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Tableau Desktop

Tableau Desktop

Overview

What is Tableau Desktop?

Tableau Desktop is a data visualization product from Tableau. It connects to a variety of data sources for combining disparate data sources without coding. It provides tools for discovering patterns and insights, data calculations, forecasts, and statistical summaries and visual…

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Recent Reviews

Analytics with Tableau

7 out of 10
February 27, 2024
We use Tableau to generate daily and weekly reports for our business module to generate our key performance indicators. These insights we …
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Awards

Products that are considered exceptional by their customers based on a variety of criteria win TrustRadius awards. Learn more about the types of TrustRadius awards to make the best purchase decision. More about TrustRadius Awards

Popular Features

View all 30 features
  • Report sharing and collaboration (157)
    9.3
    93%
  • Drill-down analysis (159)
    9.0
    90%
  • Formatting capabilities (162)
    9.0
    90%
  • Customizable dashboards (166)
    8.8
    88%

Reviewer Pros & Cons

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Pricing

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Tableau Creator

$70.00

On Premise
Per User / Per Month

Entry-level set up fee?

  • No setup fee
For the latest information on pricing, visithttp://www.tableau.com/products/desktop

Offerings

  • Free Trial
  • Free/Freemium Version
  • Premium Consulting/Integration Services

Starting price (does not include set up fee)

  • $70 per month
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Product Demos

Tableau Desktop Tutorial | Tableau Desktop Training | Online Tableau Desktop Training - Youtube

YouTube

- Tableau Demo: Quick Tutorial to Getting Started with Tableau Desktop

YouTube

Tableau Desktop Naming Conventions Part 1

YouTube

Tableau Desktop Introduction Part 1

YouTube
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Features

BI Standard Reporting

Standard reporting means pre-built or canned reports available to users without having to create them.

8.5
Avg 8.2

Ad-hoc Reporting

Ad-Hoc Reports are reports built by the user to meet highly specific requirements.

8.8
Avg 8.1

Report Output and Scheduling

Ability to schedule and manager report output.

8.6
Avg 8.4

Data Discovery and Visualization

Data Discovery and Visualization is the analysis of multiple data sources in a search for patterns and outliers and the ability to represent the data visually.

8.6
Avg 8.1

Access Control and Security

Access control means being able to determine who has access to which data.

8.8
Avg 8.6

Mobile Capabilities

Support for mobile devices like smartphones and tablets.

8.4
Avg 8.0

Application Program Interfaces (APIs) / Embedding

APIs are a set of routines, protocols, and tools for used for embedding one application in another

8.7
Avg 7.9
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Product Details

What is Tableau Desktop?

Tableau Desktop supports data-driven decisions by helping users to answer questions more quickly, solve harder problems more easily, and uncover new insights.

Tableau Desktop connects directly to hundreds of data sources, both on-premises or in the cloud, with the goal of making it easier to start analyses. Interactive dashboards, drag and drop functionality, and natural language queries help users of all skill levels quickly discover actionable insights, all from its visual interface. Users can ask deeper questions by quickly building calculations, adding trend lines and seeing statistical summaries, or clustering data to see relationships.


Tableau Desktop Video

In this video, the TrustRadius team will be discussing the top business intelligence tools available: Qlik Sense, Tableau, ThoughtSpot, and IBM Cognos Analytics.

Tableau Desktop Technical Details

Deployment TypesOn-premise
Operating SystemsWindows, Mac
Mobile ApplicationNo

Frequently Asked Questions

Tableau Desktop is a data visualization product from Tableau. It connects to a variety of data sources for combining disparate data sources without coding. It provides tools for discovering patterns and insights, data calculations, forecasts, and statistical summaries and visual storytelling.

Tableau Desktop starts at $70.

IBM Cognos Analytics, SAP Lumira Discovery, and Qlik Sense are common alternatives for Tableau Desktop.

Reviewers rate Report sharing and collaboration highest, with a score of 9.3.

The most common users of Tableau Desktop are from Enterprises (1,001+ employees).
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Comparisons

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Reviews and Ratings

(2261)

Attribute Ratings

Reviews

(176-194 of 194)
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Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Tableau is very flexible and generates analysis with graphics quite easily.
  • It is very easy to install and use.
  • Its cost is not absurd as others in its segment tools.
  • We are doing a proof of concept for the procurement planning and inventory processes of a medium-sized retail company. In this case, the tool cost and flexibility make a difference.
November 21, 2014

Tableau Desktop Review

Paul Lisborg | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
  • Tableau Desktop is intuitive and requires little training for novice users.
  • At my previous employer, we were able to instantly understand our inbound call center calls with only 15 minutes of dashboard development.
  • The developers at Tableau have successfully produced a product that is fast and easy to use.
  • Sorting and/or Ranking can be a challenge to understand. The ability to easily sort by a field (even if within a hierarchy) would be beneficial.
  • Although not primarily designed to produce printed reports, it would benefit users to have a "Print Preview" button.
Score 7 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
  • Marketing Campaign Dashboard to look for patterns over time
  • Overall Marketing ROI -- helps visualize the overall marketing metrics
  • Channel Effectiveness Dashboard -- helps make insightful decisions on marketing budget allocation
  • Ease-of-use, steep learning curve
  • Ability to visualize patterns within a data set
Joshua Kennedy | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
ResellerIncentivized
  • Tableau is designed around cognition of data and visualizations; this gives it the distinct edge over any other tool in the BI space by allowing the tool to almost disappear, from a technical usage standpoint opening up the door for non-technical users and regular business analysts to do what they do best without limitations of SQL or other DB proficiencies.
  • Due to its very intuitive nature Tableau unlocks the power companies have traditionally been limited in access, their employees. Because Tableau is easy and intuitive any user at every level of the organization can find a reason to use Tableau and make day to day business better thought better understanding of said business. Anyone can be a data explorer in Tableau.
  • The scalability of the software is formidable. Not only are there free options for usage and distribution of reporting and analytics but using all of the Tableau products correctly creates an unlimited scalability for any enterprise to have ON-DEMAND Business Intelligence. That is one of the most powerful elements of the suite.
  • Tableau is a community driven software, and in this regard they do very well; however, more is always better as it will continue to open the tool up to new industries and new ways of doing analytics in those industries. Often there are industry specific features and functions that could be further developed. Things like stats capabilities and regression right in the tool.
  • If I had one feature that could be upgraded it would be parameters. Giving more flexibility around parameter usage in Tableau is really going to open up what users can do with the tool and delivery of their analytics.
  • Tableau desktop is an incredible tool with many robust years of use and development ahead, another area I would love to see improved is formatting. A format painter for example would be great when you are consolidating reports together and need to apply a formatting theme to everything.
Anthony Chou | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
  • Tableau is a great introduction to SQL since it automatically generates a lot of the code for you. You will probably encounter blending errors sooner or later and fixing that depends on how well you understand your data.
  • Simple and quick to use. Drag and drop interface is fantastic and right clicking solves everything.
  • Lots of support, including forums. Easy to learn, challenging to master.
  • Calculated fields can be tricky, as are window calculations. You really need to understand your own data.
  • I had some issues with scrolling when the view I was making was too large for my laptop resolution.
  • Concatenating rows, combining fields, and other SQL jobs can also require some thought.
Colby Bock | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Interfaces easily with various data sets.
  • Quickly allows me to filter my data
  • Very user friendly setup and charting
  • In the beginning, it can be a bit difficult normalizing the data set, but that's not necessarily a Tableau issue.
Peter Rigano | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Rapid development of interactive visualizations. Tableau offers an ease-of-use comparable to Excel, but allows for more advanced visualization and is much easier to update if your data set is changing or expanding over time.
  • Database integration. Tableau offers the ability to connect directly to most SQL databases, or to read data directly from a flat text file or spreadsheet. The database connection option can be a huge time saver versus pulling data through a query browser and importing it manually.
  • Graphical user interface. Unlike competing visualization in SAS and R, Tableau lets you create visuals without writing any code. All visualizations can be laid out and edited in Tableau's GUI.
  • Almost completely GUI-based. This makes some types of customization impossible, since there are certain parameters that are completely out of the user's control. By contrast, something like ggplot in R allows for a massive amount of customization, but can be time consuming to learn, code and share.
  • No OS X version available. Tableau claims this is coming in a future update.
  • Limited ability to embed into presentations. If your use case involves creating graphics to embed into presentations, you'll need to export your Tableau workbooks as images, embed those images into your presentation, and repeat whenever your data is updated.
Justin R. Romo | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Tableau is an extremely powerful data visualization tool that makes generating insights from large sets of data easy and fun.
  • Creating dashboards, reports, and interactive exploration tools is very fast with Tableau. Sheets can be duplicated and altered to create vast perspectives of data.
  • To be completely honest, Tableau is very proactive regarding product developments. I have never used a software that makes such frequent and leap-frog style updates to their platform. Every year they release ground breaking advancements that make you say "Thank you!".
Victor (Mingde) Hong | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • The product enables users to visualize and analyze data interactively. We use the product primarily to analyze mobile logs so that we can visualize the data across different dimensions like device, geography, date, etc.
  • I am able to visualize 50 million rows of data in the Amazon Redshift data warehouse with no pre-aggregation - in about an hour. The time-savings are really staggering.
  • I can run very complex data queries quite easily.
  • No Mac version.
Jake Penner | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Tableau is an extremely powerful tool. It provides the flexibility of connecting to multiple variations of data types (Excel document, text, HIVE, Oracle, Postgres, etc) and moving between each with relative ease. It also allows the user to ‘blend’ data between two independent data sources, given a common key exists between them.
  • The visualization aspect is where Tableau really shines. It allows the user to not only create visually appealing representations of your data, but does so with an impressive amount of speed. Tableau supports extremely large datasets (millions of records), and allows the user the options of generating static extracts to take offline, or connecting live to a data source for real-time updates of data.
  • Additionally, the amount of formatting options available to the user at first is overwhelming. However, once comfortable with the tool (which took me about 1 month to get down the basics) having all of these options at your finger-tips is very much welcome, as it allows you to capture the exact ‘look and feel’ you are aiming to obtain.
  • We did have some challenges setting up an instance of each workbook to sit upon different environments. We were running 2 instances of Tableau sever; 1 for QA 1 for PROD. We needed an automated deployment process that modified the table connections to point to 1 of 4 different QA environments. We eventually found a custom solution with individual projects for each environment on a single server that met our needs – but the code behind it was very custom.
  • I also noticed that generating an extract, to which you can then place upon the server and set on a schedule to refresh, forces the user to generate the full extract local on their machine prior to publication. These extracts, depending on the size of the dataset and origin of the data, can take hours upon hours to finish, when simply setting up the extract on the server and letting the more powerful machine shoulder the processing load is unfortunately not an option during setup.
Brad Llewellyn | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Tableau is extremely good at turning large amounts of data into useful analyses. Once you are comfortable with the tool, you are rarely more than a few clicks away from a useful visualization/analysis.
  • Tableau's simple, clean, drag-and-drop interface allows for a business to go from 0-60 in record time. There are many types of useful analyses that can be done with no IT knowledge at all. For example, a business analysis can slice his/her Sales or Profits in almost any fashion simply with a few clicks.
  • Tableau is exceptional at answering the five basic questions "Who?", "What?", "When?", "Where?", and "How?". If you can phrase your problem as one of these five questions, then Tableau will likely be of great value to you.
  • Tableau is somewhat restrictive in the type of data it will work with. It likes relatively clean data in a tabular format. This means records on the Rows and values on the Columns. If your data is very messy/inaccurate, then Tableau has limited ability to deal with this easily. There are other tools on the market that are designed to help you clean/reformat your data. Tableau is a visualization/analytics tool, and a great one at that! Use it for its strengths.
September 15, 2013

Powerful and easy to use

Manav Bhatia | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Good for statistical analysis of business data
  • Extremely powerful geographical analysis tools
  • Fairly intuitive
  • Ease of training
  • Recognition of complex data forms
  • Modification of data from source
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Tableau is a very well rounded tool for creating action based analysis and visualizations of data against multiple datasets / data types. It is a much more user friendly interface for people with varying levels of software and analysis experience. Much more so than many other tools on the market. Tableau is click and drag whereas others require knowledge of SQL, ETL and Database administration. Not to say that you can't take Tableau to the next level by employing SQL scripts and ETL tools but it's not necessary. Tableau can analyze data in Excel or Access as well as be pointed to enterprise database solutions like Oracle or SQL Server. It can even be pointed to the cloud and analyze things like Google Data. It can crunch through giant data sets with no issues whatsoever. The visualization graphics and maps are excellent. We've had "bake off" sessions with other tools like QlikView and you can churn out things in Tableau in a third of the time as someone else using QlikView.
  • Nothing that I have seen. I've used it in many capacities for both reporting internal to an organization as well as publishing interactive reports and analysis out to customers for their own analysis.
Jerry Pritchard | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Connects to any data source.
  • Simplifies trending for the non-data analyst.
  • Cost effective.
  • Very easy to implement and start using.
  • Does not integrate back to other systems - less of a concern since this system is downstream for analysis.
  • Report archiving can be confusing for the less experienced users.
  • Utilizing images for charting can be confusing as well.
Jon Boeckenstedt | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • Tableau allows us to connect to almost any data set we can muster without translating or restructuing
  • It allows end users who are business experts but not technical experts to explore and visualize data in ways that are visually rich, compelling, and highly communicative
  • Can't think of any
Giedre Aleknonyte | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
  • It is easy to blend data from different data sources, so one can analyze data sets which would otherwise be difficult to handle in other tools.
  • It has an intuitive user interface and a easy learning curve, making it easy to train users.
  • Can implement Tableau with minimal IT involvement.
  • Interactive dashboards can be used even by people with few technical skills to explore data and get insight.
  • No advanced statistical / forecasting functionality. However, Tableau is improving in this area and future versions of the product should have more capabilities.
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