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How to make bullet charts

Date post: 13-Jan-2015
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Bullet Charts are a great way to present information and metrics. This slidedeck provides instructions on how to create Bullet Charts in a spreadsheet after you download the Aculocity Add In for Excel. So if you want to compare performance of a metric e.g. Sales in two periods e.g. this year v’s last year (or target) on a continuum that also shows Poor, Ok and Good performance, a bullet chart could be very useful.
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HOW TO MAKE BULLET CHARTS data visualisation tool Poor Ok Good Target Actual Good Job!
Transcript
Page 1: How to make bullet charts

HOW TO MAKE BULLET CHARTS data visualisation tool

Poor Ok Good

Target Actual

Good Job!

Page 2: How to make bullet charts

Why use bullet charts?

• Want to compare performance of a metric e.g. Sales in two periods e.g. this year v’s last year (or target) on a continuum that also shows Poor, Ok and Good performance

• Quick to read and understand (if familiar with them) …

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400 2600 2800 3000

Product A

Sales YTD v's Last Year

Page 3: How to make bullet charts

How to read Bullet Charts

• The Scale here is ‘000 … hundred thousand • Product A YTD is 100 (as in €100,000) • Target (or alternatively last year’s Sales) is represented by thin blue

line. • The first dark purple shade is Poor Performance • The next shade (green) is OK performance • The final shaded area in Red denotes good performance … last year

almost made this mark • Conclusion … Way off the mark. Needs further examination. Could be

early in the year or else product is not being focused on, or have competitors come in.

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400 2600 2800 3000

'000 Euro

Product A

Sales YTD v's Last Year Target

Page 4: How to make bullet charts

Step 1

• Download Excel Add on and Install http://www.aculocity.com/BulletGraph.aspx**

• Outcome – Bullet chart tab in Excel

** The author is not associated with this business and this presentation does not imply an endorsement for this organisation but the software works!

Page 5: How to make bullet charts

To create bullet chart

• Add a data chart as follows

• Can be linked to data in other sheets

YTD 2012

Sales 100000 268,842.07

Revenue Retailers 80000 259200.00

Revenue Online 20000 9642.07

Cost of Sales 90000 178,629.25

Gross Profit 10000 90,212.82

Owner's Salary / Drawings 0 9,000.00

Total Expenses 25000 96,855.04

Net Profit / Loss -15000 (6,642.22)

Page 6: How to make bullet charts

To create bullet chart cont.

• Click on bullet chart • Select ADD NEW BULLET GRAPH • This pop up appears

Page 7: How to make bullet charts

Menu Boxes explained

• Graph Location is taken from the name of your Tab. No need to worry about it further!

• Not sure what this is called so will refer to it as ‘cell insert dropdown’

Page 8: How to make bullet charts

Menu Boxes explained

• Quantitative Scale Start

– Generally is left at Zero

– But it can be set to negative value … more on this later!

-500 -400 -300 -200 -100 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000

Net Profit

Page 9: How to make bullet charts

Menu Boxes explained cont.

• Quantitative Scale Tick Interval – The default is 100 – Decide when you decide on

• Quantitative Scale Ticks – Default is 10 … ensures a nice scale chart. If goes

beyond 15 the chart gets unmanageable. This chart has 5 ticks.

• If you multiply the tick interval by the number of scale ticks you get a number which is the Max of the Scale. As such if you want the scale to go to 1,0000,000 you have a few options: – 100000 Tick Interval by 10 Ticks – 50000 Tick Interval by 20 Ticks

• You can change all these in a minute anyways…

0

600

1200

1800

2400

3000

Bullet Graph

Page 10: How to make bullet charts

• Featured measure … in our case Sales YTD … this is the one that will be the column. BTW if the value changes the column changes automatically.

• Comparative measure .. In our case Sales Target results in the Target Line. … what fixed target or benchmark are you comparing to!

Menu Boxes explained cont.

Featured measure

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400 2600 2800 3000

'000 Euro

Product A

Sales YTD v's Last Year Comparative Measure

Page 11: How to make bullet charts

Value of Shaded Areas

• The Bullet Chart allows comparison to Poor, OK and Good Performance which by default are set at 70%, 71-89%, and 90-100% … these defaults can be changed … see next slides

Bottom 70%

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400 2600 2800 3000

'000 Euro

Product A

Sales YTD v's Last Year Top 10%

Page 12: How to make bullet charts

To edit the resulting chart

• When you have selected (highlighted) a Bullet Chart, and click on the BULLET GRAPH Tab the following menu appearing allowing the selected Bullet Chart to be edited

Page 13: How to make bullet charts

Button Graph Tab Options

• Adjust Orientation … to change from a horizontal (bar) to a vertical (column) chart.

• Change the label of the column (Product A in previous examples)

• Change the font size etc etc

• Change the values of the Shaded Areas … value of Poor, Ok and Good Performance. Click on reverse to see what it does!

Page 14: How to make bullet charts

Other Edit functions

• Design allows changes to the Bar Chart .. E.g. add Colour

• Layout lets you add a Chart Title…. But don’t put on the legend.

• Format lets you work on Background colours

Page 15: How to make bullet charts

• For my Bullet Chart, I wanted lots of ticks but still wanted a small chart.

• For this I added another two columns to my table and used those to create the Bullet Chart. See table on next slide.

And finally

Featured measure

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400 2600 2800 3000

'000 Euro

Product A

Sales YTD v's Last Year Comparative Measure

Page 16: How to make bullet charts

This presentation was uploaded to Slideshare by Donncha Hughes in

July 2013

[email protected]

www.startuphughes.com


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