By Andrej Lapajne • Last updated
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How to Choose the Right Business Chart - A 3-step Tutorial

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In this article, we will explain how to choose the correct chart for your data. Or, more precisely, for your message.

If you prefer an interactive solution, we highly recommend you use Zebra BI Chart Selector. It will help you find the most suitable chart and provide you with explanations in a few clicks.

There are 3 fundamental rules that you should always follow when deciding which chart to use. If you learn these 3 rules, there is a good chance that you will get it right no matter what the context of your data is.

#1 Orientation

Will I display time-related data

#2 Task

What message do I want to deliver?

#3 Shape

What type of data am I trying to visualize?

So, without further ado, let us start with rule No. 1.

#1 Display time horizontally, category items vertically

Let us focus on the most frequent business charts, such as column and bar charts, line and area charts, dot plots or pin charts, plus-minus (variance) charts, etc. Your first decision should always be whether to turn them horizontally or vertically.

Here's how you should make your decision:

TIME

Use horizontal charts for time series

Horizontal Business Charts in Excel

Of course, you can visualize other data categories with horizontal charts. But you will probably run into problems with labeling, category spacing, etc. If you want to make an exception to this rule, do it only when the number of data categories is very small, and their labels (names) are very short.

STRUCTURE

Use vertical charts in all other cases

Vertical Business Charts in Excel

1. It is easier to display category labels

2. You can insert them into tables, thus creating combined table-chart reports, or you can choose Zebra BI Tables, which include integrated charts out of the box.

Charts can also have circular (polar) orientation, such as pie charts or "spider" (radar) charts. Additionally, we also have 2- or even 3-dimensional charts orthogonally oriented in two-dimensional space, for example, scatter plots (XY charts) or bubble charts.

Here is a summary of all possible chart orientations and when to use them:

OrientationWhen do I use it?
1.HorizontalUse only when your data represents time series (years, quarters, months, weeks, days or date/time values)
2.VerticalUse if you have discrete items (categories or structure data, such as products, customers, accounts, etc.)
3.CircularAvoid pie charts whenever possible. Use only when the number of categories is very small (2 or 3 categories)
4.2DUse when you have 2 or 3 variables in your data, such as in bubble charts or scatter plots

#2 Choose the right chart for your message

BI/reporting/visualization tools usually offer a large set of chart types. So, you must understand and predict the nature of the analytical task your readers will perform when observing your charts. You should always ask yourself: What message am I trying to convey?

For example, you might want to show an interesting trend over time. Or enable your readers to compare the sales values of different products. Yet another time, your readers will need to understand the variance to budget, growth from previous year values, the contribution of specific products' variance to the total variance, etc.

Here is our cheatsheet that will help you select the right chart for the most common tasks that business users typically perform:

Structure analysis (category comparison)

Structure analysis is the most basic analytic task where the reader observes the displayed values and visually compares data categories. These comparisons are usually the following:

  • Looking up a specific value (e.g., finding the sales value of a specific product)
  • Comparing two values between each other
  • Ranking (trying to establish the sequential order of one or more data categories)
  • Recognizing patterns in the data (outliers or subsets of values with a specific pattern)

Structure charts in Excel

Whenever you display categories like this, think about the order of categories. For ranking, sort categories by value. In other cases, order categories by their importance or a natural order like geography. Do not use alphabetical order - it works for phone books only ...

Time-series (trend) analysis

Time series (trend) analysis is a similar task to structure analysis but is performed when the data categories represent time (years, quarters, months, weeks, days, timestamps).
Depending on the situation, the reader will perform the following types of comparisons within the displayed time series:

  • Looking up a specific value (e.g., the sales value of the last month)
  • Comparing two values between each other
  • Observing trends in the data (subsets of values with a specific pattern, e.g., linear growth or seasonality)

Time-Series Charts in Excel

Part-to-whole comparison

Here, users try to assess the relation of a part to the whole value (e.g., sales of one product to total sales of the company). The analysis exposes the "significance" of each part relative to the total value. Use stacked bar charts for part-whole comparison (and OK, pie charts as well, but only in very limited cases!):

Part-to-Whole Charts in Excel

Avoid using pie charts altogether. They only work for a limited number of categories (1-2). They work best when you only display 1 category compared to the whole (as in the example above). Guess what? It's called the "pac-man" chart 😉

Variance analysis

Variance analysis is the most fundamental task in business reporting. Understanding deviations from targets or budgets and growth rates from previous periods is a core requirement in almost any organization. Use "plus-minus" charts to show variance over time or structures:


Plus-minus Variance Charts in Excel

Use "integrated variance" charts to display actual values and deviations. Since both values (actual and deviation) are shown, the user can evaluate both the importance of each deviation (its magnitude) as well as its relative share of the actual value at the same time:


Integrated Variance Charts in Excel

Wonder how to create charts like these in Excel?

Contribution analysis

Contribution Analysis is a particular type of part-to-whole analysis to assess the contribution of all parts to the whole value. There are two main versions of Contribution Analysis: (1) Contribution of variances and (2) Contribution of categories. 

Use waterfall charts for contribution analysis - they are simply perfect for explaining why a total value has changed. Here are 4 typical examples:

contribution analysis how to choose right blog post

A waterfall chart is called the "bridge" chart for obvious reasons.

Correlation analysis

Correlation analysis is used to assess whether two variables are correlated. It is also suitable for spotting outliers. Use scatter plot for correlation analysis:


Correlation Analysis - Scatter Plot
Warning: If two variables are in correlation, this does not necessarily mean that there is a cause-and-effect relationship between them!

Portfolio analysis

To analyze a portfolio of data categories (e.g., products, customers, suppliers, plants, etc.) by 3 variables, use the bubble chart:


Portfolio Analysis - Bubble chart

#3 Determine the optimal chart shape for your data

Once you have chosen the correct chart orientation and the intended task of your visualization, you are ready for your last major decision: Which chart shape should I use?

Instead of always just using the identically looking "default" column chart regardless of what it represents, you should use different chart shapes for different types of values (KPIs). This is called shape coding:

KPI chart shapes

For example, the columns in the Price chart are much thinner than the ones in the Revenue chart. This is quite intuitive - revenue values are usually way bigger than prices since the price is a ratio of revenue; that is, it is divided by sales quantity (a value/volume division). Similarly, you can use "pin" charts (yes, the "lollipops" 🙂 ) for percentages since they are value/value or volume/volume divisions and are thus without any unit (just indexes, %). So it seems intuitive to use chart shapes without width for indexes in business reporting. Once readers understand this, they will instantly know what they are looking at, even without reading the labels. Especially in a repeating process such as monthly reporting, this can come in very handy.

Similarly, you can use patterns to code data scenarios like Actual, Budget, Forecast, and Previous Year. For example, here is how budget values can look like:


Check out IBCS (International Business Communication Standards) for more great ideas like this.

Note: Zebra BI visuals in Power BI, Excel, and PowerPoint have IBCS out-of-the-box.

Achieving consistency in business reporting is critical!

Selecting the perfect chart shape is relatively easy when you only have one chart. That's not rocket science, and many researchers and authors have written guidelines on how to do this. But business reporting is so much more than just designing one single chart. You will often have to use several charts to get the whole message across to your readers.

Often, you'll need to design a report with many pages, a BI dashboard with several screens, etc. This is when consistency in your design becomes of utmost importance.

Just as traffic signs consist of consistent colors and shapes that always mean the same thing, elements in business reports should be consistently designed to depict or "code" the same meaning with always the same shapes, colors, patterns, etc.

Emphasize single values or trends?

The shape of a chart itself determines what we will see and how we will interpret the numbers. Several "gestalt" laws govern our visual perception. That's a fact. Different chart shapes will convey different messages to your audience.

For instance, some charts are more suitable for emphasizing single values, while others are better at displaying trends. Let's illustrate this with the following examples:


While we can see the overall trend, the vertical tendency and clear indication of bar heights support us in comparing single values  (compare heights between two single values, such as Jul to Aug or Nov to Dec).

Use this chart shape when the number of periods is small and only when the chart is big enough.


The flow of the line emphasizes the trend, while the dots mark the height of a single value.

There is much more emphasis on the continuation or the flow of the values (trend analysis), but still some support for single value comparisons.


There is no explicit graphical support for single-value comparisons, making it very hard to estimate the differences between particular months.

What is left is the continuity of the line, clearly exposing the trend in the data.

So, the perception of different chart shapes is ordered from vertical bars ("columns") to more "horizontally" oriented lines:

Perception of time-series charts

Still puzzled about which shapes to use? Here are two rules of thumb:

  1. Use chart shapes on the left when single values are essential (e.g., annual or monthly figures) and when you expect users to compare values (e.g., current month to previous month). Also, note that this is only meaningful when charts are big enough to display the columns and labels comfortably.
  2. Use chart shapes on the right when you want the users to focus on overall trends. Also, choose line charts when your space is limited (e.g., small chart sizes, small category widths, etc.).

Check out Zebra BI to create the charts from this article in Power BI, Excel, or PowerPoint with just one click.

Just remember, before you click to insert your perfect chart, think about the 3 fundamental rules!

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