Press Releases

Yellowfin explores the future of data storytelling and reveals the impact narrative and automation will have on business analytics

October 27, 2021

Posted by: Anasia D'mello

Geoff Sheppard of Yellowfin

London. 27 October, 2021 Yellowfin, the analytics vendor that combines action-based dashboards, automated discovery, and powerful data storytelling, launches a white paper exploring ‘The Future of Data Storytelling: how narrative and automation will redefine the next decade of analytics’, offering valuable insight to organisations on the power and potential of future augmented and automated data storytelling solutions.

The white paper introduces the limitations of historic approaches that rely on static dashboards and data visualisation to identify, communicate, and explore insights from complex business data. These rely on a level of data literacy that is not guaranteed among key business audiences and don’t offer the crucial context that drives understanding and action.

Data storytelling, in contrast, employs narrative techniques that help less data-literate audiences interpret what is in datasets and enable subject matter experts to add context not present in the data. This is driving the current demand for data storytelling capabilities as business analytics users specify new solutions.

Gartner reports that one in four business leaders view data storytelling as one of the important capabilities of new solutions, and predicts that data stories will be the most widespread way of consuming data analytics by 2025.

The intersection of data storytelling and augmented analytics 

Yellowfin’s white paper examines how augmented analytics in modern BI tools are automating the data analysis part of the narrative process, making analysis more comprehensive and efficient. It also explores how technologies such as AI, natural language query and machine learning can help users to better understand what their data means.

However, as Yellowfin VP EMEA Geoff Sheppard explains, data storytelling remains largely human-driven and manual: “Humans will always play a role in data storytelling, as they have an unmatched ability to add context and emotional intelligence that is not present in the data. But by automating the parts of the data storytelling process best suited to machine support, we help users become more efficient and make data analytics tools useful to a broader business user base.”

Yellowfin identifies three emerging challenges that automated and augmented data storytelling can potentially solve: 

AI’s capability to automatically generate augmented data stories with the level of emotion, relevance, context and narrative expertise as humans can provide is not yet a reality. However, as Geoff Sheppard explains Yellowfin 9.6, launched earlier this year, already employs analytics techniques that enhance the user experience and start to solve those three challenges:

“Our Assisted Insights automates part of the interpretation of data for the user to create stories from, reducing the data literacy needed to gain value from analytics. Our ABM product Signals delivers automated continuous monitoring that detects patterns or outliers in data, generating headline alerts to help users become aware of important discoveries.

“In combination, Assisted Insights and Signals enable the rapid discovery and analysis of large amounts of complex data, communicating insights in a way not influenced by human bias. These automatically generated explanations of data, and alerts of new trends or notable changes, can effectively act as an impetus for the data storytelling process. Together with Stories and Present, Yellowfin’s dedicated data storytelling modules, users can find problems and opportunities in data faster, and create stories from those automated results using the power of data, words and rich media.”

Yellowfin unifies all these powerful, automated techniques into a single pane of analysis, with AI- generated interpretation of insights, automated alerts, and data storytelling all feeding into a dashboard that can become part of every user’s BI workflow.

“Humans will always be the drivers of data storytelling,” concludes Geoff Sheppard. “Algorithms just cannot create the rich, contextual narratives that come naturally to us. What they can do, however, is point the way, guiding and alerting us to points of interest that might be overlooked and prompting us to build more effective, engaging and valuable data stories.”

Download the full ‘The Future of Data Storytelling: how narrative and automation will redefine the next decade of analytics’ white paper.

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