PodParley PodParley

71: BIDS Accelerator Lessons Learned: What you Write

Episode 71 of the Analytics on Fire podcast, hosted by Mico Yuk, titled "71: BIDS Accelerator Lessons Learned: What you Write" was published on December 3, 2020 and runs 33 minutes.

December 3, 2020 ·33m · Analytics on Fire

0:00 / 0:00

Tune in as I recap lessons learned from our latest accelerator class. This part two in the series of three podcasts, which deep dives into our BI data storytelling framework, where we tackle three parts of storytelling. 1) What You Say, 2) What You Write, and 3) What You Draw.

I dive into some of the biggest mistakes people make when working with users and writing down their requirements, including why so many get confused with the different story parts and how to fix it. Tune in to this amazing BI masterclass!

  • [04:36]  - How to become a better master storyteller.
  • [13:20]  - Changing your questions and process to create an effective data story.
  • [14:25]  - Biggest mistakes people make when working with users to gather requirements and create an amazing data story.
  • For full show notes, and the links mentioned visit: https://bibrainz.com/podcast/71

Enjoyed the Show? 

Please leave us a review on iTunes.

Waiting For Review Dave Wood The show is a fortnightly catch up between David Gary Wood, and Daniel Jilg!David is the longtime host of the show, an iOS development coach based in Wellington, New Zealand. His side project applications include GoVJ (https://govjapp.com), and he is currently working on several small projects.Daniel is an establish independent developer based in the south of Germany. He is the founder of: Telemetry Deck (https://telemetrydeck.com), "Lightweight Analytics That's Not Evil", an analytics service for apps that provides speedy and accurate analytics whilst keeping user's data private and anonymised. History of the Earthquake and Fire in San Francisco by Edward Hilton Loyal Books Early in the morning of Wednesday, April 18, 1906, the San Francisco area was shaken by a massive earthquake. Over the course of the next four days, fires spread through large swaths of the city, started by broken gas lines, fallen electrical wiring, and damaged chimneys. Broken water mains prevented the fire department from effectively battling the blazes. By the time the fires were finally extinguished on the afternoon of Saturday, April 21, nearly 3000 people were dead and 500 city blocks destroyed. Before the year was over, the Edward Hilton Company of San Francisco had collected and sifted through the available information to publish this concise and lucid analysis of what had happened. The Weekly Reload Podcast Stephen Gutowski A podcast from The Reload that offers sober, serious firearms reporting and analysis. It focuses on gun policy, politics, and culture. Tune in to hear from Reload Founder Stephen Gutowski and special guests from across the gun world each week. Cowboys Crunchtime KD Drummond Pure fire, no chaser. Cowboys Crunchtime gets right to the point on what's going down with America's Team. The best insight, analysis and interviews, all run by K.D. Drummond, managing editor of Cowboys Wire.
URL copied to clipboard!