Type of chart | Description | Example |
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Displays several variables together, in horizontal bars. Useful for displaying simple comparisons, such as revenue each month. |
Same as the Bar chart but displays the variables in vertical bars (columns) instead. |
Displays a combination of a Column chart and Line chart. Useful for making comparisons, such as sales vs budget. |
Shows the relative importance of differences between large sets of values. Useful for root cause analysis. |
Displays an overview of positive and negative changes to a value over time. Useful for getting a clear picture of growth or decline in performance, such as that if your Sales Reps. |
Plots performance over time. Useful for making comparisons, such as sales this year vs. last year. |
Plots performance over time, displaying data as a shaded ‘area’ that falls below a set of points connected by straight lines. Useful for visualizing comparisons, such as product profit over time. |
Same as the Area chart but the shaded areas are based on percentages rather than amounts. Provides a different way to view proportional areas and has tooltips that display data details. | ||
Displays the percentage share of a number of variables in a pie shape, where each segment is proportionate to the percentage value. Useful for visualizing comparisons, such as revenue by region. |
Same as the Pie chart but displays the data in the shape of a donut rather than a pie. |
Displays performance against a range. Useful for tracking performance against a target, such as Sales Rep performance, as illustrated in the dashboard image below. |
Displays results in a single column. Looks similar to a Column chart but has more in common with a Gauge chart. Useful for tracking performance against a target. |
Displays just one number, either alone or with an icon, on a card. Useful for displaying large numerical values, such as your total sales for the month. |
Same as the Summary chart but displays the value and other elements within a ring. |
Displays color-coded circles (bubbles) plotted on an X and Y-axis to represent measures. Useful for comparing measures, such as cost v revenue. | ||
Plots variables by providing an axis for each variable, arranged radially (like bicycle spokes) around a central point. Useful for charting matrix results, in other words, such as sales by product class and customer type. |
Displays a map with data points identified by a marker, circle or colored heat map. Useful for locating data points of interest on a map. |
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