My Top Tableau Resources

There are so much information on the internet today. In this Blog post I have summarized my best resources for Tableau to give you some tips on where to look.

Elias Nordlinder
5 min readMar 6, 2022
Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

(You can also find the article on my website together with other articles and more interesting things)

Where to start?

There are so much information on the internet today, this is great if you know where to look but can lead to decision fatigue if you do not know where to look.

I have tried to summarize all of my favorite resources regarding Tableau to make this easier for you.

They are summarized in the five big categories:
Andy Kriebel, Tableau Public, Books, Blogs and Community Projects.

Take a read, and notice that everything below the subtitles with the dots are links if you want to read further!

1. Andy Kriebel

The best resource for learning Tableau is my opinion is from Andy Kriebel, and the initiatives that he have started.

  • His Youtube page with 400+ Tableau videos, a lot from initiative TableauTipsTuesday is a gold mine if you are looking for almost anything related to Tableau.
  • One of his initiatives, MakeoverMonday, is a great way to learn new ways to create visualizations and improve how to work with data.
  • Besides these resources, I would really recommend to go to his Tableau Public where you will find more than 1000! different workbooks to take inspiration from.

2. Tableau Public

Tableau Public is a great place to first learn Tableau.
I would guess that most people that learned Tableau before working with it started out with Tableau Public.

Tableau Public is Free which means that you can just start it up in the browser without having to get a Tableau License.

If you have a Tableau License, I would really recommend to go through and download a lot of inspirational workbooks, like Viz Of The Day, and try to reverse engineer them to learn which methods the authors have used to create them.

Besides loads of inspiring workbooks, that you can also follow and get in your feed, there are resources and videos there that you can use to learn Tableau better.

3. Books

Books, books, books…

I have always loved to read, and I think even for a such practical tool as Tableau, physical books are needed as well.

To the left are the books I have in my book shelf at the moment related to Tableau and Design.

  • If you are just starting out with Tableau, Practical Tableau by Ryan Sleeper is a great book to see how you can create a lot of different charts.
    Innovative Tableau is fun to read and try out techniques you had not really though of otherwise like ways to utilize parameters and dual axis charts.
  • storytelling with data by Cole Nussbaumer Knaflic is two books that really enhance the design part of visualization. The community storytellingwithdata builds further on these books with challenges and other great things!

Some of the leaders in Tableau, Andy Cotgreave, Jeffrey Shaffer and Steve Wexler have written this amazing book, which is a great book to use to come up with designs for dashboards for different projects at work.

4. Blogs

There are so many good Tableau blogs out there!

It seems like people in the Tableau Community loves to share their tips with the world, which makes the blogs out there for Tableau almost Infinite.

To the left I have listed some of the blogs that I think are really good and well worth your time to read, many of them by Tableau Zen masters.

  • The Flerlage Twins have a lot of blog post of often more advanced Tableau Topics. They make a good weekend read and you will definitely find out things you did not know beforehand. Their guest blogs from some of the best Tableau users in the world are also really worth a read.
  • SarahLovesData and VizZenData are two great blogs from two Zen Masters. I have utilized Sarahs information for example to prep before certifications. Lindsay has a great project called Project Health Viz about visualizing data related to health and healthcare data.
  • The Information Lab have a lot of Tableau Training courses that I have participated in before, and also a great blog about everything that have something with Tableau to do.

Finally, Interworks have really good blogs about advanced concepts such as Level of Detail calulations, whereas PlayFair Data have a lot of good tips and tutorials. They partly paved the ground to my favourite Tableau Books mentioned above by Ryan Sleeper.

5. Community and Community Projects

You can not spell Tableau without Community.

The community surrounding Tableau is amazing and there are a log of different community projects, besides the ever so buzzing Twitter feed.

Some of the one I have participated in are:
Makeover Monday, great way to increase your way to convey a story from a chosen dataset in form of a dashboard.
Workout Wednesday, learn how to work with with visualizations, calculations and parameters to create something pre-specified.

But there are a lot of the other initiatives that sounds really interesting and I think they are worth to look through if you really want to do something with Tableau but do not know where to start.

Some really important projects for the society according to me are :

  • Diversity in Data, visualizations of gender inequality that still persists today
  • Project Health Viz, visualizing health and health care
  • SDG Viz Project, raise awareness to the Sustainable Developement Goals by UN.
  • Viz for social Good, project to empower non profits with the help of data and visualizations.

Storytelling With Data have some great challenges similar to Makeover Monday.

If you are into sport, Sport Viz Sundays let you analyze data sets related to different sports, Games Night Viz the same but related to different Video Games, or Data Plus Music if you love music.

I promise that you will find a community project for you no matter your interest, dig in and start visualize!

Conclusion

There are a lot of great resources related to Tableau out there.
In this article I have summarized the ones that I recommends, grouped in:

  • Andy Kriebel
  • Tableau Public
  • Books
  • Blogs
  • Community and Community Projects

Questions or inquiries

If you have any questions or input please contact me on

LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/elias-nordlinder
Email: Elias.Nordlinder@gmail.com
Webpage: eliasnordlinder.com

Have a great week everyone
//Elias

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Elias Nordlinder

MSBI Consultant at Regent. MSc in Economics and Finance. Love problem solving/analytics and to teach data to other people.