Chart Your Success: Presenting Data with Persuasive Charts

Published 8 November 7 3:32 PM | Laurence

Visuals can make or break a presentation, proposal or other business document. To do the job, your visuals should support your message-whether it's in a document or in a presentation.  

Sometimes the support will be more conceptual-key strategic factors, change in trends, geographic differences. Other times, the visuals will be quantitative or data-driven such as market share, revenue growth, and regional numbers.  

Data driven charts

Presenting data

Data driven charts allow the audience to perceive your message at a glance rather than puzzling over a list or table of data. Furthermore, it is easier (and more persuasive) for the audience to see trends and comparisons on a chart than to calculate them from the raw data. With your chart as support, you can then speak to your conclusions, insights and recommendations-your message.

Four types of chart can cover most data visualization tasks-the pie (and its cousin the relative value chart), the vertical bar chart, the horizontal bar chart and the line chart.

The right chart depends on the message

As with any presentation or document, you must first understand the message you wish to convey. After that, you can choose the right data set and choose the right chart. The last step is to make your chart both visually compelling and quickly digestible by your audience.

In general, one of biggest mistakes in creating graphics for a presentation or document is using the wrong visual for your message.  This is especially true when presenting data-the wrong chart only serves to confuse the audience or reader.

From message to data to chart

If your message is about share or distribution of a total, a pie chart or relative value chart is appropriate. If you are comparing shares from different categories, then a stacked bar chart works better than multiple pie charts.

Pie chart and stacked chart

If your message is about a comparison of values, the bar chart is the most appropriate chart. Again, if you have multiple categories, such as years or product lines, a grouped bar chart or a pairing of bar charts work best.

Grouped bar charts

If you message is about a trend over time, the line chart not only shows the values but also gives a visual feel for the rates of change. To show values from discrete time frames, such as sales total per quarter, a vertical bar chart may work better than a line.

Line chart and distribution chart

Charts created for frequency distributions and correlations will use line and vertical bar charts.

Visual impact

You've got your message, your data and the right chart type. But how do you make it persuasive and memorable? 

First, consider incorporating images into your charts. Image Charts are not only eye-catching and memorable, but also help your audience grasp quantities and relative values quickly.

Image charts

When not using an Image Chart, you can still follow some guidelines to make sure the chart supports your message as strongly as possible. Use color (and lack of color) to compare, contrast and highlight the part of the picture that aligns with your message.  Don't clutter your chart with too many gridlines, data labels and axis labels. Only show what is needed to draw the viewer to your message.

Annotated chart

Hopefully, this overview has you thinking about how to better present your data. For more detailed guidelines, download the white paper here. SmartDraw users can download a free collection of new SmartTemplates here.

 

 

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Comments

# ppedersen said on November 13, 2007 10:25 AM:

Thanks.  This is good data.  I am stuck between using SmartDraw to create awesome looking charts and using Excel for simple graphs.  SmartDraw has greater presentation purposes, but for simple statistical graphs, spreadsheet driven, I am still using Microsoft Excel.  As to Visio...why bother when you have SmartDraw?

# Brian S. Friedlander said on November 13, 2007 11:43 AM:

Your blog is very visually appealing and informative.

# AHMED said on November 13, 2007 12:31 PM:

I LIKE THIS ONE VERY MUCH

# Tufte Fan said on November 13, 2007 5:34 PM:

Pie Charts with Pictures in them make Baby Tufte cry.

If SmartDraw had a set of Tufte Approved (or approvable) charts and graphs with minimal or no "chart junk" then a whole lot of Tufte followers would have a piece of software to consider.  I've faught with many charting programs trying to eliminate the chart junk and let the data shine through and it can be amazingly difficult.  Please get a set of defaults in SmartDraw that would make Edward Tufte proud.

# Tahir Dar said on November 13, 2007 11:28 PM:

A good and effecient support from you

# Michael Wilkinson said on November 14, 2007 1:29 AM:

I found the blog on business graphics very informative and relevant to powerpoint presentations, in that slides should be fre of too much bullet point text and be replaced with graphical presentation.

# Afzaal said on November 14, 2007 1:38 AM:

The tremendous presentation of Smart draw inspired me alot and easy way to get the wanted thing. I decided to use the Smart draw. It has helped me alot in improving my presentation in reports (audit) especially in graphicall representation. I have really got what I wanted.

Thanks Smart.............

# Laurence said on November 14, 2007 12:25 PM:

ppedersen,

Oftentimes people don't want to plug in data first. SmartDraw enables you to manipulate the chart directly, in a visual manner. Image Charts are also built in as well. It comes down to personal preference though.

And for Visio...it's an advanced professional tool that certainly has its uses. I would not recommend it to the average business user though.

Brian, Ahmed, Tahir, and Afzaal,

Thanks for the comments. Please check back soon for more posts. I'll be experimenting with different formats to see what people like. Please continue to give feedback.

Tufte Fan,

Yes, we do violate Tufte-ian notions of proper charting with our Image Charts. However, you can certainly elect to build plain charts if you wish. The "default" charts in SmartDraw are plain. I very much admire Mr. Tufte for his work on the subject of Data Graphics (some of his books are currently on the shelf next to me). The topic of misleading charts is a whole other can of worms that I will definitely address in a future blog post. Thank you for bringing this up.

Michael,

I will be working on some posts relevant to presentations in the future. I should have some good guest authors on the subject as well. Be on the lookout for them.

# sami said on November 14, 2007 8:34 PM:

A good and effecient support from you

# Carmen Median said on November 16, 2007 7:26 AM:

Es muy útil para mi trabajar con sus productos, actualmente instale el Windows Vista a mi computador y utilizo casi a diario los graficos que se pueden ejecutar con su producto

Gracias

# Chavela said on November 19, 2007 7:22 AM:

I've been to Tufte's seminars, own his books.  And I don't think he has a whole lot to offer those of us who are not artists, do not have a studio to design and create "art" graphics.   Tools like Smart Draw (especially SmartDraw--boy did my life get easier when I dumped Vision for SD!) are easy to learn and use, and let you create designs that are efficient to make and effective.

Now, what I would really like to see would be design contests, in which we can compare different presentations of the same data/same message to see what works best, and learn from that.  For example: DM Review magazine in the past has done a data visualization competition, and shows the results: the good, the bad, the ugly.  Very instructive, and gives me take-aways I can apply to my work.  

# Nadia Kassem said on November 22, 2007 12:31 AM:

Thanks A lot , I think it is very effecient support , but I think that I need more practices to used it proffetionaly

# HotanotsLox said on January 12, 2008 8:19 PM:

Make peace, not war!

# carly said on April 1, 2008 12:58 AM:

i don't like it how in the trial you only have 3 tries at printing because one of my prints was wasted as my printer stuffed up just as it was printing.

# Eduardo Gutierrez said on July 16, 2008 11:32 AM:

How can Ido to download the SmartDraw 2007, because my loose my cd and I have my software number?

# Aaron Stannard said on July 16, 2008 11:48 AM:

Eduardo,

You can download your copy of SmartDraw 2007 again if you go to:

www.smartdraw.com/myaccount

And login to your SmartDraw account. You will be able to download any of your purchased versions of SmartDraw from there.

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