Credit: Ron Lach // Pexels. com Job descriptions provide insight into a place of employment by how they explain an opportunity| Nightingale
Analogies can effectively explain complex topics in our field. The “fish in the pond" analogy shows ways to make insights more accessible.| Nightingale
These dashboards are taken from over a decade. Each one comes from a time in my life, where I felt my design had to impress others to win trust| Nightingale
Friendship can feel effortless as a child. Yet as we step into adulthood, human connection becomes more difficult| Nightingale
Integrating data visualization into non-profit work is both a strategic advantage and an easy pitfall.| Nightingale
Feedback elevates work, but only when it is done right.| Nightingale
How a person receives a product is as important as the product itself, with truck drivers being a great way in understanding this point.| Nightingale
This screen shot as of April 20, shows how close the team is to Club 100 and does not include the eleven viz found on our Tableau public data site.| Nightingale
“If you give a donkey two servings of food, equidistant apart and of equal quality, then the animal starves.| Nightingale
Wrestling with which data fit for a design is challenging, but it’s vital to avoid overstuffing designs that end up valuing content over negative space...| Nightingale
Data visualization is wonderful in-part because it can be done with everything from crayons to advanced, research-focused software.| Nightingale
Our first public release of EdWise in summer of 2015 included this mapping functionality.| Nightingale
No one person can perform every data-related task in an organization. Here's a way to explain role classification by skill set.| Nightingale