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You're reading from  Microsoft Power BI Quick Start Guide - Third Edition

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781804613498
Edition3rd Edition
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Authors (4):
Devin Knight
Devin Knight
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Devin Knight

Devin Knight a Microsoft Data Platform MVP and the President at Pragmatic Works Training. At Pragmatic Works, Devin determines which courses are created, delivered, and updated for customers, including 15+ Power BI courses. This is the tenth SQL Server and Business Intelligence book that he has authored. Devin often speaks at conferences such as PASS Summit, PASS Business Analytics Conference, SQL Saturdays, and Code Camps. He is also a contributing member to several PASS Virtual Chapters. Making his home in Jacksonville, FL, Devin is a contributor at the local Power BI User Group.
Read more about Devin Knight

Erin Ostrowsky
Erin Ostrowsky
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Erin Ostrowsky

Erin Ostrowsky is a creative and passionate lifelong learner. She began her career as a business journalist and researcher and found herself drawn to the power of beautifully visualized data analysis. After living overseas, Erin returned to the USA looking to marry her communication background with a technical focus and found a life changing opportunity to work as a trainer for Pragmatic Works where she focused on creating new educational materials and delivering Power BI training around the country. Erin focuses on the Power Platform tools and loves working on teams to build business intelligence solutions that businesses use and enjoy.
Read more about Erin Ostrowsky

Mitchell Pearson
Mitchell Pearson
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Mitchell Pearson

Mitchell Pearson has worked as a Data Platform Consultant and Trainer for the last 8 years. Mitchell has authored books on SQL Server, Power BI and the Power Platform. Data Platform experience includes designing and implementing enterprise level Business Intelligence solutions with the Microsoft SQL Server stack (T-SQL, SSIS, SSAS, SSRS), the Power Platform and Microsoft Azure. Mitchell is very active in the community: Running the local Power BI User Group, presenting at user groups locally and virtually, and creating YouTube videos for MitchellSQL
Read more about Mitchell Pearson

Bradley Schacht
Bradley Schacht
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Bradley Schacht

Bradley Schacht is a principal program manager on the Microsoft Fabric product team based in Saint Augustine, Florida. Bradley is a former consultant and trainer and has co-authored five books on SQL Server and Power BI. As a member of the Microsoft Fabric product team, Bradley works directly with customers to solve some of their most complex data problems and helps shape the future of Microsoft Fabric. Bradley gives back to the community by speaking at events, such as the PASS Summit, SQL Saturday, Code Camp, and user groups across the country, including locally at the Jacksonville SQL Server User Group (JSSUG). He is a contributor on SQLServerCentral and blogs on his personal site, BradleySchacht.
Read more about Bradley Schacht

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Overcoming low data literacy with a data strategy

So how should organizations facing the challenge of staff with low data literacy respond? The first thing leadership must focus on is developing a data strategy. Data itself has no intrinsic value without a strategy for using it properly. The goal of a data strategy is to provide an organization-wide plan on how data should be collected, stored, protected, and analyzed. Without such a plan, an organization is susceptible to issues like data loss, violating international personal data collection laws, and even data breaches, which you hear about often in the news.

It is important to realize that every organization is different, and each has its own unique set of challenges to working with data. So, you shouldn’t stress out about trying to find the definitive data strategy guide because it doesn’t exist! There is no one-size-fits-all data strategy approach for all organizations. For example, a data strategy for a university would look very different from a data strategy for a Fortune 500 company. The former is focused on the success of their students while the latter is likely focused on overall profitability. During the planning of a data strategy, an evaluation of each segment of data must be completed to determine how the data will be processed, stored, and shared. This process will often uncover that not all organizational data should be treated the same. For example, timecard entry data from two years ago is far less important than financial statements from the same timeframe. The idea is that a data strategy should be more granular and not make large declarations about all data. Some data is more valuable than others and the time and resources spent should not be the same for all data. An organization’s data strategy should be centered around its unique needs, but the point of this chapter is not to give you a step-by-step guide on developing a data strategy. More than anything, this is to stress the importance of simply having one!

The second thing organization leadership should focus on to drive higher data literacy is building a data culture. An organization with a healthy data culture is inclusive, meaning it puts data in the hands of everyone, leaving no one left out. This can be challenging when there is such a skill gap between the typical business user and a professional data analyst or data scientist. So, what do you do to overcome that skill gap?

Anyone can improve their data literacy skills, but the question is: what is your organization doing to foster an environment that encourages engaging with and thinking about data? Many organizations are embracing a positive data culture by promoting data enablement programs, which include ways for individuals to improve their skills with both training and mentoring. An enablement program is far more than sending a group of eager data enthusiasts to a class and hoping they learn enough to be productive. A thoughtful data enablement program is an ongoing exercise over the course of weeks and sometimes months to groom your team into becoming citizen developers.

Gartner defines a citizen developer as:

”An employee who creates applications capabilities for consumption by themselves or others, using tools that are not actively forbidden by IT or business units. A citizen developer is a persona, not a title or targeted role. They report to a business unit or function other than IT.”

Growing a data culture full of citizen developers doesn’t happen all at once. Many organizations often start by building a group of data champions. This group would consist of individuals from multiple departments that are eager to learn and ready to make a commitment to improving their data literacy skills. The primary goal is to grow experts in each department so that way, as new citizen developers emerge, they have a known resource within their department who can help them learn. As you might expect, it’s always easier to bounce ideas off someone who knows the kind of data you work with rather than someone who is unfamiliar with your data

Education in data literacy can vary from broad topics that apply to any data analytics tool or more specific tutorials geared toward a particular technology you want your citizen developers leveraging. An example of tool-agnostic learning would be how to spot trends in your data, how to determine outliers in data, or even how to choose the best visualization for the data you are working with. Any of these topics can apply to every data analytics tool on the market. While there are many great data analytics tools on the market, this book spotlights Power BI.

You might have gravitated toward this book for a number of reasons. Maybe you are completely new to Power BI, and you needed a way to kickstart your learning. Perhaps you have been learning about Power BI for some time now but you’re completely self-taught, so you are hoping to fill in the gaps of things you just haven’t seen yet. This would be the phase of learning where many would say, “I don’t know what I don’t know.” Whatever the case may be for you, the authors of this book hope to give you the essentials necessary for achieving high data literacy within Power BI.

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Authors (4)

author image
Devin Knight

Devin Knight a Microsoft Data Platform MVP and the President at Pragmatic Works Training. At Pragmatic Works, Devin determines which courses are created, delivered, and updated for customers, including 15+ Power BI courses. This is the tenth SQL Server and Business Intelligence book that he has authored. Devin often speaks at conferences such as PASS Summit, PASS Business Analytics Conference, SQL Saturdays, and Code Camps. He is also a contributing member to several PASS Virtual Chapters. Making his home in Jacksonville, FL, Devin is a contributor at the local Power BI User Group.
Read more about Devin Knight

author image
Erin Ostrowsky

Erin Ostrowsky is a creative and passionate lifelong learner. She began her career as a business journalist and researcher and found herself drawn to the power of beautifully visualized data analysis. After living overseas, Erin returned to the USA looking to marry her communication background with a technical focus and found a life changing opportunity to work as a trainer for Pragmatic Works where she focused on creating new educational materials and delivering Power BI training around the country. Erin focuses on the Power Platform tools and loves working on teams to build business intelligence solutions that businesses use and enjoy.
Read more about Erin Ostrowsky

author image
Mitchell Pearson

Mitchell Pearson has worked as a Data Platform Consultant and Trainer for the last 8 years. Mitchell has authored books on SQL Server, Power BI and the Power Platform. Data Platform experience includes designing and implementing enterprise level Business Intelligence solutions with the Microsoft SQL Server stack (T-SQL, SSIS, SSAS, SSRS), the Power Platform and Microsoft Azure. Mitchell is very active in the community: Running the local Power BI User Group, presenting at user groups locally and virtually, and creating YouTube videos for MitchellSQL
Read more about Mitchell Pearson

author image
Bradley Schacht

Bradley Schacht is a principal program manager on the Microsoft Fabric product team based in Saint Augustine, Florida. Bradley is a former consultant and trainer and has co-authored five books on SQL Server and Power BI. As a member of the Microsoft Fabric product team, Bradley works directly with customers to solve some of their most complex data problems and helps shape the future of Microsoft Fabric. Bradley gives back to the community by speaking at events, such as the PASS Summit, SQL Saturday, Code Camp, and user groups across the country, including locally at the Jacksonville SQL Server User Group (JSSUG). He is a contributor on SQLServerCentral and blogs on his personal site, BradleySchacht.
Read more about Bradley Schacht