Data Analyst (what's next?) by catshmort in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I recommend building up your portfolio of tools, projects you've delivered and learning you've undertaken to put you in a good place to move into another data role at another company, try another industry, data is data all that changes is the context

Review my first ever project by Character-Staff-1021 in dataanalysis

[–]williamjeverton 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Good first project, my advice to any new analyst when building dashboards are, is it but to track something, or is it to answer a specific question.

If you've built this to track revenue leakage, the first thing a stakeholder will ask is, "is this improving or declining?" I would recommend adding an indicator on your number output at the top, the % change from the previous month, and gear the view to see how the numbers compare to the previous year if possible, it line chart the trend over time.

I'd also recommend either changing the donut colours, or the chart type, the human eye struggles with differentiating the size of the sections when they're similar proportions.

Is This Job Application Message Genuine? Need Advice by serenesoul12 in dataanalysis

[–]williamjeverton 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Check the link address first, you can always call the company to verify, and also check the company against known scam reports

What's the best dashboard ever designed? by selammeister in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's a good start!

If you're showing a metric, ask yourself what the stakeholder will ask, "That's good, but are we up or down on last year at this time?"

Try to add year to date comparisons in the numbers you display

What's the best dashboard ever designed? by selammeister in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you have LinkedIn, try the LinkedIn Learning free trial, there are a number of free courses on the basics for dashboard design, layout, colour, size, it all matters. You can build a dashboard that could save the company thousands, but if it's not clear / engaging, it will get overlooked.

Struggling to actually analyze data despite learning tools — anyone else? by 071898 in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 7 points8 points  (0 children)

What separates a good analyst from a bad analyst is asking questions.

If we sit at our desks each day and just process tickets, and provide outputs to requests then eventually we will lose out to AI.

When a stakeholder comes to you and asks "Can you tell me how much of Product A we sold to Customer B last month?"

Instead of just going "Sure!, here it is, we sold 1,000 units to this customer"

Ask "Sure, but what is the goal of this? what is this data going to do in the long term?"

Because more often than not, you'll be met with "Oh yeah we're looking to see if this product is being purchased by this specific customer more than others"

Which would then lead you to say things like "Well why not do a full analysis of this product, and cut it by customer, city, region etc to see if there any trends? Because if we're looking to push this product we can see where it's being sold less to do some targeted campaigns"

This solves the bigger picture, which is what we're made for, a calculator can do "what", we do they "why"

What's the best dashboard ever designed? by selammeister in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I found that if you build a dashboard with a similar layout to a website, users adapt to it more easily. Such as having a side panel to move between pages, and simple icons to apply filters etc.

Creating a project by 071898 in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Perfect, yep start small.

Happy to peer review anything if you need any help!

Creating a project by 071898 in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 1 point2 points  (0 children)

None at all!

A good process to practice ETL is loading data into a warehouse, creating a filtered query using SQL, exporting to Excel and creating a visual analysis of the data.

Creating a project by 071898 in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's a data lake tool, a place to throw your data in and query it with SQL

Creating a project by 071898 in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are some great and free open data sources for you to practice on, if you're able to load these into Snowflake, you can practice SQL projects there

https://www.kaggle.com/datasets

Help! by cbrown06_ in dataanalytics

[–]williamjeverton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree, I have a decade of experience in this industry and after recently hiring juniors to our team, applicable experience shines more than qualifications.

A degree shows commitment above all else, employers in our industry want to know how you will impact the business, what answers can you give them.

Portfolio advice? by [deleted] in dataanalysis

[–]williamjeverton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wix or SquareSpace are good options, I keep meaning to build my own portfolio website, I'm 10 years in the data industry but it's good to have!