Training | marketingQED

Information Visualisation Workshops - London - 6th July 2011 to 8th July 2011

In July 2011, marketingQED is delighted once again to present the three courses covering topics in information visualisation at the Royal College of Physicians building in London. All courses are taught by Stephen Few, founder of Perceptual Edge, a leading consultancy that was established to help organizations like yours learn to design simple information displays for effective analysis and communication. The courses on offer are:

Show Me the Numbers: Table and Graph Design - 6th July 2011

This full-day course will teach you how to effectively communicate quantitative business data using tables and graphs. You will learn how to select the appropriate medium of communication (table vs. graph, and which type) and how to visually design each component to express your message clearly and compellingly.

Dashboard Design for at-a-Glance Monitoring - 7th July 2011

Dashboards offer an exciting new way to provide people at a glance with the critical information they must monitor to do their jobs. This full-day course reaches past the hype to give you the unique design skills required to build dashboards that really work.

Now You See It: Visual Data Analysis - 8th July 2011

Most business data analysis requires skills and practices involving the use of graphs that can be easily learned, but resources that teach them are almost impossible to find. Almost all books and courses on data analysis teach sophisticated statistical and financial analysis techniques, but only about 10% of business data analysis requires them. This full-day course is for those responsible for the remaining 90%.

To download a brochure giving further details of these workshops, simply complete this form and a link to a brochure will be sent to you. If you have any issues completing the form please email qed@marketingqed.com.

Information Visualisation Workshops - Vienna - 5th October 2011 to 7th October 2011

Due to conflicting dates the "Information Visualisation Workshops" in Vienna with Stephen Few had to be rescheduled from March 16th-18th to October 5th-7th, 2011. Many thanks for your understanding.

In October 2011, marketingQED is delighted to present three courses covering topics in information visualisation at the Architekturzentrum Wien (Az W) in Vienna. All courses are taught by Stephen Few, founder of Perceptual Edge, a leading consultancy that was established to help organizations like yours learn to design simple information displays for effective analysis and communication. The courses on offer are:

Show Me the Numbers: Table and Graph Design - 5th October 2011

This full-day course will teach you how to effectively communicate quantitative business data using tables and graphs. You will learn how to select the appropriate medium of communication (table vs. graph, and which type) and how to visually design each component to express your message clearly and compellingly.

Dashboard Design for at-a-Glance Monitoring - 6th October 2011

Dashboards offer an exciting new way to provide people at a glance with the critical information they must monitor to do their jobs. This full-day course reaches past the hype to give you the unique design skills required to build dashboards that really work.

Now You See It: Visual Data Analysis - 7th October 2011

Most business data analysis requires skills and practices involving the use of graphs that can be easily learned, but resources that teach them are almost impossible to find. Almost all books and courses on data analysis teach sophisticated statistical and financial analysis techniques, but only about 10% of business data analysis requires them. This full-day course is for those responsible for the remaining 90%.

To download a brochure giving further details of these workshops, simply complete this form and a link to a brochure will be sent to you. If you have any issues completing the form please email qed@marketingqed.com.

Details of London courses being run by Stephen Few. Might be interesting for someone from MS to go. If you agree with this, who do you think should go. Me or you (or someone else?).