Tableau Story Points

A Tableau Story sequences dashboards and sheets into a guided presentation. Each story point is one slide. The viewer clicks through the slides in order, following a narrative you control. Stories work like a PowerPoint made entirely from live data — every chart in the story is still interactive.

When to Use Stories

Use a Tableau Story when you need to walk an audience through a data narrative with a beginning, middle, and end. A business quarterly review, a research findings presentation, or a project status update all benefit from a structured story format rather than a free-form dashboard.

Story vs Dashboard

Dashboard:
  Multiple charts visible at once
  Viewer explores freely
  No forced sequence
  Best for: Exploratory analysis, ongoing monitoring

Story:
  One chart or dashboard per slide (story point)
  Viewer follows a guided path
  You control the narrative sequence
  Best for: Presentations, executive summaries, guided tours

Creating a Story

  1. Click the New Story tab at the bottom (paper stack with plus icon)
  2. A blank Story opens with one empty story point
  3. The left panel shows all available sheets and dashboards
  4. Drag a sheet or dashboard to the story point canvas
  5. Click "Add a caption" to write a label for this story point
  6. Click "New Story Point" to add the next slide
  7. Repeat until all your slides are built

Story Navigator

At the top of the story, Tableau displays story point captions as clickable tabs or arrows. Viewers click these to move between slides. You can set the navigator style to "Dots," "Arrows," "Numbers," or "Caption boxes" in the Story menu → Format.

Diagram: Story Structure

Story Title: "2024 Annual Sales Review"

Navigator:
[ Intro ] [ Q1 Results ] [ Q2 Results ] [ Regional Breakdown ] [ Conclusion ]
   ↑                                                                
Current story point shown below

+-----------------------------------------------------------+
|                                                           |
|   [ Dashboard or Sheet for Current Story Point ]          |
|                                                           |
|   Caption: "Q1 saw a 15% sales increase vs last year"     |
|                                                           |
+-----------------------------------------------------------+

Adding Captions and Annotations

Each story point has a caption field at the top. Write a short headline that tells viewers what to focus on — "Sales dropped in March due to supply delays" or "The West region outperformed all others in Q3." These captions anchor the viewer's attention and do the analytical storytelling so the chart does not have to do all the work.

Saving a Snapshot vs Using a Live Sheet

When you add a sheet to a story point, you can either use it live (any filter changes carry forward to the next story point) or capture a saved snapshot for that story point.

Live — The chart responds to viewer interaction. Filters applied on story point 2 may affect story point 3 if they share data.

Snapshot — Tableau captures the current filter state as a fixed image. Viewer interactions on that slide stay isolated. Useful when you want each story point to show a specific slice of data without viewers accidentally changing it.

How to Use Snapshots

Apply a filter or select marks in the view to show exactly the data you want. Click "Update" at the top of the story point panel. Tableau saves the current state as the story point's snapshot. Click "Reset to Saved" to revert to the snapshot after any temporary changes during presentation.

Duplicating Story Points

Right-click a story point navigator tab and select "Duplicate." The new story point is an exact copy. Apply different filters to the duplicate to show a different slice of the same chart — a powerful way to compare two time periods, two regions, or two customer segments side by side through sequential slides.

Story Point Use Case: Quarterly Review Narrative

Story Point 1 — "Full Year Overview"
  Dashboard: Annual Sales by Region (all data)
  Caption: "Total 2024 revenue reached $4.2M"

Story Point 2 — "Q1 Strong Start"
  Dashboard: Same, filtered to Q1
  Caption: "Q1 delivered 32% of annual revenue"

Story Point 3 — "Q2 Dip Explained"
  Dashboard: Monthly trend line highlighted at Q2
  Caption: "Q2 slowdown linked to supply chain disruptions"

Story Point 4 — "Q3 Recovery"
  Dashboard: Same trend, Q3 highlighted
  Caption: "Q3 recovered with a record single-month peak in August"

Story Point 5 — "Regional Winners"
  Dashboard: Map with regional breakdown
  Caption: "West region grew 42% YoY — largest regional gain"

Story Point 6 — "2025 Outlook"
  Dashboard: Forecast chart
  Caption: "Models predict $5.1M in 2025 if current trends hold"

Formatting a Story

Go to Format → Story to set the background color, title font, and navigator style. Keep the background neutral — white or light gray — so the charts remain the visual focus. Use a consistent font across all story points for a polished, professional look.

Summary

Tableau Stories sequence sheets and dashboards into a slide-by-slide narrative. Each story point has a caption that directs the viewer's attention. Snapshots freeze a specific filter state for a story point while live views respond to viewer interaction. Duplicate story points to compare different data slices through sequential slides. Stories combine Tableau's live interactivity with the structured format of a presentation — making them ideal for data-driven briefings and executive reviews.

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