Lately, people have been searching online for Power BI. Reason why? Because it’s one of the most recommended business intelligence tool available today. Power BI comes with your Office 365 Subscription for free, depending on your plan subscription.
Read previous Power BI blogs:
If you didn’t already know, Microsoft Power BI was unveiled on September 2013 for Office 365. During 2016-2017, Power BI has contributed a lot for Microsoft’s growth in Data Visualization and Business Intelligence.
The Data Visualization for Business Intelligence tools as per Gartner:
I had a wonderful experience with Tableau earlier but now I find Power BI is much enhanced and easier to use. If you compare the trends of Power BI and Tableau in the years 2016 and 2017, Power BI has a better growth rate compared to its competitors.
The below questions were collected from various sources. For job aspirants, I really don’t know if this could help you for your interviews. But you can give it a shot.
Microsoft Power BI comes with a bunch of Power BI Templates that delivers insights throughout your firm. The best part about Power BI is that you can integrate with hundreds of data sources. In addition, you can generate beautiful reports as well as the ability to save it as a dashboard. Your team can work on the visual data across web and smartphones. Lastly, it includes governance and security built-in features to protect all your data effectively.
Start from Data -> Insight -> Action! You can connect to hundreds of sources easily and create beautiful reports within a few minutes.
Since business users are always on the go, they can view dashboards from their laptop or smartphone easily. Setup alerts for data changes and drill down for more data. With the click of a button, business users can see all the necessary information in one page.
IT professionals can achieve compliance, simplify management and protect data when giving access to users to the intelligence data they require.
Power BI is flexible to cater the end users’ needs. Develop applications to life with Power BI data. It’s easier to embed interactive dashboards into SharePoint Pages and other applications with high fidelity on several devices.
In short, Power BI helps you to:
DAX stands for Data Analysis Expression. It is a formula language that is used for computing calculated field and column. It is used for doing basic calculations and data analysis in power pivot.
A Sample DAX formula syntax:
For the measure named Total Sales, calculate (=) the SUM of values in the [SalesAmount] column in the Sales table.
1. Measure Name
2. Indicates beginning of the formula
3. DAX Function
4. Parenthesis for the Sum Function
5. Referenced Table
6. Referenced column name
Some of the most commonly used DAX functions are:
SSBI or Self-Service BI is a way to data analytics that helps business users for segmenting, filtering and analyzing the data without in-depth tech knowledge in business intelligence and statistical analysis. Self-Service BI is made easier for the end users for accessing their data and enables them to create many visuals for getting better business insights. Business users can work with this data for generating reports for building shareable and intuitive dashboards so they can prepare for a better presentation model for their organization.
The key components in Power BI are:
Microsoft has got two parts for SSBI (Self-Service Business Intelligence):
I’m pretty sure most of the users who are reading my blog have already installed the Power BI desktop app. If not, visit powerbi.microsoft.com to download a copy today. It works cohesively with Power BI service by giving data modeling, shaping and generating reports with beautiful visualizations. You can easily save your Power BI file or publish data and reports into your Power BI dashboard and share it with your colleagues.
The Power BI Content packs are pre-built solutions that comes with the Power BI experience. When subscribed to this supported service, users can easily connect to their respective accounts using Power BI for checking out the data through visually appealing dashboards with live data. The best part is that templates are available for users to work on (It’s more like the visual models are pre-built for the users). The content packs are available for several services like Marketo, Saleforce.com, Adobe Analytics, CircuitID, Quickbooks Online. tyGraph, Azure Mobile engagement etc. The organizational content packs help users, system integrators and BI professionals to build their own content packs to contribute purpose-built reports, dashboards and datasets within the company.
Speaking about the list of data sources for Power BI, it is very vast. However, it can be grouped into the following types:
Microsoft Power BI gives users the option to filter data, reports and visualization as shown in the image above. The list of filter types is described below:
I have mentioned about Power BI’s interaction feature that helps to filter the report in just a click away. Visual interactions are beautiful, however comes with couple of limitations:
Well, that’s it for today. Stay tuned to our Power BI Series blogs in the coming days!