How to use a Tableau dashboard: Tableau tutorial for beginners
There are endless guides on how to build a Tableau dashboard, but almost nothing on how to actually use one, so let's settle that score.
- The viewer licence is Tableau's most basic tier, built purely for using dashboards, and many features you'd like are controlled by the author rather than you, so feeding back pain points to authors is essential
- Clicking data points, headers or axes filters a dashboard via actions, but authors decide what's interactive, and you can use the pause/resume button to batch multiple filter selections without waiting for each refresh
- The download menu offers image, summary data (first 200 rows for viewers), crosstab, PDF and PowerPoint, and you must click a chart element to enable the data and crosstab options
- When exporting to PDF, always choose 'unspecified' paper size and automatic scaling to get the crispest, highest-resolution vector output and let your printer handle sizing
- Custom views let you save a personalised default version of a dashboard, while subscriptions, metrics, alerts and data details give viewers ways to track and understand data, though metrics and alerts must be set up by an explorer or creator
- Why this video exists0:00
- The viewer licence explained1:28
- Navigating the Tableau homepage and menu2:05
- Favourites and searching5:06
- Opening a dashboard and the toolbar6:54
- Filtering with clicks and actions9:51
- Filter controls and the pause button13:53
- Revert, undo and redo16:16
- Profit ratio legend and filters17:36
- Exporting and the download menu18:25
- Full screen, comments and sharing19:28
- Download options in depth21:16
0:00Hey, it's Tim here. Now for a long time, I
0:02've always tried to make videos on this
0:03channel that
0:04really help everyone get to grips with
0:06Tableau. But a large part of my audience
0:08have actually
0:09been people who build dashboards and dawned
0:11on me the other day, is there a guide for
0:13people who
0:14don't build dashboards? And so I went to
0:16Google, which is where I start all my
0:18research before I
0:19make a video. And I simply type that
0:20question in. And when you hit an answer, I
0:22was really
0:23surprised to find that there's not one
0:25resource on the homepage. And for the
0:27record, I'm searching
0:29incognito. So this level, Google doesn't
0:31know who I am, I'm not signed in, it's not
0:33sort of
0:34bias with my previous search history, this
0:36should be what most people see on the
0:38internet when they
0:38search how to use a tablet dashboard. The
0:41first hit you get is how to create a
0:42dashboard. The
0:44next one is how to create a dashboard. View
0:47ing a dashboard when you expand on that
0:49actually goes
0:50into a menu setup for creating a dashboard
0:53again. And the videos are all about
0:56creating dashboards,
0:58you kind of get the picture, everything
1:00here apart from this one resource from 2012
1:02is about creating dashboards, everything
1:05else is about building dashboards. So in
1:07this video,
1:08we're going to settle that score, I'm going
1:10to show you how to use a tablet dashboard.
1:13And if
1:13you've never built a dashboard, you're the
1:15ideal audience. If you're never going to
1:17build a
1:17dashboard, you're also the ideal audience.
1:20And this is really going to be a video
1:21targeted at
1:22people who don't even have to think about
1:24building dashboards, but do have to use a
1:26tablet dashboard
1:27at some point in their day to day work. I'm
1:29also going to try and keep it as simple as
1:32possible.
1:32So I'm actually going to be logging in as a
1:34viewer. A viewer is essentially a specific
1:37tableau license
1:38that allows you to have access to a
1:40specific set of tablet features. It's the
1:42most basic license
1:43you can get. And it's ideally pitched to
1:45people who just need to use dashboards to
1:46get their job
1:47done. Another version of this license might
1:50be something called the tableau explorer
1:52license.
1:53And in this license, you do get a little
1:55bit more capabilities. I won't cover those
1:57in this video.
1:58But if you have an explorer license, you
2:00will be able to do many of the things I'm
2:02talking about
2:02here to use a dashboard as well. Now if I
2:05go over to my tableau online instance, you
2:07can see that
2:07I'm logged in as a viewer. And viewers have
2:10a very limited sort of view of tableau. And
2:12they probably
2:13don't know it because for them, they just
2:15know what they see. And I've assumed that I
2:17'm logging
2:17in for the first time. So you can see that
2:20here in this homepage, we've got this blue
2:22welcome banner,
2:23that pretty much just tells you, hey, you
2:25've arrived, this is where analytics is
2:26served in
2:27the tablet platform, and start exploring.
2:30Now, I tend to close this straight away,
2:32because it's
2:33actually getting in the way. And you can
2:35see that you get a little notification here
2:37to tell you
2:38that it's gone. If you want to bring that
2:40back, you can click on this change settings
2:42option here.
2:42And when you do that, it takes you to your
2:44settings. And if you scroll down all the
2:46way to
2:47the very bottom, you'll see this little
2:49message here that says welcome banner, tick
2:51that again,
2:51save the changes. And now when you go back
2:53to the homepage, which I'm going to click
2:55on here on the
2:56left hand side, you can see that the banner
2:58is back again. Okay, so if you get rid of
3:00that,
3:00and you actually want to bring it back,
3:02because you don't know what it meant, or
3:03you just want
3:03to read it again, that's how to set it back
3:06up. Let me close this now for good, we're
3:08not going
3:08to bring it back. And now you can see we're
3:11on this page. Now on this page, we have
3:13different
3:14sections. In the middle of the page, we
3:16have a recent sections here at the top
3:18recommendations
3:19just below that. And if I keep going down,
3:21I don't have much more. Now depending on
3:23your organization,
3:24you might have other things available on
3:26this page. And those are all essentially
3:29sort of
3:30quick links to everything we've got on the
3:32left hand side menu. So on the left hand
3:34side,
3:34I've got a simple menu system that allows
3:37me to go back to this page, which is the
3:39homepage,
3:39my favorites, if I've had any particular
3:41ones saved, you can see I have none recent
3:44items that
3:44I've looked at or worked on things that
3:46have been shared with me explicitly by
3:48other people,
3:49recommendations, things that Tableau thinks
3:51I should take a look at, because other
3:53people like
3:53me are looking at them. And then as we go
3:55further down, you can see you get this
3:57little line. And
3:58then we have this new area called
4:00collections. Again, collections are just a
4:02group of content
4:03that have been grouped together from lots
4:05of different places. And they've been put
4:06in one
4:07place. Think of it as like a folder with
4:09lots of different files or documents in
4:11them. But those
4:12documents could have come from lots of
4:14different departments or lots of different
4:15parts of the
4:16organization. It's just another way of
4:18sharing content. Explore allows me to look
4:21at everything
4:21that I can see and I have access to. This
4:23is a little bit of a daunting place to go
4:25to. You have
4:27to understand a little bit about projects
4:28and folders. So don't worry too much about
4:31this. The
4:31best way to think of this is just imagine
4:33this as the file system for visualization.
4:36Essentially,
4:36each one of these projects or folders
4:39allows you to go to different parts of the
4:41business and inside
4:42of those, you'll find different types of
4:44content. So if I go to the samples folder
4:46here, you'll see
4:46that I have four sample bits of content,
4:49three of them are workbooks and one is a
4:51data source.
4:52You don't need to worry too much about that
4:54. But that's essentially how this all works.
4:57If you find another folder in here, then
4:58you just go another level into that folder
5:00and it becomes
5:01a bit like your desktop, you've got folders
5:03and folders. In Tableau, we call these
5:05projects.
5:05Now if I go back to the homepage, you can
5:08see this is where I land, this is where I
5:10arrive every
5:11single time. And what I can start to do is
5:13actually save some things to favorites. Now
5:15,
5:15if you see something in your recent stab
5:17that you'd like to save into your favorites
5:19,
5:19just go ahead and hit the star underneath
5:21the items. If you see here, I can just go
5:23ahead and
5:23hit the star. And that will actually go
5:25into my favorites. And you'll see that
5:27Tableau creates a
5:28new section immediately showing me my
5:30favorites on the homepage. And this is why
5:32favoriting items
5:34is good because they appear on your
5:35homepage. And it's going to save you a
5:37whole ton of hassle
5:38in the future every time you log in. So I
5:40'll go back to my recent area here, which
5:42has now
5:42gone further down. I'll also save this
5:45overview to my favorites. And I'll also go
5:48down here and
5:49I'll have a look at this root scout and I
5:50'll save that to my favorites as well. Three
5:53items in my
5:53favorites were pretty much good to go. I've
5:56set everything up the way I want. The other
5:58place to
5:58look just before we move into a dashboard
6:01itself is the search bar here on the top
6:03right hand side,
6:04you can search for pretty much anything. So
6:06you can search for people, you can search
6:08for content,
6:08it's just all there. So in this case, I'm
6:11going to search for something called an
6:12overview.
6:13And you can see that when I search Tableau
6:15looks across the whole entire site, it
6:18gives me a nice
6:19visual sort of guide for what's going on.
6:21And it goes and finds everything with that
6:23name in a nice
6:24clear way. There is this sort of little
6:26section marker here at the top that says me
6:28there's six
6:28views. If I click on that, it actually
6:30takes me to those six views. And you can
6:32see that everything
6:33is set out really nicely. Bear in mind that
6:36in this particular page, you're now in the
6:38search
6:39page. So everything here is related to the
6:41search results of the thing you just
6:42searched. If I go
6:44back by clicking on that, we go back to the
6:46homepage again. So now you know how to
6:49search,
6:49you know how to sort of navigate the site,
6:51let's actually get to a dashboard and see
6:53how it works.
6:54I'm going to click on this overview
6:56dashboard, you might already have seen this
6:58on your own Tableau
6:59instance, it's actually the default work
7:01book that ships with Tableau. And it's
7:03something that alters
7:04sometimes used for testing and capabilities
7:06. Now in this interface, you can see the
7:08dashboard loads
7:09straight away. And I have three core
7:11sections. At the top, I have this blue bar,
7:14which is essentially
7:14just a bread, breadcrumb bar. On the left
7:17hand side, it tells us where things are
7:19going, and
7:19where we've come from to arrive at this
7:21piece of content. And on the right hand
7:23side, we have a
7:24few basic sort of controls that we can use.
7:26But again, don't worry too much about this,
7:29we're just going to maintain our focus on
7:30the dashboard itself. On the next section
7:33down,
7:33you can see I have something called a
7:35toolbar, and the toolbar starts to look
7:37intimidating.
7:38And it's worth highlighting that you might
7:40not be able to see everything that I can
7:42see here.
7:43And that is because authors, the people who
7:45build your dashboards can essentially
7:47disable some of
7:48these features, because they don't
7:49necessarily want you to be able to do some
7:51of these things,
7:52or those experiences haven't been curated
7:54and governed properly by the organization.
7:57And so that disabled those, a good example
7:59is subscribing to this by email. In some
8:02organizations,
8:03the email capability has not been enabled.
8:05So you can't subscribe, because essentially
8:07,
8:07the Tableau server needs to be able to
8:09email things out. If I go to the download
8:12option here,
8:12you'll see that it's available. But in some
8:14organizations, downloading data is sort of
8:17a
8:17taboo, they don't let you download anything
8:20from any particular data visualization, or
8:22anything
8:23that has access to any sort of data set. So
8:25just depending on your setup, the author
8:27and how
8:28everything is set up in your organization
8:30and its culture, some of these settings
8:31here will not be
8:32available. Okay, so just bear that in mind.
8:35Now, if I go down, you can see that I'm
8:37actually now
8:38in the dashboard, this big title here is
8:40the title of the dashboard. And basically
8:42everything below
8:43this little bar here in the middle is
8:46actually just part of your dashboard. Okay.
8:49In some context,
8:50this bar here can load at the bottom
8:52depends if you're going to an embedded view
8:54or not.
8:55But if you don't find it here at the top,
8:57look at the bottom, sometimes that's where
8:58it is.
8:59Now, when we get to the dashboard, it's not
9:02always apparent that there's interactivity
9:04built into the
9:05dashboard. Most good authors should give
9:08you a guide like a PDF or a PowerPoint
9:10showing you how
9:11to use the dashboard. This is really good
9:13because it shows you where all the features
9:14are. And it
9:15gives you a little bit of intuitive
9:17guidance about how to go about using the
9:19dashboard.
9:19It shouldn't be hard to use a dashboard if
9:22you finding it hard to use a dashboard,
9:24maybe have
9:24a word with your author and ask them if
9:26there's anything they can do to improve the
9:28user experience.
9:29And when you do so be sure to mention the
9:31pain points. For example, it's hard to find
9:34this when
9:35I'm looking for this in my day to day work.
9:37When you term things like that the youth,
9:39the author
9:40typically starts to better understand what
9:42you're trying to do with something and
9:44starts to make
9:45those decisions as they build the dashboard
9:47rather than you having to wait for this
9:49whole feedback
9:50loop to go around in circles. Right, one of
9:52the first things I'm going to do is I'm
9:53just going to
9:54go into my dashboard and I'm going to click
9:56on one of these items you can see as I
9:58hover over,
9:59I get these sort of tooltips and these tool
10:01tips are great. They're fascinating because
10:03they give
10:03you this sort of deep dive. But in essence,
10:06sometimes is a distracting. Now I can't
10:09switch
10:09this off. Only the author can switch this
10:11on love. So again, this is one of those
10:13user interactivity
10:14things that you should feed back to your
10:16author. Say hey, these tooltips are great.
10:18But every time
10:19I hover on something they just pop up. I
10:21don't want them to pop up instantly when I
10:23hover over
10:24them. That's something they can change. But
10:26you unfortunately can't. Now if I click on
10:29this
10:29particular region here in Germany, you can
10:31see that a couple of things happen
10:33throughout the
10:34whole visualization. And in essence, what I
10:36'm doing by clicking on that item is
10:38filtering the
10:39whole dashboard to that item that I've just
10:41clicked on. This is known as an action.
10:44Actions
10:44are used by authors to enable specific
10:46interactivity like this. But for you, you
10:49can
10:49just think of them as a filter. And this
10:51filter, all you're doing is you're clicking
10:53on the thing
10:53you'd like to filter with. And it's
10:55applying that change throughout everything
10:58in the visualizations.
10:59Now sometimes an author won't set that to
11:01apply to everything, they might only set it
11:03to apply to
11:04one chart, or one set of figures, just
11:06depends on how they've set it up. So if you
11:08click on something,
11:09and you don't see everything else changing,
11:10that's because essentially the author
11:12designed
11:13it slightly differently. And again, you can
11:15go back to them and ask them, hey, when I
11:16click on
11:17this, could you make it so that it changes
11:18all these other items that I'm actually
11:20quite
11:20interested in. So that's one way of
11:22filtering a dashboard is a very simple
11:24thing, you click on the
11:25data item and everything around it, maybe
11:27sometimes changes depending on how the
11:29author is set it up.
11:31Okay, this time, I'm going to head to this
11:32chart here on the right hand side. And you
11:33can see that
11:34I have a chart with essentially three
11:36sections, one for furniture, one for office
11:38supplies,
11:39and one for technology. For hover over
11:41these items, again, you get the information
11:43and the
11:44tooltips. And again, this is really useful
11:46supplementary information. But what I want
11:48to
11:48do is actually filter using this header
11:49item here in furniture, I don't want to
11:51have to click on the
11:52data point here, I want to filter on just
11:54this section across the whole entire
11:56visualization.
11:57So let's see what happens. If I click on
11:59that here, you'll see that everything does
12:01change. But
12:02notice that the numbers change, but my
12:03highlight is slightly off. Again, this is a
12:06weird sort of
12:06sort of design issue. And again, sometimes
12:09you might come across this when the author
12:12has set
12:12something up, and there's a bug. So again,
12:14do you send feedback to an author or to
12:17someone and ask
12:18them, hey, I'm clicking on this thing, but
12:19it's sort of grayed out the numbers. Now
12:21the numbers
12:22are filtering, so I can actually see them
12:24correctly there. If I deselect furniture
12:26here, you'll see
12:26that it goes back to 96.5. I selected again
12:30, you can see that it's sort of not working
12:32the way it
12:32should. So when you see little things like
12:34this, if there's something that looks
12:36unusual, it's sort
12:37of hard to know what's normal and what's
12:39not normal. Because you might assume that
12:41this sort
12:41of behavior where everything is grayed out
12:43when you select it is how Tableau works.
12:45Just be sure
12:47to check those items with whoever's built
12:48it. Normally, they should have some sort of
12:50feedback
12:51mechanism and you can feed into them there.
12:53Now if I go to this bottom one, which is
12:55broken down
12:56by segment, let's deselect furniture here
12:58and go down to the bottom, you can see
13:00consumer,
13:00corporate and home office. When I click on
13:02those, nothing happens. And essentially,
13:05this particular
13:05chart has not been configured to filter
13:07anything. So you can see that it's just
13:09behaving like a
13:11static chart, it's not designed to filter
13:13anything else. So when you don't find
13:16interactions, that's
13:17absolutely fine. But if you think they make
13:19sense, do send that feedback on to whoever
13:21's building it
13:22so they can do that. I keep saying that a
13:24lot because you start to realize that as a
13:26viewer,
13:26a lot of what you'd like to do sometimes is
13:28possible, but it's not actually been
13:30enabled
13:31by the author. And they could also be
13:33sometimes a skills gap where the author is,
13:35you know,
13:36building a dashboard, but maybe they're not
13:38familiar with the full feature set of Table
13:39au.
13:40So again, work with them and ask them, hey,
13:42can I add this, and they might actually be
13:43able to find
13:44a way of doing it if they know that a user
13:46is going to actually use that feature. So
13:48it's a
13:49good way to motivate authors to get the
13:50kind of features you want into the product.
13:52Now, the last
13:54area on this dashboard is I'm going to go
13:56over here on the right right hand side. And
13:58you can see that
13:58I have this sort of filter area. Now,
14:00typically on a Tableau dashboard, you will
14:02have an area to the
14:03right, or that pops up at some point on the
14:06screen that has a bunch of controls. Now
14:08with these
14:09controls, you can essentially control the
14:10dashboard again. So if you see here, I've
14:12got this drop down
14:13option. If I do select all the whole entire
14:15chart goes blank, because essentially I
14:18filtered
14:18everything out by deselecting all. If I
14:21just tick central, then the chart here will
14:25come back,
14:25but this time it's only me showing me data
14:27for central. Okay, if I deselect central,
14:30everything
14:31will go out again. And if I deselect north,
14:33everything comes back out again. Now you'll
14:36notice
14:36that that interaction takes a bit of time.
14:38The reason it takes a bit of time is
14:39because Tableau
14:40is an analytics tool. So it's having to
14:42work with either a database or some other
14:44information to help
14:46sort of show you what you need. But that
14:47means there's a little bit of thinking time
14:49between
14:49these. Let's say I wanted to quickly set up
14:52north and south and central. I didn't have
14:54to click on
14:55those three, then wait for the chart to do
14:57its thing. Maybe I've got to drop down with
14:5920 items.
14:59Well, there's actually a better way to do
15:02this. What you can do as a little hack is
15:04you can go
15:04over here to the top left hand side and
15:06select this pause option. What this does is
15:09it stops
15:10Tableau from updating the view anytime you
15:11change something. So if I now go to my
15:13region area here,
15:14and I deselect central and north, you can
15:17see that the chart hasn't updated to show
15:19me what's
15:19going on. What it has done is it sort of
15:21grayed out the whole page to show me that
15:24hey, this view
15:25needs an update. So if I go over back here
15:27to the top left hand side and hit resume,
15:29everything comes
15:30back and it loads. And this is great when
15:32you've got maybe a drop down with 20 items
15:34and you need
15:35to select eight of them manually ad hoc.
15:37This is going to save you a lot of time
15:39because if you're
15:39going through and selecting each of them
15:41one by one, you're going to be increasing
15:43the amount of
15:43time it's taking. Because each time you
15:45change something, it has to load the data.
15:47And while
15:48it's doing that, you kind of really can't
15:50use the visualization or the interface.
15:52That's something
15:52to be aware of. Now, you can also see there
15:55's another item here, which is a date filter
15:57. Now,
15:57these are a bit tricky, because sometimes
15:59most people think they have to use these sl
16:01iders,
16:01you can actually just click on them and
16:03just get a date picker straight away. So
16:05don't sort of take
16:06interfaces for you know, face value, click
16:09around, see what will happen, you can't
16:11break the
16:12visualization, you can't break it for
16:14anyone else, this is your experience. And
16:16if you want to reset
16:17anything, or go back to how it was at the
16:19beginning, there's a nice big fat revert
16:21button
16:21here at the top. And what that will do is
16:23it will take you back to how the
16:25visualization was loaded.
16:26So if you just want to start again, you've
16:28messed something up, maybe the selection
16:30isn't quite
16:30right, that revert button is going to help
16:33you. Okay. If I go back, and I'm deselect
16:36ing option
16:36here, you can see that it goes to central.
16:39And then if I go again and select North,
16:41it's going to go forward again. And all
16:43these options are sort of being saved in
16:45Tableau sort
16:46of intelligence, right, it's remembering
16:48these steps. And I can actually go back
16:49here to the top.
16:50And you can see there's an undo and redo
16:52function. Essentially, if I undo, then it
16:54takes me back a
16:55step. And I can undo again, and it takes me
16:58back one more step. But then I can also red
17:00o by going
17:01forward, I can go forward one more step.
17:03And it's remembering all of these steps.
17:05And every time you
17:06do that, it just allows you to sort of play
17:08around with some of these options.
17:10Sometimes maybe
17:11I things don't sort of work out the way you
17:12want. And you want to go back to the
17:14previous step,
17:15then forward again, this lets you do that
17:17in a very, very nice way. Now you can see
17:19that here
17:19that the spinner sort of froze, but it's
17:22essentially loaded up fine. If I go to redo
17:24again,
17:25you can see that it's loaded great there.
17:26So everything is set up the way I wanted it
17:28to.
17:29Let me go back into this region filter,
17:31select everything again. And we'll go back
17:34to these
17:35little items here in the bottom. Now, the
17:38last thing you'll see here is a like a
17:40profit ratio
17:40legend. This is actually linked to the
17:42performance on this map. So sometimes the
17:45legends and the
17:46information you need is not necessarily
17:47next to the visualization or next to what
17:49you need.
17:50Again, if the chart has been well
17:51documented, this shouldn't be a problem.
17:53And you can see there's
17:55also a profit ratio filter here. If I slide
17:57this a little bit, you can see that it
17:59works just as
18:00you'd expect. But I can also go in there
18:02and type it now the thing with percentages
18:04here is that
18:05notice that it's it's sort of displaying it
18:07as 47% or let's click out of this seven
18:10minus 72.
18:11But when I go to type it, it's actually the
18:13numerical value that I need to type in. So
18:15minus
18:1671.5. So if I wanted to change this to 75%,
18:20minus 75, I just hit minus 0.75. And there
18:24we go. Okay,
18:24the last thing I'm going to show is this
18:26export button here at the very bottom. Now
18:28when I click
18:28on the export button, the author has
18:30actually built something in for me that
18:32allows me to
18:33export a section of this data. And
18:35depending on what I can see and what I can
18:37't see, I'm actually
18:38get this ability to do this. So I can say
18:40specific sheets from this dashboard or
18:42specific sheets from
18:43this workbook. So let's say sheets from
18:45this workbook, you can see that I'm on the
18:47overview
18:47here. So I'm going to select that I'm going
18:49to hit download. And what it actually does
18:51is it gives me
18:52a nice image. So let's go ahead and look at
18:54this. Now it's actually given me a
18:55PowerPoint presentation
18:57rather than an image. And the author has
18:59baked this into the settings. So now when I
19:01open that
19:01in PowerPoint, you can see that it opens up
19:04and it's called export test. And there's my
19:07chart,
19:07my images in PowerPoint ready to go for
19:09whatever meeting I need it for. And so this
19:11is a nice way
19:12of going to your dashboard, setting
19:13everything up, making sure it's perfect,
19:15then hitting that export
19:16button for the PDF if it's an option, and
19:18being able to sort of go from there. Now
19:20what if the
19:21author hasn't given you that button? Is
19:23there another way to do this? Absolutely.
19:25If you close
19:26PowerPoint here, and we just go back to the
19:28view, and we go back to our toolbar, you'll
19:30notice that
19:30we have a host of items here across the top
19:32. So let's start going through those. If I
19:35click on the
19:35first one on the right hand side, you can
19:37see that it allows me to go full screen
19:39very handy in case
19:39I'm in a presentation, I need to show
19:41people a chart or I need the focus of the
19:43meeting to just
19:44be the chart. Really, really nice feature
19:47to have. If I click on that little x at the
19:49top of the
19:50screen, again, it goes back. So you see
19:52this little sort of square icon here, if I
19:54click on that, it
19:54goes back to how I had it before. Really
19:57cool. If I've been given the ability to I
19:59can actually
20:00leave comments for other people. So I can
20:03say hey, at Tim, this looks great. Let's
20:06chat about this.
20:07And when I do that, I can also attach what
20:10exactly what I'm looking at here. So if I
20:13go in here and
20:14just D select naught, let's say that I'm
20:15looking at the central and south region.
20:18And I think this
20:18looks great. If I click on this little
20:20paperclip and square, it's actually going
20:22to take a snapshot
20:23of this and save it with a comment, you can
20:25see that it just loads up here on the
20:26bottom right
20:27hand side. And now when I post this comment
20:30, it's a bit like taking a snapshot and
20:32adding it to the
20:33comment. And now this is visible. It also
20:36sends a notification to that person via
20:38email or via slack
20:39if they have that set up. And they're able
20:41to click on that and come directly here and
20:43see the
20:43exact same thing that you've clicked. Just
20:45to show you what that looks like. Let me
20:47revert this back
20:48to the very beginning. I'm going to close
20:50this comment tab so you can't see any
20:52comments. Go back
20:53in, open the comments tab so that you can
20:55see comments. And notice that the region
20:57here selected
20:58to all, I'll go back out and hit view. And
21:01you can see that it loads that old view
21:04back. And now you
21:05can see central and south selected. So now
21:07that's a really, really good way to share
21:09information
21:10with other people, both on Slack and here
21:13inside of tablet as well. Now the next
21:15feature is the
21:16download function. So when you click on
21:18this, you get a range of other settings,
21:20you get image,
21:21the data, which is grayed out, I'll explain
21:22that in a second, crosstab, PDF, PowerPoint
21:25,
21:25and Tableau workbook. Now as a viewer, you
21:27can't download the tablet workbook, that's
21:29not allowed,
21:29but you can download all the other options,
21:32an image will give you exactly that. Let's
21:34have a
21:34go at that. Let's collect an image. And
21:36when you do that, you get again, this
21:38option of where to
21:39save it, if I hit it to the desktop, click,
21:42click on that, you can see that the image
21:44loads up
21:44straight away here in Windows. Perfect. If
21:47I go back, go to download, this time, you
21:50'll see the
21:50data is grayed out. Okay. And if you see
21:53this little tool tip, it says click the
21:55view to enable
21:56data and crosstab download. This is not
21:58really that clear. What it actually means
22:01is look,
22:02Tableau doesn't know which data set you'd
22:04like to download. And so it wants you to
22:06click on a chart
22:07or in the visualization. And it's going to
22:09use that to download the data. So this time
22:12,
22:12let me do this, let me click on this chart.
22:14And for the record, it looks like I'm
22:16clicking in
22:16white space, that is exactly what I'm doing
22:18. I'm going to click in that white space,
22:20you didn't even
22:21see anything happen on screen. Now I go to
22:23download, and you can see up still nothing
22:25there.
22:26Okay. Very, very bizarre. Now, if I click
22:28on Office supplies, though, go back to
22:30download,
22:31you can see the data does appear. So it
22:34wants me to click on something very
22:35specific, okay,
22:36you have to click on some sort of element
22:38of grouping, a header, something on a map
22:41for it
22:41to grab the data. I wanted to click on
22:44everything, if I wanted to select furniture
22:47, technology and
22:48office supplies, what I could do is I could
22:50select the axis here, for example, and then
22:53go back to
22:54download. And you can see the data option
22:56is open as well. Or I could hold Ctrl and
22:58select each of
22:59these items. Notice that as I do that, it's
23:02firing off the actions and filtering
23:04everything. And now
23:06if I go to download, you can see the data
23:08is there again. So if I click on data, what
23:10it's going to
23:10do is give me the summary of the data. So
23:12it's not going to give me the full data
23:14that's not allowed,
23:15unless you're an explorer who has explosive
23:17explosive access to download the full set
23:19of data.
23:20But it does give me the summary of the data
23:22. And it gives me the first 200 rows. As an
23:24example,
23:25if I download all the rows as a text file,
23:27it opens it up, it actually generates a CSV
23:29,
23:30let's save that to my desktop. Let's open
23:32that in Excel. And boom, there we go, we've
23:34got the file
23:35in Excel. And you can see it's got a little
23:37bit of the formatting, as well as it's
23:38picked up from
23:39Tableau. And now I can use this data to do
23:41whatever I need to do. I hate showing
23:43people
23:44that feature. Because essentially, that's
23:46literally becomes the biggest use case for
23:48this
23:49is really frustrating. But yeah, that's
23:52just sort of how it is sometimes. So if you
23:54go back to this
23:55dashboard, you can see that's how to
23:57download data. Now, if I go back to the
23:59download option,
24:00we've also got a cross tab. So let's go
24:02ahead and click cross tab, you'll see that
24:04it then asks me
24:04which chart that I want to cross, or then
24:08ask me which chart I want the cross tab
24:10from, and also
24:12which file. So this is a bit like the
24:14option we've just used, except for this
24:16actually lets you
24:17choose which chart it's going to come from.
24:19So I'm going to choose the sales map. I'd
24:21like it to come
24:21out as an Excel last time I did CSV. Now I
24:23'm going to choose Excel, we're going to
24:26save it to the
24:27desktop, open up that file. And here we go.
24:30And you can see we get a cross tab. Now the
24:33cross tab
24:33was probably the worst format here because
24:35it's got the countries and of course, some
24:37of these
24:38cities are only going to be available in
24:39one of these countries that you know, you
24:41can't have
24:42Antwerp in Austria, Germany and Italy just
24:45doesn't exist. So cross tab wasn't the best
24:47format here.
24:48Maybe a summary data set would have been
24:50the better thing. So just bear that in mind
24:52.
24:52The thing you're downloading isn't ideally
24:54suited to a cross tab. Don't use the cross
24:56tab,
24:57use something like the summary view and
24:59just go ahead and download the data like
25:01this. If I click
25:02here on the map, I can go to the data and
25:04you can see the summary data is in a much
25:06better format.
25:07I even get the latitude and longitude and
25:09go off and use that in a much better way.
25:11So just think
25:12about what you're downloading and how you
25:14want it to sort of work. Let me just close
25:16this tab here.
25:17And let's go back to the download option.
25:19If I click it again, there's an option to
25:21grab a PDF.
25:22Now what I always say to people is that it
25:25's so tempting to choose a paper size on
25:27this page.
25:28Don't do that. Never choose a paper size in
25:30this setting. I know it sounds counter
25:32intuitive,
25:33and you might want to print an A4 or
25:35something like that. But here's the thing.
25:37PDF file format
25:38already handles this for you when you go to
25:41print. So there's no need to define it here
25:43in Tableau.
25:44Just go ahead to this drop down and choose
25:47unspecified. Choose the orientation and
25:49landscape
25:50or portrait, whatever one you want to use
25:52landscape would work better with this
25:53particular one.
25:54I want to download this particular view,
25:56you can select specific sheets from this
25:58dashboard,
25:59or you can just go ahead and do anything. I
26:01'll show you how to use this in a little bit
26:03more
26:03detail shortly. And this is a bit of
26:05scaling. Again, just set it to automatic,
26:09because we've
26:09chosen an unspecified paper size. This is
26:11generally the best setting to use. I'll
26:13show you why. If I
26:14hit download, Tableau will think about it,
26:17it will generate the PDF, and there it is.
26:19There's my PDF.
26:20Let's open that. And you can see it opens
26:22it up for me here in Chrome, because this
26:24is my default
26:25sort of PDF viewer when I'm just on my
26:27desktop. If you've got something like Adobe
26:30Acrobat,
26:30it will open it in that instead. Now, what
26:33I can do over here in the print settings is
26:35I can of course
26:36specify my paper sizes specifically for the
26:39printer that I want. And the settings are
26:42endless
26:42here. Okay, you don't need to specify this
26:44in Tableau. The other thing you'll get when
26:46you do
26:47this is you'll get a file that is much,
26:48much higher resolution. So if I just zoom
26:51in here,
26:51notice how crisp the text stays all the way
26:54through. That's because it's basically a
26:57vector
26:57item. Now, the map doesn't do the same
26:59thing. Maps are pretty hard to sort of keep
27:02consistent because
27:03of the way all this is done. But if I was
27:05to zoom in again, and let's go all the way
27:08to the right,
27:08you can see that even the charts stay crisp
27:11and nice and detailed. If you set a paper
27:13size,
27:14and you try and do the same thing, you don
27:16't always get consistently the same quality
27:18as
27:18you zoom in or you make things larger. So
27:21again, unspecified as a paper size,
27:23is going to give you the highest level of
27:26detail in that PDF, and you're going to be
27:28fine. So let's
27:29go back out. Go to download again. And the
27:32last one is PowerPoint. We've already seen
27:35an example
27:35of this. So let's select this view,
27:38download. We'll do another export test,
27:42open it up again.
27:45And this is what our button was doing,
27:46essentially was creating one of these for
27:48us without
27:49having to use the button. So in essence,
27:50you can see that the button here is quite
27:52handy because
27:52it gives me a specific feature. But on the
27:55other hand, this download option gives me
27:57all the
27:57features I could want. So you don't
27:59necessarily need to have it built into the
28:00dashboard.
28:01If it's been enabled, you'll be able to do
28:03it over here as well. Now you might see
28:05this interface
28:06for choosing this view or specific sheets
28:08from this dashboard, or specific sheets
28:10from this
28:11workbook. Essentially, this is talking
28:13about which specific item you want to
28:15download. And you can
28:16kind of see that you get this sort of
28:19different choice, different choices as you
28:21go through.
28:22Now, the only one to really talk about is
28:25specific sheets from this dashboard.
28:27This will give you each of these charts as
28:30their own thing. So if I go in here, for
28:32example,
28:33and I select the sales map, then we say
28:35unspecified, remember, automatic, and we
28:40can choose
28:41landscape for this, I think that's going to
28:42be better for the map, hit download, and
28:45what it
28:45will give me is just essentially that sales
28:48map. And it's a nice way for me to sort of
28:50isolate that
28:51and just see what's going on. So if you
28:52wanted to do that, and you wanted to
28:54generate that,
28:55that's how to do it. It's really super easy
28:57. You don't need to sort of stress too hard
28:58about it.
28:59Okay, that's everything in the download
29:01option is pretty thorough, you're going to
29:04be pretty much
29:04set. The next option is the share option.
29:06If I go ahead and click on that, I get this
29:09nice
29:09interface, I can then go ahead and tag a
29:11colleague here. So I can say hey, Tim, what
29:14's going on. Now
29:15in this particular setup, and you can see
29:17that I can just actually just type a
29:19username, I was
29:20treating it like a comment, you don't need
29:22to do that at all, I can just go ahead and
29:23type a name,
29:24and it will find that person, I can go
29:26ahead and type their email. Or if I know
29:28their enterprise
29:29ID, I can sometimes even type that. And
29:31again, it will find them absolutely fine.
29:34The user is going
29:35to need to be part of the Tableau server.
29:37That's how it knows their name is
29:38interesting. If you
29:39try and type someone's name in here, and
29:42they don't exist on the Tableau server, it
29:45won't come
29:45up. So therefore, you won't be able to
29:47share it with them. What you could do is
29:49you could copy
29:49this link though, and send it to them in an
29:52email. And then when they get access to
29:54Tableau, they'll
29:55then be able to click on that link and get
29:57the access if they've got the access to see
29:59that
29:59particular item. So if you want to send
30:01something to someone preemptively, because
30:02you know, they're
30:03joining the organization, copying this link
30:05and putting in an email will be a nice way
30:07to do that.
30:08And then once they arrive, you can maybe
30:10come back and share a bunch of things with
30:12them.
30:12But that's just sort of a mechanic, you
30:14have to work around and see what's best for
30:15you and your
30:16organization. Let me close the share view.
30:19And I'll go back to this option here, which
30:22is
30:22subscribe. Now if emails have been set up,
30:24you can actually have this view on this
30:26dashboard land in
30:27your inbox every single week or however
30:29often you want. The first thing to do is to
30:31choose what you
30:32want to see this particular view or the
30:34entire workbook, the entire workbook will
30:36go and get
30:37everything. So not just this specific tab,
30:39I'm on but every other tab, this dashboard
30:41only has one
30:42tab, so we don't need to worry too much.
30:43But if I go back to this view, this is
30:45going to be all that
30:46I get. The format I can have is an image, a
30:49PDF, and both. So this is a really nice
30:51thing to have.
30:52So I'm going to choose a PDF in this
30:54particular case, because something's
30:56interesting, I'd like
30:57to be able to forward it. And I think a PDF
30:59sometimes works a little bit better in that
31:01instance.
31:02Remember what I said about paper size,
31:03never choose the paper size, go to
31:05unspecified,
31:06choose your format, create a subject and
31:09call this weekly report. And you can add an
31:13additional
31:14message and then you can pick a schedule.
31:17Okay. Now the schedule, you can you can
31:19pick here on
31:20a selected schedule or when data refreshes.
31:22Okay. Now these are sort of two options and
31:25they sort of
31:25don't make sense unless you've used Tableau
31:27for a while. Essentially the data in Table
31:29au can refresh
31:30on a schedule. The author worries about
31:32this, you don't need to worry about it. The
31:34author worries
31:35about this, you don't need to worry about
31:37it. But why this is useful is that
31:38sometimes in
31:39organizations the data is not refreshed
31:41that often because essentially it doesn't
31:42change that often.
31:44So if a data set is only maybe changing
31:46once a week, then you might be better off
31:48choosing this
31:49option here. But you need to make sure that
31:51the data source does actually refresh
31:53because otherwise
31:54the first time you get this you'll get it
31:55and then you won't ever get anything again
31:57until it
31:58updates. And so some people it's actually
32:00quite nice to have this schedule selected
32:02because then
32:03even if the data hasn't updated, they're
32:05still getting that ping and it prompts them
32:07to go and
32:07say, hey, why hasn't this data been updated
32:10in two weeks now. If I scroll down to the
32:12bottom,
32:12you'll see a schedule. This is largely set
32:15up by your admin. Now your admin is the
32:17person who
32:18controls the whole entire Tableau server.
32:20They set up these schedules and you can
32:21essentially pick
32:22from the schedules depending on what's
32:24going on. Now a lot of these are actually
32:26pretty smart. So
32:28you can go in here and choose weekly,
32:30hourly, whatever you want to do. And this
32:32is sort of set
32:33up for you to do whatever you want. And the
32:35data updates are done on a completely
32:37different schedule.
32:38Those are sort of set in stone. So this
32:41scheduling is actually quite powerful. You
32:43can go in and set
32:44whatever you want. But just bear in mind
32:46that you might be getting email updates at
32:48a different
32:48frequency to how the data is being updated.
32:51That's why this option here to use a data
32:53refresh is
32:53there. But again, like I said, if you want
32:56the prompt, then just get it at the same
32:58time every
32:58week, let's say weekday, daily, every
33:01Monday, Tuesday, another Sunday, Wednesday,
33:05Thursday,
33:06Friday, I can choose this specific time. So
33:08let's go ahead and choose, what should we
33:11choose here,
33:12let's choose 9am in the morning, let's say
33:14910 in the morning, just after I've signed
33:17in. And you
33:18can see the times and then it's using for
33:20this as well. And there's a little link at
33:21the bottom to
33:22go manage the subscriptions. I won't click
33:24on that and deviate, of course. But if you
33:25do click on
33:26that, you can go and see all the things you
33:28've subscribed to and delete them from one
33:30place.
33:30If you want to manage that it's a bit like
33:32unsubscribing from emails, there's an
33:33interface
33:34place for that to do. So if I go ahead and
33:36hit subscribe, you can see that I get this
33:38little
33:38notification at the top saying I've created
33:40a subscription. And we're pretty much good
33:42to go.
33:43Metrics is super cool. In this particular
33:45setup, I'm a viewer, so I can't create any
33:47metrics. So
33:48if someone has created a metric, I can view
33:50the metrics there. And there's not much to
33:52say about
33:53this other than essentially a metric allows
33:55you to track one particular KPI from a
33:58dashboard always
33:59has to come from a dashboard. So let's say
34:01you wanted to track furniture sales, you
34:03could ask
34:04an explorer or somebody has elevated access
34:06to create a metric linked to the furniture
34:09sales,
34:09essentially, they'd click on this item. And
34:12this furniture value here would show up
34:14here as a line
34:15item. Okay, so that's something really
34:17useful to be aware of. Let me just quickly
34:20enable one so you
34:21can see what it looks like. Okay, so I'm
34:22going to refresh this. And just like that,
34:24we should have a
34:24metric available. Okay, so I've just gone
34:28and go to my metrics tab. And you can see,
34:32well, I have
34:33a metric. And now this metric here is
34:35specifically tracking the sales of
34:37furniture. And it's not
34:38tracking the yellow item is tracking the
34:40blue items, just the sales. And you can see
34:43the current
34:43value today is down 24.28%. And I think
34:47this is from a specific value, if I
34:49actually click on it,
34:51you see it takes me off to view. So it's
34:53basically saying that it's down from
34:55November 2019. And that
34:56change there is 24.28%. The hover over you
34:59can kind of see the number changing over
35:02time. But
35:03it's connected to this visualization, you
35:05can't create them just off some other data
35:07set has to
35:08be based on a visualization item. And again
35:11, you can't create this as a viewer, only an
35:13explorer
35:14or a creator can actually go in and create
35:16these and set these up. So if you want to
35:18use these,
35:19make sure someone is setting them up for
35:21you, so that you can do that. Okay, let's
35:23close that,
35:24go back, you can set up alerts on a
35:26particular dashboard. Now it's set up an
35:29alert, you need to
35:30do a couple of things. Okay. Now, if I
35:32click on this axis here, you'll see that I
35:35have nothing
35:35set up here. And you'll see that it's not
35:38letting me do anything. Now again, now just
35:40like metrics,
35:41alerts need to be set up for you by an
35:43explorer. So let me go ahead and set up an
35:46alert on this
35:47page. And then we're going to see what it
35:48looks like. Now, the reason I can't see any
35:50is because
35:51the author hasn't actually enabled them for
35:53me. So whoever's created the alert hasn't
35:55set it up
35:56for me to see. So what I've done in the
35:58background is I've changed that. So I've
36:00now gone and enabled
36:01those alerts to be visible to other people.
36:03And if I go ahead and refresh this again,
36:05and I go back into the alert section, you
36:09can see that I can now see an alert. And
36:12what I can do is
36:13I can add myself to it. So if I know there
36:15's an alert there that someone is set up, I
36:17can already
36:17see who a recipient is, I can add myself to
36:19that alert. And you can see that I've been
36:22added. When
36:22I do that, I get this actions tab here,
36:25where I can remove myself from that action
36:28and alert as
36:29well. So it's a really good nice thing to
36:31be able to do if you see an alert that you
36:33find useful,
36:34again, set it up. Now, it's sort of strange
36:37because of the viewer, this should be
36:38something
36:39you should be able to set up for whatever
36:41reason, it's not a current capability. So
36:43if you want to
36:44be able to set these up and use these, ask
36:46someone on an explorer or create a license
36:49to create them
36:50for you. And then you're going to be in a
36:51good spot. Go back to this top item here,
36:54which is
36:54called view original. Now this is called a
36:56custom view. Remember earlier on when we
36:58went into regions
36:59we had central and south ticked? What if
37:02that's the only thing I care about. And
37:04every time I come
37:05to this dashboard, I don't want to have to
37:07reselect these two things. So what I can do
37:09is I can
37:10actually go to this little view option here
37:14. I can name this North and South. And I can
37:18actually make
37:19it my default. Every time I come to this
37:21visualization, it loads this North and
37:23South version
37:24first. Okay, I'm going to hit save. What it
37:27does is actually creates a nice version
37:29just for me.
37:30And I can know that if I look at the URL
37:32here, you can see that it's gone really,
37:34really long.
37:34And the other thing to know is that this
37:37little tab here saying view North and South
37:40has changed
37:40to tell me that I'm looking at a different
37:43version of the same thing. If I click on it
37:45,
37:45I can actually go back to the original one,
37:47you can see that the original one was
37:49created by me,
37:50of course, if I click on that, it takes me
37:52back to the default one. So if you want to
37:54go back to
37:54what everyone else is looking at, you can.
37:57And if we go here, and I select my version,
37:59you can see
37:59that it loads up there just fine. Now you
38:01can see that it is a default. So what that
38:04means is if I
38:04go back out to let's say this export test
38:07tab here, and I go back into my overview,
38:09it's going
38:10to look at my credentials. And it's going
38:12to figure out that hey, I'm Tim, and I
38:14actually
38:14prefer the North and South version every
38:16single time. And it actually tells me up
38:18here. So this
38:19is what this is actually for. Essentially,
38:21you're saving a custom view for yourself,
38:23based on the original visualization to save
38:25you having to go and change a bunch of
38:27filters and
38:28do a bunch of things that you don't need to
38:30do. If I go back, and I go back into the
38:33original one,
38:34you'll also see things like the filters and
38:36the order dates are completely different
38:39where I go,
38:39if I go back into the North and South, you
38:42can see the order dates and profit ratio
38:45are set up
38:46slightly differently as well. So it's a
38:48nice way of saving these things and sort of
38:50looking at them
38:50in the future. Now the last one here is
38:52going to be data changes. This essentially
38:55notifies you if
38:55there have been any changes to the data or
38:58in the dashboard. And this is basically
39:00based on analysis
39:01now, at this moment in time, this is still
39:04a fairly new feature. So don't worry too
39:06much about this.
39:07I'll probably cover this in a separate
39:09video. But just to be aware, more and more
39:11features can get
39:12added to this toolbar over time. So as this
39:14video ages, so will its currency. So be
39:17sure to check
39:18out other videos on my channel to find out
39:20more about things like this as and when
39:21they're
39:22announced. The last thing is the data
39:24details. So when I click on this, I get a
39:26little bit of
39:27metadata about the data being used here. So
39:30you can see that I can see that this is in
39:32this work
39:33book. It's in the samples project, the
39:35author was me, and the exact date it was
39:37modified, it was
39:39modified a few minutes ago, because I
39:40changed the alerts and the settings, I can
39:43actually see the
39:44data source that is connected to. So you
39:46can see here, it's connected to sample e
39:48superstore. If I
39:49scroll down, I even get a view of the
39:51individual metrics. So I can go into profit
39:53ratio, for
39:54example, and I can see what the calculation
39:56looks like. So as a viewer, this is really
39:59nice, because
39:59if I have any doubts about how something's
40:01been done, and that metadata is available
40:03in Tableau,
40:04I can actually get to the bottom of that.
40:06So I can see here how the profit ratio is
40:08calculated.
40:08And I can actually select something called
40:11view more, it takes me off to another place
40:13where I can actually see something called
40:15the lineage. Now, in this particular setup,
40:18because I'm a viewer, I'm actually getting
40:20a few sort of errors here. But nonetheless,
40:23nonetheless, this is quite useful, because
40:25I can actually start to understand more
40:26about what's going on with my data set. But
40:29again, this is a for another day, don't
40:31worry too much
40:31about this. And I just wanted to show you
40:33that you can dig into these features a bit
40:35more.
40:36If I keep going down, you can see the other
40:38fields are also available. If I look at my
40:40order dates,
40:41and you can see there's nothing there,
40:43because no description or anything has been
40:45set up.
40:45Ideally, authors should be setting these up
40:48as well. So be sure to make sure that if
40:50you want
40:50these descriptions, and you think they're
40:52useful, make sure the author is setting
40:54them up
40:54appropriately when they're creating the
40:56workbook. So that's pretty much everything
40:59in the toolbar
41:00and everything in the dashboard. The key
41:02thing to remember is that essentially,
41:05really try and lean
41:06on any guides that have been created for
41:08the dashboard, that's going to be the
41:09fastest way
41:10to find out what the dashboard can do, and
41:12what the interface items can do. I've only
41:15shown you
41:15a fraction of the interface items, there's
41:17so many more available, things like
41:19parameters,
41:20set actions, parameter actions, all these
41:23are fantastic features that authors use
41:25to make things really interactive and smart
41:28. But they do require a little bit of
41:30awareness. And so
41:30the author really needs to tell you exactly
41:33what they do and how to use them because if
41:35you use
41:35them incorrectly, then they can actually
41:37break your visualizations as well. So be
41:40sure to check
41:40that out. Okay, this has been a long video,
41:43I hope you find it useful. I really hope I
41:45'm not the only
41:46one who makes videos about how to use a
41:47tablet dashboard. I'm sure other people
41:49will be making
41:50them as well. If I've missed anything in
41:52this video, or maybe there's something
41:54blatantly
41:54obvious that you think should be in this
41:56video, let me know and I'm sure we can make
41:58another video
41:58to fill the gap. But thank you for watching
42:00. And if it's the first time you found the
42:02channel,
42:03be sure to subscribe, like and let me know
42:05what you'd like to see more of about Table
42:07au.
42:07And if you're brand new to Tableau, check
42:09out my explainer on Tableau it's had over a
42:12quarter
42:12actually no, yeah, it's on its way to half
42:15a million views on YouTube, which is crazy.
42:17So if you haven't seen it, be sure not to
42:19miss out on that
42:20and check it out as well. Thanks for
42:22watching and I'll catch you in the next
42:24video.
In this video, I show you how to use a Tableau dashboard. You need no prior knowledge of Tableau and I’ll show you how to find content, save it to your favourites and use a dashboard as well as understand what you can and can’t do and how to collaborate with colleagues to enable more capabilities.
0:00 Intro 1:30 Viewers and explorers 2:05 The landing page for viewers 5:09 Adding items to your favourites 5:58 Searching for items 6:54 Navigating to a Tableau dashboard and the layout 9:52 Interacting with the dashboard in Tableau Server & Online 13:53 Additional controls on your dashboard 14:56 Pausing your view for complex selections 15:59 Date pickers 16:21 Revert Button to reset the dashboard 18:24 Export button in the view 19:27 Full-screen view on a Tableau dashboard 19:58 Leaving comments on a Tableau Dashboard 21:15 Downloading data from a Tableau Dashboard 29:05 Sharing a Tableau Dashboard 30:19 Subscribe to a Tableau Dashboard via email 33:42 Using metrics in a Tableau Dashboard 35:27 Using alerts in a Tableau Dashboard 36:52 Setting up a custom view of your Tableau Dashboard 38:51 Data Changes 39:24 Data details in a Tableau Dashboard 40:58 Summary and conclusions