put bars on both sides of an axis. Plotting positive and negative data points along the same axis makes trends and outliers stand out.
  • Try Pareto analysis by combining bar charts with table calculations. Use table calculations to create a Pareto chart, showing the accumulation of multiple categories.
Example of a bar chart combined with pareto analysis.

This Pareto chart shows that roughly 20% of all sales are coming from the state of California.

Example of a bar chart showing outliers.

In this example, the bar chart quickly shows when inflation rates rose and dropped. In the first half of the century, the drops were more dramatic than in more recent history.

Tableau is one of the best tools out there for creating really powerful and insightful visuals. We’re using it for analytics that require great data visuals to help us tell the stories we’re trying to tell to our executive management team.

Line chart

The line chart, or line graph, is another familiar method for displaying data. It connects several distinct data points, presenting them as one continuous evolution. The result is a simple, straightforward way to visualise changes in one value relative to another.

Use line charts to:

  • View trends in data, usually over time. Line charts are most often used to show a value evolving over time, but they aren’t limited to that. Any dimension – like date types, time intervals and other ordinal data – can be used as the horizontal axis. For example, stock price change over five years, website page views during a month, and revenue growth by quarter.
  • Tips:

    • Combine a line graph with bar charts. Bar and line charts go well together. Showing two kinds of information on the same axis adds powerful context to your data.
    • Shade the area under lines. Shading the area under line charts provides an immediate visual cue of quantity, and can improve the look and feel of your graph. When your graph includes multiple lines, use multiple colours to inform the viewer of each line’s relative contribution to the whole.
A line char is great for showing seasonality.

This line chart show which slot machines have the largest winning amount while also showing the seasonality.

Pie chart

Pie charts are powerful for adding detail to other visualisations. Alone, a pie chart doesn’t give the viewer a way to quickly and accurately compare information. Since the viewer has to create context on their own, key points from your data are missed. Instead of making a pie chart the focus of your dashboard, try using them to drill down on other visualisations. This approach uses the pie chart’s simplicity to add information without distracting from the larger picture.

Use pie charts:

  • Alongside other charts. A pie chart is most impactful when used to add information to other types of charts and graphs.
  • Drill down on other visualisations. This approach uses the pie chart’s simplicity to add information and context without distracting from the larger picture.
  • Tips:

  • Limit pie wedges. If you have too many proportions to compare, the viewer may have trouble getting meaning from the chart. Similarly, limit dashboards to a small total number of pie charts.
  • Overlay pies on maps. Pie charts can further break down geographical trends in your data, creating a compelling visualisation.
Pie charts should be used to show proportions.

Adding the pie charts to the map allows the viewer to quickly see how particular states are profiting from different product categories.

Map

Maps are a no-brainer for visualising any kind of location information, whether it’s postal codes, state abbreviations, country names or your own custom geocoding. Maps highlight geographic trends in a format everyone knows and understands.

Use maps to:

  • Display geocoded data. If you have geographic information associated with your data, maps are a simple and compelling way to show how location correlates with trends in your data. For example, insurance claims by county, product export destinations by country, car accidents by postcode and custom sales territories.

Tips:

  • Use a map as a filter for other types of charts, graphs and tables. A map provides an intuitive way to drill down into your data. Viewers can see large trends at a glance and use filter actions to quickly investigate even further.
  • Layer data points on top of maps. Marks can be overlaid on a map to show individual data points with more precision. Try varying their size to add more visual detail to your analysis.

Read Maps: The power of where to learn how using maps effectively helps drive better business decisions.

Maps can tell the full story quickly.

By layering the magnitude of an earthquake on top of the map, the viewer can see where bigger earthquakes occur.

Scatter plot

Scatter plots are an effective way to give you a sense of trends, concentrations and outliers that facilitate deeper investigations of your data. A scatter plot presents lots of distinct data points on a single chart. The chart can then be enhanced with analytics like cluster analysis or trend lines.

Use scatter plots to:

  • Investigate the relationship between different variables. Scatter plots are used to show if one variable is a good predictor of another, or if they tend to change independently. This type of chart easily lends itself to many types of analysis. For example, male versus female likelihood of having lung cancer at different ages, technology early adopters’ and laggards’ smartphone purchasing patterns, or delivery costs for different product categories to different regions.

Tips:

  • Use cluster analysis to identify segments. Cluster analysis groups data points into distinct segments, based on the variables you select.
  • Use highlight actions. By adding a highlight action to your scatter plots, quickly see which points have attributes in common without losing sight of the rest of the dataset.
  • Use custom mark types. Custom marks add a quick visual cue to your chart, clearly distinguishing different groups of points.
Scatter plots quickly show outliers in your data.

This scatter plot shows how sales and profit compare across department, and it quickly lets you see any outliers.

Gantt chart

Gantt charts are purpose-built for illustrating the start and finish dates of steps in a process or project. A Gantt chart shows steps that need to be completed before others can begin, or which resources are overcommitted.

Gantt charts aren’t limited to projects, though: Represent any time series data with this chart type. Try using a Gantt chart to show how a multi-step process has performed over time. Colour can be used to show which steps are under- or over-performing.

Use Gantt charts to:

  • Display a project schedule. A Gantt chart can easily illustrate key deliverables, owners and deadlines.
  • Show changes in use or activity over time. Time series data is presented in a natural, easy-to-understand format on a Gantt chart. For example, the duration of a machine’s use or the availability of players on a team.

Tips:

  • Add colour. Changing the colour of the bars within the Gantt chart quickly informs viewers about key aspects of the variable.
  • Combine maps and other chart types with Gantt charts. Including Gantt charts in a dashboard with other chart types can help correlate otherwise disconnected data.
Example of a Gantt chart for project management.

Using this Gantt chart, the team knows which pieces of content are on schedule and which are running late.

Bubble chart

Although bubbles aren’t technically their own type of visualisation, using them as a technique adds great detail to scatter plots or maps. Varying the size and colour of circles creates visually compelling charts that present large volumes of data at once.

Use bubble charts to:

  • Show the relationship between three or more measures. Bubbles can add more detail to the traditional two-axis chart, highlighting the relationship between three or more variables without overwhelming the viewer.

Tips:

  • Add colour. Colour can add more dimension to a bubble chart while creating an attractive visual “pop”.
  • Overlay on maps. Bubbles quickly inform a viewer about relative concentration of data. Using these as an overlay puts geographically related data in context quickly for the viewer.
Example of a bubble chart.

In this example, the bubble chart can be used as a filter for the line chart to better understand how sales for a particular product have performed over time.

Histogram chart

Histograms show how your data is distributed across distinct groups. By grouping your data into specific categories (also known as “bins”), then plotting the number of records in a category as a vertical bar, you can quickly see which bins the majority of your data falls in.

Use histograms to:

  • Understand the distribution of your data. The histogram is your best option for visualising how data falls into categories. For example, number of customers by company size, student performance on an exam and frequency of a product defect.

Tips:

  • Test different groupings of data. Creating a variety of histograms can help to determine the most useful groupings of data.
  • Add colour to break bins down. Apply colour to bars representing each group to show a second set of categories on the same chart.
Example of a histogram.

The histogram gives a breakdown of the distribution of rental prices throughout the United States.

Bullet chart

Bullet charts show progress against a goal by comparing measures. At its core, a bullet graph is a variation of a bar chart. Designed to replace dashboard gauges, meters and thermometers, a bullet chart shows more information while using less space.

Use bullet charts to:

  • Quickly compare a metric to a goal. A bullet chart shows how a metric is doing at a single point in time. Because it doesn’t display history, this chart is best suited for quick “how are we doing?” dashboards rather than deep analysis.

Tips:

  • Use colour to illustrate achievement thresholds. Including colour as a backdrop gives the viewer another reference to better understand how performance is measured against goals. 

  • Add bullets to dashboards for summary insights. Combining bullets with other chart types into a dashboard supports productive discussions about where attention is needed to accomplish objectives. 

Example of bullet chart with a filled map.

In this dashboard, the viewer can see that the Central region has not yet hit its quota. By using the bullet graph as a filter for the map, the viewer can see where there is more opportunity to sell.

Heat maps

Heat maps are a great way to compare data across two or more categories using colour. Patterns guide viewers around the chart, quickly showing them where the intersection of categories is strongest and weakest.

Use heat maps to:

  • Comparing categorical data using colour. Heat maps are best for presenting data sets with lots of categories. This chart type can pack hundreds of comparisons into a small area and still be easy to understand at a glance. For example, sales quota assessment, actual spending vs budget, and performance spectrum (great/good/poor).

Tips:

  • Vary the size of squares. Changing the size of the squares adds significance to the heat map’s visual analysis. For example, shrinking a square creates white space around it, de-emphasising it and directing the viewer’s eye elsewhere.

To discover more tips for optimising your dashboard layout, read The dos and don’ts of dashboards.

Example of a heat map.

The heat map gives the viewer a quick summary of how different product categories are performing compared to each other per month.

A heat map, which would take 40 worker hours before Tableau, now takes us less than a day. That’s a reduction of almost 80 percent.”

Highlight table

Highlight tables take heat maps one step further. In addition to showing how data intersects by using colour, highlight tables display number by cell, providing additional detail.

Use highlight tables to:

  • Draw attention to detailed information. A highlight table uses colour to grab the viewer’s attention while still presenting precise figures. For example, segmentation analysis of target market, product adoption across regions and sales leads by individual rep.

Tips:

  • Combine highlight tables with other chart types. Buttressing a line chart with a highlight table, for example, lets a viewer keep overall data trends in mind while drilling down into specific cross-sections of interest.
Example of a highlight table.

The highlight table draws the eye to see the biggest percentage changes in population per state.

Treemaps

Treemaps relate different segments of your data to the whole. By nesting rectangles within others, treemaps show how individual data points fit into a hierarchy. As the name of the chart suggests, each rectangle is subdivided into smaller rectangles, or sub-branches, based on its proportion to the whole. They make efficient use of space to show percentage totals for each category.

Use treemaps to:

  • Show data with multiple levels of categorisation. When a dataset can be broken down in many different ways, a treemap might be the best way to show what categories most of the data falls into. For example, storage usage across computers, managing the number and priority of technical support cases, and comparing fiscal budgets between years..

Tips:

  • Colour the rectangles by category Because treemaps are such a dense chart type, colour makes it easier for the viewer to distinguish one category from another.
  • Combine treemaps with bar charts. Bar charts whose “fill” is a treemap are a visually impressive way to drill down into data. The bar chart lets the viewer quickly compare items through the bar’s length, while also showing the breakdown of categories within each bar.
Example of treemaps within a bar chart.

The use of the treemap within each bar lets the viewer see which regions had the highest GDP each year.

Box-and-whisker plot

Box-and-whisker plots, or boxplots, are a common way to show distributions of data. The name refers to the two parts of the diagram: the box, which contains the median of the data along with the 1st and 3rd quartiles (25% greater and less than the median), and the whiskers, which typically represents data within 1.5 times the interquartile range (the difference between the 1st and 3rd quartiles). The whiskers can also be used to also show the maximum and minimum points within the data.

Use box-and-whisker plots to:

  • Show the distribution of a data set. Use box-and-whisker diagrams to understand your data at a glance. See how data is skewed towards one end and identify outliers in your data. For example, comparing scores between sites, analysing data before and after a process change, or examining data from duplicate machines manufacturing the same products.

Tips:

  • Hide the points within the box. This helps a viewer focus on the outliers.
  • Compare boxplots across categorical dimensions. Boxplots are great at allowing you to quickly compare distributions between data sets.
Example of a boxplot.

In this example, the viewer can quickly see how the profit distribution has changed over time.

Candlestick chart

Candlestick charts are commonly used for financial analysis, showing metrics about a financial instrument over a period of time. This chart type shows the open, close, high and low values of an instrument over time in an easy-to-understand format.

Use candlestick charts to:

  • Show financial data. A candlestick chart is an advanced chart type meant specifically for financial analysis. Though it may look like a box-and-whisker plot, these two charts do not have the same meaning.
  • Tips:

    • Present multiple separate candlestick charts. Trying to layer too many data points on a single chart can be confusing and difficult to navigate. Creating clear distinctions helps the viewer to analyse the charts separately.
    • Use highlight actions to correlate data. Time-series data can be difficult to keep track of. Highlight actions allow a user to focus on a single date, while still seeing the historical information in the rest of the chart.
Example of a candlestick chart.

Candlestick charts enable you to perform price and volatility analysis in one view. In this example, you can track Coke or Pepsi’s stock prices in one compact view.

About the authors

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Tracy Rodgers

Product Marketing Manager

Tracy Rodgers is a Product Marketing Manager, where she focuses on all things data. She started working at Tableau in 2011 and has worked in several roles since, from support to managing the Tableau Community and product marketing. She loves connecting with customers, learning new tips and tricks about the Tableau products and introducing more people to the world of data.

Robert Bloom

Tableau Engineer