---
product_id: 28636325
title: "Effective Data Visualization: The Right Chart for the Right Data"
price: "464 zł"
currency: PLN
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 10
url: https://www.desertcart.pl/products/28636325-effective-data-visualization-the-right-chart-for-the-right-data
store_origin: PL
region: Poland
---

# Effective Data Visualization: The Right Chart for the Right Data

**Price:** 464 zł
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- **What is this?** Effective Data Visualization: The Right Chart for the Right Data
- **How much does it cost?** 464 zł with free shipping
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## Description

desertcart.com: Effective Data Visualization: The Right Chart for the Right Data: 9781506303055: Evergreen, Stephanie: Books

Review: Feeling like a data viz wiz - Effective Data Visualization is the perfect book for people who want to level up their data visualization skills beyond the defaults in Excel. I’ve learned so much from this book and it has fundamentally changed the way I think about visualizing data. What I like about this book is that it doesn’t assume you have data visualization knowledge apart from basic familiarity with Excel. That’s actually a plus for this book, as the author Stephanie Evergreen shows you how to make most of these charts IN EXCEL. I'm not always the biggest fan of Excel but it really is the first place most people start with data viz. So if we’re all going to start there, at least this book shows you how to make your Excel charts not suck. Even better, Evergreen tells you how difficult a chart will be to create in Excel by including a helpful Excel ninja rating. The other thing that’s great about this book is that charts are organized by the type of data you want to present. Categories include: a single number, comparisons, beating a benchmark, survey results, parts of a whole, correlations, qualitative data, and data over time. Evergreen bases her selection of charts on research showing which chart types are more effective for information retention. It’s a different way to think about charts, but one that I’m finding really useful. The range of covered charts includes the usual suspects, from bar charts to scatter plots, but Evergreen also details visuals that I haven’t used before. The ones I plan to immediately add to my graphing repertoire are: icon arrays, slopegraphs, dot plots, back-to-back bar charts, and small multiples graphs. Beyond choosing the right chart and knowing how to make it in Excel (which, of themselves, are incredibly useful skills), this book gave me a framework for creating charts that are easy to read and convey a clear message. For example, I now understand how to write an effective chart title, select good colors, reduce data overload, and eliminate chart junk. It’s reached the point where I can’t even look at my old graphs without wanting to tweak them. There is one downside of this book and it’s that it was done with two-color printing. All of the charts are limited to shades of blue and grey. While this makes for a visually cohesive (and cheaper) book, the printed figures occasionally do not fully convey the author’s point – most often when showing a bad chart. This is annoying but it’s not enough to detract from the many good things about this book.
Review: A great tool for communicating information visually! - This is a great resource for anyone who wants to clearly present information visually! Not only does the book explain which chart to use in a specific situation, it also explains HOW to do it in Excel. Sometimes it involves a "hack" that I would never thought of. The book goes into a great detail on the scientific research on why certain graphs are better than others. For example, it explains why, in many cases, pie charts are not easy for the reader to grasp the information in the chart. For me, and I have been doing "Business Intelligence" for 20 plus years, it has changed the way I provide information. I know longer try to cram as many charts\numbers onto a single piece of paper, I know try to think of few graphs that make the data more meaningful and easy to remember.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,004,328 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #729 in Sociology Research & Measurement #742 in Social Sciences Research #8,681 in Social Sciences (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (125) |
| Dimensions  | 7.36 x 0.67 x 9.09 inches |
| Edition  | 1st |
| ISBN-10  | 1506303056 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-1506303055 |
| Item Weight  | 7.4 ounces |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 264 pages |
| Publication date  | May 18, 2016 |
| Publisher  | SAGE Publications, Inc |

## Images

![Effective Data Visualization: The Right Chart for the Right Data - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81Uolzi3KpL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Feeling like a data viz wiz
*by K***B on March 8, 2017*

Effective Data Visualization is the perfect book for people who want to level up their data visualization skills beyond the defaults in Excel. I’ve learned so much from this book and it has fundamentally changed the way I think about visualizing data. What I like about this book is that it doesn’t assume you have data visualization knowledge apart from basic familiarity with Excel. That’s actually a plus for this book, as the author Stephanie Evergreen shows you how to make most of these charts IN EXCEL. I'm not always the biggest fan of Excel but it really is the first place most people start with data viz. So if we’re all going to start there, at least this book shows you how to make your Excel charts not suck. Even better, Evergreen tells you how difficult a chart will be to create in Excel by including a helpful Excel ninja rating. The other thing that’s great about this book is that charts are organized by the type of data you want to present. Categories include: a single number, comparisons, beating a benchmark, survey results, parts of a whole, correlations, qualitative data, and data over time. Evergreen bases her selection of charts on research showing which chart types are more effective for information retention. It’s a different way to think about charts, but one that I’m finding really useful. The range of covered charts includes the usual suspects, from bar charts to scatter plots, but Evergreen also details visuals that I haven’t used before. The ones I plan to immediately add to my graphing repertoire are: icon arrays, slopegraphs, dot plots, back-to-back bar charts, and small multiples graphs. Beyond choosing the right chart and knowing how to make it in Excel (which, of themselves, are incredibly useful skills), this book gave me a framework for creating charts that are easy to read and convey a clear message. For example, I now understand how to write an effective chart title, select good colors, reduce data overload, and eliminate chart junk. It’s reached the point where I can’t even look at my old graphs without wanting to tweak them. There is one downside of this book and it’s that it was done with two-color printing. All of the charts are limited to shades of blue and grey. While this makes for a visually cohesive (and cheaper) book, the printed figures occasionally do not fully convey the author’s point – most often when showing a bad chart. This is annoying but it’s not enough to detract from the many good things about this book.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A great tool for communicating information visually!
*by L***O on April 5, 2017*

This is a great resource for anyone who wants to clearly present information visually! Not only does the book explain which chart to use in a specific situation, it also explains HOW to do it in Excel. Sometimes it involves a "hack" that I would never thought of. The book goes into a great detail on the scientific research on why certain graphs are better than others. For example, it explains why, in many cases, pie charts are not easy for the reader to grasp the information in the chart. For me, and I have been doing "Business Intelligence" for 20 plus years, it has changed the way I provide information. I know longer try to cram as many charts\numbers onto a single piece of paper, I know try to think of few graphs that make the data more meaningful and easy to remember.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Easy to read
*by T***R on October 11, 2017*

The author, an academic, wrote the book in a non-academic style, and avoid using many technical jargons. A good HOW TO overview for dataviz tools.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Effective Data Visualization: The Right Chart for the Right Data
- Storytelling with Data: A Data Visualization Guide for Business Professionals
- Effective Data Visualization: The Right Chart for the Right Data

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*Store origin: PL*
*Last updated: 2026-04-23*