Dashboard Week # 2

I spent today fighting Tableau layout containers

If you’ve ever opened a messy historical dataset and thought, "How do I turn this into something people actually want to look at?"—that was my entire morning.

I wanted to take centuries of science history and build a museum-style infographic. No sterile corporate dashboards.

By the end of the day, I managed to ship a solid Minimum Viable Product (MVP). It breaks the data down into four intuitive pillars: What, Who, When, and Where.

Slicing Up History

To keep the page readable, I set up a long, vertical canvas so readers could scroll through it like a storybook. I tackled it top-to-bottom:

  • The "What": Loud, high-level KPI cards at the top to establish the scale of the data right away.
  • The "Who": A clean, side-by-side split leaderboard showing the top contributors divided by gender.
  • The "When": A continuous line chart timeline that shows how human knowledge upped over the centuries.
  • The "Where": A map where I stripped away all default map layers, leaving just the data circles floating cleanly on the page.

Wrestling with the Background

The real frustration hit mid-day. I tried using an old paper vintage parchment image as a floating background watermark, and it completely locked up my canvas. Tableau wouldn't let me move any of my actual chart containers underneath it. I was clicking against a giant wall.

At the end, I just took a brownish background.

What's Next?

To wrap up the theme, I took Georgia as font. While the dashboard functions as an MVP, it definitely needs some refurbishing before it's completely final. I need to clean up the tooltips and polish the color contrast on the map etc...

Author:
Shabnam Dost
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