Tableau Lesson 44 – Story Points | Dataplexa
Section IV — Lesson 44

Story Points

A Tableau Story is a sequence of worksheets and dashboards assembled into a guided narrative. Where a dashboard lets viewers explore data freely, a Story controls the sequence — walking the viewer through a series of insights in the order the author intends, like a slide deck that lives inside the data.

Stories vs Dashboards vs Worksheets

Type Purpose Viewer Experience
Worksheet Answers one specific analytical question with a single chart Sees one chart, can interact with marks and tooltips
Dashboard Answers a primary question with supporting context — multiple charts in one view Explores freely — clicks, filters, and interacts with all charts simultaneously
Story Walks the viewer through a sequence of findings — each step builds on the last Follows a guided path — navigates forward and back through story points

Creating a New Story

A Story is created from the bottom tab bar — the same place as new worksheets and dashboards. Click the book icon (to the right of the dashboard icon) or go to Story → New Story from the menu. Tableau opens the Story canvas with a left panel listing all available worksheets and dashboards to use as story points.

The Story interface — annotated
1 · Overview 2 · Regional View 3 · Key Findings + STORY PANEL SHEETS Sales Overview Regional Map Trend Line DASHBOARDS Executive Dashboard Regional Dashboard SIZE Automatic ▾ Story point 1 — currently displayed Drag a sheet or dashboard from the left panel to populate this story point Add a caption to describe this story point… 1 2 3 4
1Navigator strip — the row of caption tabs at the top. Each tab is one story point. Click + to add a new one.
2Story panel — lists all worksheets and dashboards available to use as story points. Drag onto canvas to populate.
3Caption box — the text label shown on the navigator tab for this story point. Keep it short — one insight per caption.
4Story canvas — the display area. Contains the sheet or dashboard for this story point.

Adding and Arranging Story Points

Each story point is one slide in the sequence. To add a story point, click the + button in the navigator strip — a blank story point is created to the right of the current one. Then drag any worksheet or dashboard from the Story panel onto the canvas to populate it.

A single worksheet or dashboard can be used in multiple story points. This is one of the most powerful features of Stories — you can use the same dashboard twice, once with a filter applied and once without, to show a before-and-after comparison. Each story point captures its own state of the view, including any filters, highlights, and annotations applied to it.

1
Click + in the navigator strip to add a new blank story point.
2
Drag a sheet or dashboard from the Story panel onto the canvas — or double-click it to add it automatically.
3
Apply any filters, annotations, or view state changes you want this story point to capture. Then click Update in the story point navigator to save the state.
4
Type a caption in the caption box below the canvas — this becomes the tab label in the navigator strip. Keep it to 3–5 words that state the insight.
5
Repeat for each story point. Drag tabs left or right in the navigator strip to reorder them.

Story Point States — Blank, Saved, and Updated

Each story point exists in one of three states that are visible in the navigator strip:

Blank
A new story point with no content yet. The canvas shows the drag-to-populate placeholder. The tab appears empty in the navigator.
Saved
A story point with content and a captured state. The tab shows its caption. Viewers navigate to this state when they click the tab.
Updated
You have made changes to the view while on a saved story point. An Update button appears — click it to save the new state, or Revert to go back to the last saved state.

Annotations on Story Points

Annotations add explanatory text directly on top of the chart inside a story point — pointing to a specific mark, a specific point in space, or a specific area. They are more precise than captions because they sit right next to the data they are describing.

To add an annotation: right-click on the chart inside the story point canvas → Annotate → choose Mark, Point, or Area. A text box appears that you can move and resize. Annotations are saved per story point — the same chart can have different annotations on different story points.

Annotation Type Anchors To Best For
Mark A specific data mark — moves with the mark if data changes Calling out an outlier, a peak, or a specific customer or product
Point A fixed X/Y coordinate on the chart axes — stays in place regardless of data Marking a threshold, a target line, or a date of a business event
Area A rectangular region on the view — highlights a zone rather than a single point Drawing attention to a period, a cluster of marks, or a range of values

A Well-Structured Story — Example Sequence

Five-point story — Q3 sales performance narrative
POINT 1
Overall Sales up 12%
Executive Dashboard — no filters
POINT 2
West leads, South declines
Regional Map — annotated
POINT 3
Technology drives growth
Category bar — filtered to West
POINT 4
Profit lags in South
Profit chart — South highlighted
POINT 5
Recommended actions
Text + KPI dashboard
Each caption states the insight · Same dashboards reused with different filters and annotations per point

Navigator Style Options

The navigator strip — the row of tabs at the top of the Story — can be styled to match the presentation context. Go to Story → Format Story to access navigator style options.

Style Appearance and Use
Caption boxes The default — rectangular tabs showing caption text. Best when captions are short and descriptive.
Numbers Shows step numbers (1, 2, 3…) instead of caption text. Clean for long stories where captions would be crowded.
Dots Small circular indicators. Minimal — good for presentation mode where the story navigates automatically.
Arrows only Just previous/next arrows, no step indicators. Used when the story is fully linear and step count does not matter.
📌 Teacher's Note

The most important thing to understand about Stories is that they are not a replacement for a dashboard — they are a complement. A dashboard is the right tool when the viewer needs to explore freely. A Story is the right tool when you need to control the narrative for a senior audience. Write captions as insights, not descriptions: "South declining for second quarter" tells the viewer what to think. "Regional View" tells them nothing they cannot already see from the chart.

Practice Questions

1. A Story needs to show the same executive dashboard three times — once unfiltered, once filtered to the West region, and once filtered to Technology only. How is this achieved without building three separate dashboards?

2. A story point shows a scatter plot and you want to add a text note anchored to a specific outlier customer mark. Which annotation type is correct and why?

3. A story point caption reads "Regional Sales Chart". What is wrong with this caption and how should it be rewritten?

Quiz

1. Two story points use the same dashboard. Story point 2 has a Region filter for South applied. Story point 1 has no filters. When the viewer navigates back to story point 1, the South filter is gone. What feature of Stories makes this possible?


2. A story point shows a trend line and you want to annotate a specific date on the X axis where a business event occurred — the annotation should stay at that date position even if the data is refreshed. Which annotation type is correct?


3. A senior leadership team needs a presentation of Q3 findings in a specific sequence — starting with the headline result, then drilling into regional performance, then ending with recommendations. Should this be built as a Story or a Dashboard, and why?


Next up — Lesson 45: Layout and Formatting — controlling fonts, borders, shading, gridlines, and tooltips to create polished professional views.