Tableau Keynote - Tableau conference 2022: Live reaction livestream
Andre and I react live as Tableau renames Online to Cloud, ships multi-site management, and leans hard into the Salesforce pitch.
- Tableau Online is being rebranded to Tableau Cloud, an always-up-to-date, fully hosted version that gets new features the moment they ship.
- Accelerators offer pre-built dashboards for common sources like Salesforce, Eloqua and Marketo, with hundreds more in the Tableau Exchange, including community-built ones.
- Multi-site management lands in Tableau Cloud with region selection, which effectively closes a long-standing on-prem-only request and is especially useful for embedding use cases.
- Admin Insights brings Tableau Cloud usage metadata to administrators as published data sources and a starter workbook, mirroring the Postgres repository on Tableau Server, but it must be enabled manually.
- Much of the keynote leans on a Salesforce-centric philosophy, which adds little if you are not already a Salesforce 360 customer.
- Welcome and stream setup1:19
- Recap of last year's announcements8:35
- Pre-keynote community chat14:20
- Keynote opening and translation glitch29:40
- Salesforce integration pitch40:00
- Tableau Cloud announcement46:51
- JetBlue customer story48:19
- Tableau Cloud features with Alex51:10
- Multi-site management and Admin Insights55:46
- Make work matter and Standard Chartered60:41
0:00[ Silence ]
0:17[ Silence ]
0:57[ Silence ]
1:07[ Silence ]
1:17[ Silence ]
1:18Hello.
1:20Hello, everyone.
1:21How is everyone doing?
1:23A few people are here early by the looks of
1:26things.
1:26Watching from Albuquerque.
1:28Craig is watching from sunny York.
1:30Hello and welcome to the reaction live
1:33stream
1:33is what we're going to call it for now.
1:35I don't know what to call this.
1:37Is it a live stream?
1:38Is it a reaction?
1:39Is it a reaction live stream?
1:40Who knows?
1:41How are you doing, Andre?
1:42I am good, yeah.
1:43I'm really excited for this.
1:45How are you?
1:46Good, good.
1:47I'm pretty pumped.
1:48I'm also super nervous.
1:49Last time we did a live stream,
1:51I had dropouts throughout the stream.
1:54Oh, really?
1:55Yeah, exactly.
1:56So this time round,
1:57I've sort of tried to design the stream a
1:59little bit better
2:00and everything should be more rigid.
2:02We're going through a third party, so yeah,
2:04it should be good.
2:05Cool.
2:06We're seeing people coming in from loads of
2:09places.
2:09Yeah, exactly.
2:10So we've got LinkedIn, Twitch, Twitter,
2:14Facebook,
2:14YouTube, we're going through all the
2:17platforms.
2:17So if you drop a comment from any of those
2:19platforms,
2:19it comes over here to the live stream
2:21and you can see us live on here.
2:23So yeah, so many people from America,
2:25obviously.
2:26Denver, Boston, Omaha,
2:29New Hampshire, Ireland.
2:31Ireland.
2:32Amazing, amazing.
2:33It's actually interesting.
2:34The LinkedIn crews are turning out pretty
2:37strong here.
2:37I love it, I love it.
2:38Yeah.
2:39LinkedIn has become a social platform, hasn
2:41't it?
2:41It used to be a professional platform,
2:43but now people just post everyday updates
2:46on there, don't they?
2:47I think LinkedIn is one of the social media
2:49I change the most every day.
2:51I don't know why, because it used to be for
2:55like,
2:55"Oh, let me find a new job,"
2:56but actually it's more than that now, right
2:58?
2:58Yeah, exactly, exactly.
3:00Cool, we've got loads of people coming in
3:03nice.
3:03But yeah, we're here for the Tableau
3:05Conference live stream.
3:07We're specifically here for the keynote.
3:08We're not going to stick around all day.
3:09That would be a pretty tough call.
3:11There's tons of sessions to watch as well
3:13and Andres and mine's pick probably won't
3:16be what you're looking to watch.
3:16But the keynote is something that everyone
3:19I know will love to see.
3:21There's something a little bit different
3:22this year,
3:22which is the keynote and devs on stage are
3:25in one session, right?
3:27Yes, exactly.
3:28Can we have some special effects?
3:30There's someone from the Netherlands coming
3:32in here.
3:32[airhorn]
3:33Yay!
3:34[laughter]
3:36If you're here for the effects, sound
3:38effects and special effects,
3:39we've got some lined up, so don't worry.
3:41We're going to be using them throughout the
3:44whole entire keynote.
3:45The keyword for the bingo game today is
3:49going to be the cloud.
3:50So every time anyone mentions the cloud,
3:52you will hear this sound.
3:54[ding]
3:55[laughter]
3:57The sound of the cloud.
3:58Yeah, exactly, exactly.
3:59So that's what we'll be doing throughout
4:02the day.
4:02But nonetheless, yeah, this is going to be
4:05an interesting keynote
4:06because it's devs on stage and the keynote.
4:08So we've got a bit about the product vision
4:10from Tableau
4:10where they're looking to head in the future
4:13.
4:13But then also, we're going to hopefully see
4:16some of the features
4:16that have only really been cooking for the
4:19last six months
4:19because the last conference wasn't that
4:21long ago
4:21because conference moved forward this year,
4:24right?
4:24Yeah, exactly.
4:26I think we'll see, hopefully today, we see
4:30a lot more around the product
4:31because we have seen in the past that more
4:34and more
4:34is very much marketing focused for the C-su
4:38ite.
4:38But actually, I think now with Dreamforce
4:41coming up in September,
4:43we'll probably see a lot more of that
4:45content at Dreamforce.
4:46And then today and tomorrow, there will be
4:49a huge focus on the product itself.
4:51Yeah, exactly, exactly.
4:52And you did the keynote, the Tableau
4:55keynote at Trailblazer DX, right?
4:58Yeah, exactly.
4:59Like two weeks ago, it was in San Francisco
5:02and that was specifically focused on
5:04developers.
5:04So we see a little bit of branching off
5:06like the developers, the data devs,
5:08they moved to Trailblazer with all the
5:10other tools
5:11like MuleSoft and Slack and Salesforce.
5:13And then this is very much focused on the
5:18core product.
5:19Yeah, exactly, exactly.
5:20Just to show you sort of what's going on in
5:23the live stream itself.
5:24This is the sort of live event.
5:27It looks like a Salesforce keynote, doesn't
5:30it?
5:30It's got a slightly different layout, right
5:32?
5:32Exactly, yeah.
5:33So we see a little bit of a mix between
5:36Salesforce and Tableau.
5:37So Tableau traditionally, their setup is
5:39like having a stage
5:40and all the audience in front of it.
5:42Whilst with Salesforce, you are really in
5:45the audience.
5:45So with Trailblazer, what we had to do was
5:48there's this arena
5:49and in the middle there's a platform in
5:51which you present.
5:52I was a co-host.
5:53So if we wanted to, we could have walked
5:56off stage
5:56and walked through the audience, etc.
5:58So it's a different approach to doing
6:02conferences.
6:04Oh, yeah, Craig says so Salesforce, yeah.
6:07I agree, it's very much Salesforce.
6:10But I don't think that's necessarily a bad
6:13thing.
6:13Yeah, exactly.
6:14I think this will be interesting for people
6:17who are there in person.
6:17Obviously, this year is one of the...
6:19It's probably the strangest year for
6:21conference
6:21because there's a bigger virtual contingent
6:23,
6:23I think, than there's ever been whilst
6:26there's an actual in-person conference.
6:27Previously, Tableau conference used to be
6:30only in person.
6:31And in essence, there wasn't really any
6:34virtual coverage
6:35other than maybe the keynote going out live
6:37.
6:37But now we've got sort of a hybrid setup.
6:39I think there'll be an interesting sort of
6:42shift this year as well
6:42from people who are there in person, but
6:45also watching it virtually.
6:46The good thing is that we're finally back
6:48in person, right?
6:49Yeah, exactly.
6:50Exactly. I think a lot of people in the
6:54community
6:54have joined in the last few years, but what
6:57you don't realise
6:57is that means a lot of people have joined
6:59in a time
7:00where there's never been a conference.
7:02So it's super, super important to actually
7:05have an in-person setup
7:06that people can actually connect with
7:08community members,
7:08see what the community is actually about,
7:10but also just get a feel for what the
7:13community actually is,
7:14how they can get involved, how they can
7:16take part,
7:16who the innovative people are,
7:18but also meet the Tableau devs in person,
7:20the Tableau product managers in person,
7:22talk about features and really get those
7:24through the door.
7:25Yeah, exactly.
7:26What we now see on the screen is all the
7:29ambassadors are popping up
7:30with their little hats.
7:32Just in time for myself.
7:34Yeah, for yourself, yeah.
7:36So yeah, that's pretty cool.
7:38So he makes Tableau.
7:40This guy's a dev, right?
7:41Yeah, if you have any questions, he will
7:44know how to make it.
7:45Oh, look at this guy.
7:46Oh, never mind.
7:48[Laughter]
7:51Such good timing.
7:53What socks is he wearing?
7:55What socks is he wearing?
7:56Exactly.
7:57I've muted the audio because we're going to
8:00be talking over this.
8:00I'll put the audio back on during the
8:02conference.
8:02So for the record, if you want to hear what
8:05's going on in the livestream
8:06over what we're saying, this is probably
8:09not the best place for that.
8:10We'll obviously try and time what we say
8:13when we say it,
8:13but the main audio is going to be coming
8:16from us
8:16with a bit of the background,
8:17but we'll start that once the livestream
8:20kicks off.
8:20We'll tweak the sound, right?
8:22Yeah, exactly.
8:23It's deliberately muted at the moment,
8:25so once we get going, we'll tweak it.
8:28And let me know if the sound or the levels
8:30aren't right.
8:31We'll be able to tweak that perfectly fine.
8:34So yeah, what was announced at the last
8:37keynote?
8:37Just before we go into the keynote itself,
8:39let's just sort of touch base on what was
8:42announced last time.
8:43André has made some pretty decent notes
8:45for me today.
8:46[laughs]
8:47I had no notes prepared, and André an hour
8:51before was like,
8:51"Okay, I've made some notes for the session
8:54."
8:54So André, I think I'll let you sort of
8:57just do a roundup
8:57of what was announced last year.
8:59Yeah, exactly.
9:01So quite a few of the things from last year
9:04have actually been implemented in the
9:06product already, so that's good.
9:07Sometimes we see things being mentioned
9:09in like Devs On Stage in the keynote,
9:11and it takes like two years to implement,
9:13or sometimes they're being squashed, so we
9:16don't even see them.
9:16But yeah, mainly things around
9:18collaboration.
9:19We've seen AskData and Slack integration.
9:22We've seen XplainData and Slack,
9:24although I've not seen that one actually
9:26there.
9:26But Einstein Discovering Slack is also
9:29something that's interesting.
9:30So yeah, we'll see probably more integ
9:32rations
9:32with MuleSoft, Slack, Salesforce,
9:36but hopefully also with the wider kind of
9:39technology ecosystem.
9:40We saw something around business science,
9:43which is something that Tableau's really
9:46pushing.
9:46Around kind of machine learning, artificial
9:50intelligence,
9:50but then actually make that accessible for
9:53everyone.
9:53Yeah.
9:54One of the cool things that we saw last
9:57year
9:57is things around Tableau Public,
9:59again, being very central in the keynote.
10:02So there's now like a hire me button in
10:04Tableau Public.
10:05Yeah.
10:06Hopefully we'll see some more stuff around
10:09Tableau Public
10:09so that it doesn't...
10:10Tableau Public always has been like this
10:13playground, right,
10:13for Tableau to kind of innovate and test
10:16new features
10:16and then they deploy them further.
10:18So hopefully Salesforce hasn't forgotten
10:20about Tableau Public.
10:21Yeah.
10:22What else? Yeah, we have seen some really
10:25cool features
10:25around embedded analytics.
10:26Embedded analytics is now...
10:29The whole API has been rewritten.
10:31They're implementing new features
10:33throughout.
10:34Embedded analytics is all about putting
10:36analytics the way users are.
10:38So we've seen connected applications, new
10:42APIs.
10:42So let's hope we see a little bit more of
10:44that today as well.
10:45Yeah, exactly. Exactly.
10:46So there's so much there, isn't it?
10:48And what is interesting to sort of see
10:52is that I feel like this conference might
10:55be the conference
10:55where we see a little bit more deeper
10:59integration with Salesforce,
10:59obviously coming through in the year ahead.
11:02But at the same time, maybe a more Sales
11:04force-centric sort of philosophy
11:06to how Tableau delivers products
11:08rather than maybe the more traditional on-
11:10premise approach
11:11that Tableau's sort of been used to for a
11:13long time.
11:14Yeah, exactly.
11:16One of the things that I have in the notes
11:18here
11:18as well is the huge focus on the Tableau
11:22economy,
11:22which we'll see some announcements around
11:25today as well.
11:25The Tableau Exchange, which is kind of...
11:29If you're familiar with Salesforce APAC
11:31Change,
11:31that's for Tableau, where you can get what
11:34they call accelerators,
11:35extensions, and connectors,
11:37which Tableau partners basically kind of
11:41upload and share with users.
11:44I'm just checking the comments.
11:45We have people from all over the world.
11:46This is really cool.
11:48Everyone. Jakarta, South Africa.
11:52Sorry, I'm playing around with the size of
11:54the stream.
11:54Jakarta, South Africa.
11:56- India. Syria as well. - Syria as well.
11:58Syria as well. Amazing, amazing.
12:00On a boat in Solent, according to Sam, a
12:03colleague of ours.
12:04Austin, Texas, Netherlands, Germany,
12:07Chicago, the UK, Ireland.
12:10Lots of locations around America.
12:12Hampshire, Omaha, Boston, Denver. Canada's
12:16not in America.
12:16That's a bad joke to make.
12:18That's not in America.
12:20California. California again. Syria, yes.
12:24Here we go. We have Malno from Syria here.
12:28Let me get this positioning right.
12:30The stream comment from Malno there.
12:34Really cool.
12:35Another one from Albuquerque as well.
12:37Another location in America.
12:39Absolutely amazing. Absolutely amazing.
12:41Let's just switch over to the stream very
12:43briefly.
12:43See what's going on here.
12:44I'm going to use this opportunity to check
12:46the audio
12:46for the stream is actually set up nicely.
12:48So let's turn this up.
12:51I mean, I think I like, I tell the story so
12:53much because I believe in it.
12:54I've been here for seven and a half years.
12:55Right. So they've got their own interview
12:57here as well.
12:57Just kind of, it's kind of cool.
12:59So this is a, he works in sales in
13:03somewhere in the US.
13:05But he's been with Tableau for, he just
13:07said over seven years.
13:08So he is, I guess, we're super excited to
13:11be in person again.
13:12Yeah, yeah, exactly.
13:14Out of interest for everyone on the stream,
13:16how is the audio?
13:17Have I got the balance right?
13:18I can sort of turn it up, the audio of the
13:21stream up if you want.
13:22Not our stream, but the actual event stream
13:26.
13:26I'm asking you this and I know there's
13:28going to be about a 30 second lag
13:29before I get a response as well.
13:31I think you need to up the volume a little
13:34bit of the keynotes
13:35because I think I can see the same as what
13:37they see.
13:37Okay, cool. So let's do this.
13:39That excitement never ever changes.
13:41Yeah.
13:42So let's do a technical question.
13:44Wow, Biggie Small is playing in the
13:46background.
13:46I'm going to get a copyright strike.
13:47Back in the year ends.
13:48Yeah.
13:50I might need to turn that down before I get
13:53closed down on Twitch or something.
13:55Biggie will not like it.
13:59Yeah, yeah. So cool.
14:00The feed isn't loud enough.
14:02Okay, cool.
14:03I totally appreciate that.
14:05I've turned it down because they're playing
14:07copyrighted music in the background
14:09and I don't want the stream to get killed.
14:11So I will turn it up once the keynote gets
14:14going.
14:14But I think I've set the levels correctly.
14:16I sort of saw the dials on my side.
14:18So we should be good.
14:19Craig is saying more.
14:21Yeah, we can move up the actual volume.
14:25I was just looking at the list of people
14:27that are going to talk at the keynote
14:29and there are quite a lot of people coming
14:32on stage.
14:32So I think this is going to be quite
14:34exciting.
14:34Lots of product managers.
14:36So that means that there's a lot to
14:38announce.
14:39Exactly.
14:40We see also some customers, I think, that
14:45are going to talk.
14:47Yeah, someone from Feeding America.
14:49So I think that's around the tableau for
14:52good.
14:52Or data for good. What's the name?
14:55So that's going to be exciting.
14:59Yeah, Ravi is tuning in from the keynote.
15:03That's a bit of a meta.
15:04Ravi, if I send you an Ecamm link, can you
15:08join from the keynote
15:09as we livestream the keynote?
15:14If Ravi did that, it would make Vacit full
15:18circle.
15:18But I doubt the internet would survive.
15:21Craig, appropriately asking, who are you?
15:23I assume that's to Ravi.
15:27So Ravi was on this stream last year with
15:31Tim.
15:31And this year he's live in Vegas.
15:33We saw him earlier with him.
15:35He was a dude with the weird socks.
15:37Exactly, exactly. The shorts.
15:40And the shorts, yes.
15:43Vegas has such a weird climate, especially
15:46with conferences.
15:47People are wearing shorts, but then also
15:49hoodies.
15:50If you go outside, it's 40 degrees.
15:52Exactly. You go outside, it's 40 degrees.
15:54You go inside, the aircon's on too high.
15:56So you actually generally need a hoodie to
15:58survive in some of the rooms there.
16:00So yeah.
16:03For anyone asking us to turn up the volume,
16:05we will turn it up once the keynote starts
16:07because they're playing copyrighted music
16:10in the actual event room
16:12and I don't want to get in trouble from
16:14YouTube, Twitch, LinkedIn, Facebook and
16:17Twitter.
16:17So they're talking now about IronViz.
16:20Really quickly they introduced the people
16:22who are going to do IronViz.
16:23So we're going to look at that tomorrow as
16:25well.
16:25Yeah, yeah.
16:27That's going to be good fun.
16:28We have... she was on the stream.
16:32There's another screen as well. Welcome.
16:36Amazing, amazing. I love that.
16:38I love it when you see yourself in the
16:41actual stream.
16:42Nisa, hello. Hello, how are you doing?
16:45Absolutely great to have you.
16:46So many colleagues as well. So many people
16:49I've worked with as well.
16:49Thank you so much for joining. I really,
16:52really appreciate it.
16:52It's amazing.
16:54Oh, yeah. There we go.
16:56I'll turn this up now. Hold on.
16:58Oh, sorry. I said 40 degrees. I meant
17:02Celsius.
17:02Celsius.
17:03Very good for correcting us.
17:05We have a global audience here. Sorry about
17:10that.
17:11Good stuff. So let's turn this up a little
17:13bit. Let's get this.
17:15That has to be like some kind of record of
17:19some kind.
17:20Can you tell us a bit about why you come
17:21every single time?
17:22Yeah, absolutely.
17:23So obviously there's a great opportunity
17:25for connecting with the community.
17:28But also just networking.
17:29Five minutes.
17:30And figuring out how other people are
17:32utilizing Tableau every day.
17:33I'm always learning something new and kind
17:35of, you know, meeting people.
17:36So I know the excitement and the nerves
17:38that are going on in the keynote speakers
17:40now.
17:40Yeah, talk a bit about that. Because you
17:43were behind the scenes with the Tableau
17:44team.
17:44So what's going on behind the stage?
17:47Well, about like half an hour ago they
17:49should have done all the makeup and
17:51everything.
17:52Which is so weird. Especially like I never
17:57wear makeup.
17:58But yeah, and then everyone's kind of still
18:02in their like real focus and rehearsing
18:04their lines.
18:05And it's a cool moment before because you
18:08've actually been like when I was there I
18:11prepared it for weeks.
18:12And then it's like half an hour to go.
18:14Yeah.
18:15And then I think if Francois is there they
18:18'll do some kind of huddle where everyone's
18:21like countdown and shouts "data" at three.
18:24So one, two, three, data.
18:27So that's really cool.
18:30Yeah, oh we have more people coming in from
18:32Ohio as well.
18:33Ohio, yeah. We had a few more from Ghana as
18:37well.
18:38A few people joining from Ghana.
18:40Skelko from, I think Skelko, Sachelo. How
18:45do you say your name?
18:45If you're still on stream please let me
18:47know how to pronounce your name phon
18:49etically in the chat.
18:50I really appreciate it. I hate getting
18:52names wrong.
18:53Especially as an African whose name gets
18:56completely maligned every single time.
18:58I hate to be the one who's doing it. So let
19:01me know how to say your name properly.
19:03So...
19:06Washington D.C. Amazing.
19:09Rodrigo, another familiar face from the
19:14tablet community.
19:17There's also for the virtual audience of
19:19course we don't want you to leave these
19:21streams but there's also some slack
19:23channels.
19:23Yes, yes.
19:24There's some integrations with slack. I see
19:28loads of people posting cat pictures over
19:31there.
19:31That's a fun one to be in.
19:33It's really cool. It's really cool.
19:36I think I'm trying to see, can you see the
19:40little crowd over here where my mouse is
19:44just over here?
19:45Yes.
19:46That's like a group of very familiar faces.
19:50I think this is Luke.
19:52You can recognize Luke Stanky from just his
19:57frame. I'm pretty sure that's him.
19:59Yeah, Luke was with us in San Francisco two
20:04weeks ago and he doesn't like swag.
20:07So every time they give him a t-shirt or a
20:10hoodie or something he's like, "No, I'm not
20:14going to wear it."
20:15Oh God. I've muted the audio for a little
20:18while as we get started. I think you can do
20:20feedback.
20:21There's also a Remo group actually. If you
20:24want to sort of just be in a room with
20:26people virtually,
20:27there's a Remo that's Tableau set up that
20:29you can join for the keynote.
20:31Of course, we don't want you to leave but
20:33also for the whole entire conference.
20:34So that's a really cool place to go hang
20:36out beyond this live stream and any other
20:39sort of watch parties you might be taking
20:41part in.
20:41So what's the main thing you're interested
20:44in and excited for this keynote?
20:46You know, for me, earlier on before the
20:49stream, we ran a little sort of poll
20:53and we asked a few people what they wanted
20:56to see from conference.
20:57In fact, let me get this up on screen. So
21:01here we go. Let's mute that.
21:07If I just go to my primary display, you can
21:09just see this here.
21:10So we asked, "Look, what do people want
21:13from the keynote?"
21:14We haven't had as many responses. So if you
21:17want to go in and add a response,
21:18by all means go ahead and do so StrawPaul.
21:21live and then use the code.
21:23And I sort of cooked this a little bit
21:26because I put the selfish things that I
21:28want in there.
21:28But you can of course add your own options
21:31as you enter the poll.
21:32And I think the low-hanging fruit is the
21:34stuff that I really want to see.
21:35There's just so many features that we haven
21:38't...
21:38Tableau haven't just picked off the ideas
21:41page for the last decade and just knocked
21:44them out of the park.
21:45And a few of those have sort of made it
21:47through recently.
21:47But I'd love to just see for the next year
21:50or two,
21:50let's just close off all those really
21:53annoying small things that we'd love to do
21:55with Tableau that I think feel easy.
21:58They feel like they should be possible.
22:00Yeah, I went through the ideas form just
22:03before we started and I was like,
22:04"Maybe we should take off some of these."
22:06I sorted on like... Someone says it's a
22:10nice pie, so yeah, it's quite cool.
22:13I don't get to choose the chart.
22:15Yeah, maybe we should sell some Tableau to
22:19Straw Poll so they can do some embedded
22:22analytics.
22:22Yeah, no, so I see things like 10 years ago
22:27, Jonathan Drummy talking about conditional
22:29formatting of Meiji names and Meiji values
22:31as being one of the ideas on the forum. 10
22:34years ago.
22:3410 years.
22:35In technology, 10 years ago. That's such a
22:38long time ago.
22:39Yeah, that's like multiple cycles of
22:42product managers to the point where even if
22:45it started,
22:46it's probably not survived the different
22:48transitional teams of leadership and so on
22:51and so forth.
22:52Yeah, exactly.
22:54Let's switch back to the stream over here.
22:58So they're just getting ready.
23:00This looks like a more traditional setup
23:02now, I think.
23:03Yeah, I think so.
23:05One thing that we haven't seen though,
23:08which we will see, I think, is Astro.
23:11Oh yeah, Astro. The character, right?
23:15Yeah, Astro, the data rock star.
23:17Are they called characters? I think Sales
23:19force have a name for them.
23:20Personas or something like that. But yeah,
23:22Astro.
23:22I think they're called personas, yes.
23:26I've refreshed the poll. We'll come back to
23:30it a little later on for those asking.
23:34We are starting pretty soon anyway, so I'll
23:37stay focused on this for you.
23:39Yeah, more people in the Slack channel are
23:41asking if the keynote has started.
23:43It hasn't started.
23:47I think they are just making sure
23:51everything works.
23:53More copyright music in the background.
23:59I am 100% going to get a strike at the end
24:03of the day.
24:04Like even if you just have a slither of a
24:08song that sounds familiar, they're just so
24:11on it.
24:11So I think as long as you don't go over 20
24:14seconds, that's the fair use.
24:18Oh, we've got Francois on the stream as
24:20well.
24:20Yeah, that is very meta because he's
24:23supposed to be on stage as well.
24:25Yeah.
24:30Francois, if you're in the keynote and on
24:34our livestream, you've got some superpowers
24:37.
24:37So yeah.
24:40Amazing.
24:42Iron Viz build up in the background here.
24:46The bragging rights this year.
24:48We have some scenes as well when they did
24:51virtual of course.
24:52It's really good how they still try to do
24:56that.
24:57But yeah, Francois is hanging out backstage
25:00.
25:00Amazing.
25:06Super cool.
25:10So if anyone has any feature or product
25:13requests, you need to send them in now.
25:15Now is your time.
25:17You could sneak them into the keynote the
25:21next minute or so.
25:22So Francois, looking forward to seeing the
25:24livestream.
25:25Keynote is going to rock.
25:26Absolutely agree.
25:29You can catch the livestream afterwards as
25:31well.
25:31It will just be immediately on YouTube for
25:33anyone who wants to replay, watch anything.
25:35I'll try and do clips as well because I
25:37appreciate watching the whole thing.
25:38Might take a while.
25:39So I'll probably cut them into shorter
25:41videos and make them more accessible.
25:43So I might spam the YouTube feed for a week
25:46or two.
25:46But we'll get them in.
25:47Drop them in as YouTube shorts maybe.
25:50Like really quick ones.
25:51Don't get me started on editing YouTube
25:54shorts there.
25:55That's too difficult.
25:58I've literally started and tried to make
26:01shorts so many times.
26:02It's one of those things that I think I'm
26:05just not in that mind frame and sort of
26:08demographic that understands the format
26:10really, really well.
26:11And screen-shared content is also not ideal
26:14for it.
26:14Yeah, true.
26:16Can kind of be a little bit difficult.
26:19Yeah.
26:24There's someone asking me on Twitter if I
26:26just made the account.
26:27No, I didn't just make the account.
26:29I've just never streamed on it.
26:30I've actually had the account for a long
26:32time.
26:32But yeah, it probably looks like I've just
26:35made the account.
26:36Francois is ready to go on stage now.
26:40I think it's going to happen.
26:41It's going to start very soon.
26:47Amazing.
26:48I think I'll move this over here.
26:49I'm sort of slowly figuring out the best
26:51position for everything as we go.
26:53I'll put these on the left and the chat on
26:58the right.
26:59I do love the honest, like the brutal
27:02honesty of this comment though.
27:05Someone is watching on Twitch and just, you
27:09know.
27:13Someone's looking at Remo and is
27:17disappointed.
27:18Good.
27:20For next year, what we need to do is
27:22introduce a hashtag
27:23and then people can send in photos of where
27:26they are watching
27:26and how they are watching.
27:28Exactly.
27:31I think one of the things I did last year
27:33is I realized that people aren't all on
27:35YouTube
27:35and I think this stream is proving that.
27:37Most people have actually joined on
27:39LinkedIn.
27:40I wouldn't have said that before.
27:42But essentially meeting people where they
27:44are I think is a good thing.
27:45And Twitch I think is an underused platform
27:49.
27:49So I'm just using a service that's
27:51streaming to everything.
27:52We'll see what happens and then yeah.
27:55Anyway, we're about to go to the live
27:57stream.
27:57Cool.
27:58We have about more than 60 people live with
28:01us at the moment.
28:02Cool.
28:04[Music]
28:21We're just getting started.
28:23[Music]
28:41If you're wondering what the delay is, it's
28:44going to be considerable
28:44because I'm actually streaming to a service
28:49called Restream
28:50and they're restreaming it to multiple
28:52platforms.
28:52So there'll be a bit of lag.
28:54[Music]
29:01Yeah, to be honest, you'll probably see new
29:03features being announced
29:04about 20 seconds later.
29:06But before you can actually use those new
29:09features,
29:09it's going to be like multiple days a week.
29:11So I wouldn't worry too much about not
29:14seeing everything live.
29:16Here we go.
29:18[Music]
29:39Oh gosh.
29:41This is the band that did all the funny
29:43videos last time, right?
29:45The funny videos?
29:46Did you call them funny?
29:48[Music]
30:13Eurovision for next year.
30:15Hello, Andy.
30:17Hello, Tableau.
30:19Here we go.
30:20Hello, Tableau.
30:22Tableau.
30:2422, give it up for Tableau's tech evangel
30:27ist,
30:27House of Iron Biz, and the host of
30:30literally one of the most fantastic.
30:32It is Andy Pangree.
30:38Tableau Conference 2022, like, hear the
30:41energy in the room.
30:43Come on.
30:45That is not bad energy, but I think you can
30:49all do better than that.
30:51Let me hear a cheer from the analyst.
30:53We'll do one on the stream.
30:56Yeah.
30:57Pretty good. Not bad, not bad.
30:59Let me hear it for our international data
31:03fam.
31:04Yes.
31:06That was good down the front line.
31:08I like the cheers.
31:09All right, now, how about a big, big, big,
31:12just, just, just a little distillation?
31:15Not many. That's good.
31:16You are here to rock for the Tableau
31:18Conference, right?
31:20Yes.
31:21Okay.
31:22I want to take a couple of minutes to show
31:24some appreciation for the people who make
31:27the data fam the best in the world.
31:30If you are one of these people, I want you
31:32to stand up and bask in a huge cheer from
31:34everybody.
31:35I can hear Spanish, can you?
31:37We stand if you are a Tableau visionary.
31:38There's something in the background going
31:41on.
31:41Oh, you have the, did you have the finger
31:44on?
31:44No.
31:46These are the people that push our product
31:49to the very frontiers of existence.
31:51Now, stand up.
31:53I don't have it on.
31:55Yeah, because someone is live captioning
31:58this.
31:58Thank you.
31:59I think they've got the feed wrong.
32:00Is it just me or is it on the main feed as
32:04well?
32:05Let me see this like, yeah, anyone else
32:08getting Spanish, Spanish boys over.
32:12You are later.
32:14The Spanish is coming from the mainstream.
32:18The Spanish is coming from the, yeah, props
32:21to the translator.
32:22It's very good for the translator to keep
32:25up with this.
32:26So, yeah, if you can see the, you can see
32:30my caption here on the left hand side.
32:31It's set to English, so that shouldn't be
32:33coming through, but.
32:34Yeah, and the main Slack channel says the
32:37same.
32:37Yeah, cool.
32:38Or Andy Cottgrith has all of a sudden
32:41studied Spanish, but I don't think so.
32:45Yeah, more people hearing Spanish.
33:03This guy's got some swagger with his jacket
33:08. I love it.
33:08I think they fixed it now.
33:10They are working on it now.
33:11Ryan Melling from Tableau says that they're
33:13working on it.
33:14Cool, cool.
33:20Mis amigos aquí.
33:22All my friends here.
33:30I love it.
33:35Let's try that again.
33:44Okay.
33:45Okay.
33:49One, two, three.
33:50[Music]
34:16Yeah, a few people are complaining about it
34:28.
34:28I apologize to anyone who's watching this.
34:34Just take the opportunity to learn some
34:36Spanish.
34:37No, I'm not concerned.
34:44Spanish has the English track, let's see.
34:50Yeah, they are working on it and they are
34:52removing it.
34:53I'm just checking the Slack channel.
35:00There is Mark Nelson.
35:02Here we go.
35:07Not liking this translation, no, you're not
35:17the only one.
35:20Okay.
35:25Awesome.
35:26Oh, maravilloso.
35:28Maravilloso.
35:30Are you excited to be here?
35:33It is amazing.
35:35We are here.
35:37Because TC has always been the biggest CEDA
35:41event of the year.
35:42Oh, wow.
35:43The suggestions they're giving in the Slack
35:45channel is to turn on captions and turn the
35:48volume off.
35:49Welcome home, Deisam.
35:51Because it has been way too long.
35:55And the reconnections that have already
35:58happened are amazing.
35:59I walked around the conference center for a
36:01few hours last night.
36:02I got more selfies in the room.
36:04That's really difficult to see.
36:07Let me check if there's a YouTube feed.
36:10No, there is everywhere.
36:12This is everywhere.
36:13You won't see it anywhere else.
36:15This is on all channels.
36:17Even the Tableau channel.
36:18The Tableau channel as well, yeah.
36:20Oh, okay.
36:21Never mind.
36:22So let's get to it.
36:24We have an amazing conference ahead.
36:28This morning we're going to have three
36:30amazing customer stories showing the value
36:34of data.
36:35This is really tricky, isn't it?
36:39It's tough enough listening.
36:40Yeah, the translation is hard.
36:41It is louder.
36:43It's a tough enough lesson to us over
36:52Spanish, over Mark.
36:58Watch American Sign Language to fix the
37:03translator.
37:04We click on the sign language.
37:09That does it, yeah.
37:11There we go.
37:12Boom.
37:13Genius, whoever that was.
37:20We had a few people drop off, but apologies
37:23.
37:23That was out of our realm.
37:27I will do this.
37:28We'll go on better and we'll have the sign
37:29language visible and us visible.
37:32There we go.
37:33We're accessible here.
37:35None of which would be possible if it weren
37:37't for our amazing sponsors, especially our
37:41diamond sponsors.
37:42Now I think it's coming out of my right ear
37:44for some reason.
37:45They've mixed it only to one channel.
37:49You made TC22 a reality.
37:52We're grateful for your support and a big
37:56thank you to you.
37:57A huge thank you to all of you, our Tableau
38:00community, rock stars, visionaries,
38:04ambassadors.
38:05You inspire everything we do.
38:08We are truly grateful for all of you.
38:11We're blown away by the difference you make
38:15with data.
38:16Let's take a look.
38:17How's this?
38:18That's fantastic.
38:20You ready to get cracking?
38:21If I go too long, you guys have like an air
38:23horn or something?
38:24Let's go.
38:27The Tableau community has been a lot of
38:32changes for me.
38:33I mean it really is kind of a rock and roll
38:35culture.
38:35People are interested, friendly, supportive
38:38.
38:38Amazing.
38:39They embrace you.
38:40It makes me feel happy.
38:41The Tableau community is my second family.
38:44I live in Lagos, Nigeria.
38:45Belgium.
38:46Yeah.
38:47Bangkok.
38:48I think the American Sign Language channel
38:51comes in on the right speaker, on the right
38:55channel of the main group.
38:57It's fine.
39:00It's fine.
39:01This is better than...
39:02Otherwise there's three different voices,
39:05right?
39:05Yeah.
39:06The audio from the stream comes from the
39:07left speaker.
39:08I have the same.
39:09Everyone is saying that.
39:11That's not me.
39:15That's the actual stream itself.
39:19Being a student ambassador gave me the
39:21ability to teach and empower other students
39:23.
39:23It's really important for me to be a mentor
39:26, taking time to help others grow.
39:28I'm trying to see if I can force...
39:31The whole Slack channel goes wild about the
39:34Spanish translator because they keep on
39:36missing that you need to go to the ASL.
39:41Hopefully we get a few more people as a
39:44result.
39:45Yeah.
39:46And fun.
39:47My voice being buried up.
39:49Future starts now.
39:50Go get it.
39:53[Applause]
39:59That was awesome.
40:00Good friends in data places.
40:03We love our data family so much.
40:06We see your passion for data and it makes
40:09us hopeful, but we have a lot of work to do
40:13because we have a gap.
40:15We have a data gap.
40:17We know that 83% of CEOs...
40:19Tablet trough from Ravi.
40:20...want their organizations to be data
40:22driven.
40:22And yet only 34% of organizations actually
40:25believe they're getting to that state.
40:28And there are a lot of things that stand in
40:30the way.
40:30Okay, they say it's fixed now on the Slack
40:32channel.
40:33Okay.
40:34The data can't ever grow and ever speeding
40:35up amount of data that is coming at us.
40:36Unless you want to keep accessibility.
40:38Yeah, let's do that actually.
40:43The ability to get data cultures into every
40:45organization.
40:46So you can really use that data.
40:48And of course getting the right data tools
40:51in everyone's hands.
40:52And now is the time for data.
40:55Because we live in an ever-changing world.
40:58It's changing so fast and unpredictably.
41:01And data is the answer on how to navigate
41:04that world.
41:05But before we do that, we have to close
41:09that gap.
41:10This is why we...
41:11Almost 100 people tuning in.
41:13Yeah.
41:14And that's what we're going to talk about.
41:15It's incredible.
41:17And as we look at all the work ahead of us
41:19to do that, we have a superpower.
41:22The last time we were together here in
41:25Vegas, we were announcing Tableau's action
41:28...
41:28Corey is here.
41:30Whenever I'm asked...
41:31Corey, hello.
41:34I say the same thing.
41:36It's like chocolate and...
41:37Absolutely hello.
41:38On their own, spectacular.
41:41Together, spectacular squared.
41:44I mean, think about it.
41:45The leader in analytics joining together
41:48with the number one customer relationship
41:51management platform.
41:52It's almost too good to be true.
41:55Interesting.
41:56And think about the communities that are
41:57involved.
41:58We have our 1 million strong data...
42:01Paul Hunt thinks you're a much better co-
42:02host, aren't you?
42:03Salesforce brings an even larger...
42:08Love it.
42:09We're thrilled to be bringing...
42:11We're doing a giveaway later, Paul.
42:13But this relationship goes well beyond our
42:16amazing community.
42:17It goes well beyond our amazing
42:19technologies.
42:20The key to this relationship is shared
42:22values.
42:23That's what makes the combination so
42:25special.
42:26Everything Salesforce does is guided by
42:29values.
42:30I think it would be...
42:33It would be tough for Mark to get away with
42:35starting a keynote without mentioning Sales
42:38force.
42:38Just in response to the comment from Twitch
42:41.
42:41So someone mentions that we should stop
42:44talking.
42:45But this is a live reaction feed.
42:48If you want to see the feed without us,
42:51then go to TC22.tableau.com.
42:53Exactly.
42:54Over a half billion dollars in grants.
42:58Add to that the Tableau Foundation and our
43:01data for good $100 million in grants.
43:046.7 million volunteer hours by Salesforce
43:07employees.
43:08Over 50,000 organizations that are doing
43:12good in the world with Salesforce software.
43:15Shared values are a great foundation for
43:18any relationship.
43:19But when we thought about the product
43:21potential of these two companies coming
43:22together, that's when we got really excited
43:26.
43:26When Tableau joined Salesforce, everything
43:29...
43:29This is a hard, hard pitch.
43:31... bigger, faster, and more powerful.
43:35Hard pitch.
43:36Start with the Salesforce Customer 360.
43:40Salesforce built its business on the idea
43:42that nothing is more valuable.
43:44I think my biggest critique with all of
43:46this stuff is that if you use Salesforce,
43:49this maybe is true.
43:52I don't know.
43:53But if you don't use Salesforce, I don't
43:56think Salesforce 360 is helping you at all.
43:59If anything, it's probably getting in the
44:01way of the features you want to see.
44:03Because a lot of effort is getting put into
44:06integration technologies between the two
44:09platforms.
44:10Yeah, what I typically hope is that when
44:13they build out the capabilities and the
44:16APIs to connect to all of these different
44:17Salesforce components,
44:18that they also make those available to
44:22developers.
44:24If we think about the Slack integration, it
44:26would be great to then be able to create a
44:28Teams integration or a, well, a convo
44:31integration.
44:32Yeah, exactly.
44:35And every one of those Customer 360 clouds
44:38is a gold mine of...
44:40Why are we talking?
44:41Tableau lets you unlock, see, understand...
44:45Sorry, Darius. It's a reaction live stream,
44:49so that's why we're talking.
44:53Normal Salesforce components don't work
44:55properly.
44:56Okay, yeah.
44:58Yeah, it's been a bit of a rocky
45:00integration period at the moment, moving
45:03Tableau but also Slack and MuleSoft into
45:06the ecosystem.
45:08To be frank, I don't think we're going to
45:11see a full integration.
45:12Salesforce is just still going to consider
45:14them as separate products.
45:16With the Tableau connector to the CDT.
45:19And with those insights, of course, you
45:21want to take action.
45:22That's why we've connected Tableau to Sales
45:25force Flow with Tableau Action.
45:28All right, so today we're going to talk
45:30about data everywhere for everyone.
45:32We have some special effects, though.
45:35We're going to start with Jeff Lu.
45:37We'll take a faster time to value in
45:39pushing its sustainability goals.
45:41We're going to talk about Standard Charter
45:43Bank.
45:43They're here to talk about the value of
45:46building a data culture and how we can make
45:50work matter.
45:51And we'll share an inspiring story from
45:54Feeding America that shows the power to do
45:58more with data.
45:59So let's get started.
46:00So first, customer session, right?
46:04Yeah, so we'll see some product
46:06announcements later when Francois comes on
46:09stage.
46:10Yeah, exactly.
46:11So typically, Tableau have customers come
46:15on and essentially support the message that
46:18they're trying to get across over
46:20conference.
46:21And they work closely with those customers.
46:23Obviously, there's a little bit of
46:24collaboration in terms of what they say and
46:26stuff like that.
46:27But those customers typically do sort of
46:30align with Tableau's EPROS for that
46:32conference, if that makes sense.
46:40If you do want to switch to the other one,
46:43I'm just checking out these because the
46:45audio on this one is a bit low.
46:47The other one is better, right?
46:49Yeah.
46:50Tableau Cloud.
46:51Tableau Cloud.
46:52Oh, hey.
46:53In fact, in fact.
46:54It's available today.
46:56And we've got some exciting new features.
46:58I've muted it for the thing.
46:59We'll come back to it.
47:00Okay.
47:01We've got more than 100 plus accelerators
47:04that will be available on the Tableau
47:06exchange.
47:07Soon, you'll be able to, woo.
47:09And soon, you'll be able to-
47:11Can you go to full screen?
47:12Yeah, yeah, hold on.
47:13I'm just switching it over.
47:14Okay.
47:15Can plug in their data into prebuilt dash
47:18boards and be up and running with value
47:21immediately.
47:22There we go. That's a bit better.
47:23For large enterprise customers-
47:24Okay.
47:25So we're now announcing Tableau Cloud.
47:27So Tableau Online is going to be renamed to
47:29Tableau Cloud.
47:30-management capabilities.
47:32This will provide richer data preparation,
47:35better governance, tighter security, and
47:38easier ways to share.
47:40We want to make it easier for everyone to
47:42collaborate.
47:43So we're going to put data right at the
47:45center of every conversation by joining
47:48together Tableau Cloud and Slack into an
47:50enterprise bundle.
47:52To help kick off Tableau Cloud, we're also
47:55excited to announce an extended trial
47:56program.
47:57Cool.
47:58We're also expanding our strategic
48:00partnership with Snowflake by offering free
48:02-
48:02Can you move our icons over?
48:04We'll make these-
48:05We're hiding the announcements.
48:06-next few weeks.
48:07Put it back to where it was before.
48:08Now, I want to share a story from a Tableau
48:11Cloud customer.
48:12And it's hard to imagine a better customer
48:15to share experience from the cloud than Jet
48:18Blue.
48:19JetBlue is using Tableau Cloud to get
48:21better speed and value.
48:23Nope. Nope. Nope.
48:25Nope.
48:28Get off the stage, Mark.
48:31JetBlue can't wait for you to start to
48:32finish.
48:33Everyone has to fly. Everyone has to
48:35commute. Everyone has to travel for
48:36business.
48:37But we want our customers to love flying
48:38JetBlue.
48:39We want air travel to feel exciting.
48:42Airlines are this incredibly complex system
48:45. You have a lot of moving pieces and a lot
48:47of variables.
48:48One of the challenges with an industry as
48:50complex as ours is there is no lack or
48:53shortage of data.
48:54You have data coming off the aircraft. You
48:55have data coming off the flight planning
48:57system.
48:57You have data coming off the fueling truck,
48:58coming out of the cockpit, coming out of
49:00the airport.
49:01We have data coming out of our ears.
49:03Data is everywhere.
49:04It's impossible to always have your eyes
49:06everywhere you need them to be.
49:07Tableau Cloud has been tremendous for us.
49:09When you can see and understand your data,
49:11you start seeing and understanding your
49:12problems.
49:13It allows our leaders to have greater
49:14visibility. Decisions come faster and
49:17communication flow is quicker.
49:20In my role, to have a bird's eye view of a
49:23variety of different metrics around the
49:25business and to help me know where I need
49:28to focus, it's really incredibly important.
49:31We can help lead the way to a lower carbon
49:34future of aviation, but it starts from very
49:37real action and commitment from ourselves.
49:40Take fuel consumption for example. It's a
49:42problem for every airline.
49:43When we use less fuel, we save money as a
49:46company, but that is also great for the
49:48environment and we run a more sustainable
49:51airline.
49:52An airline is talking about the environment
49:54here.
49:54We've been able to use Tableau Cloud to
49:56develop a set of fuel dashboards that have
49:59given us so many insights.
50:01Now we can identify which flights are
50:03working out more fuel and we can really
50:05start addressing the problem.
50:07The data itself just opens up so many doors
50:10.
50:10The e-commerce dashboard helps me
50:12understand what our booking rates are, what
50:14our conversion rates are.
50:16I can see the trends, I can compare them to
50:1930 days ago.
50:21It's definitely made a difference to our
50:22bottom line.
50:23When you use Tableau Online, Tableau Cloud
50:25and mobile as well?
50:26Yeah, yeah.
50:27It gives us insights that we haven't had
50:29before and it also allows us to offer this
50:32new level of transparency.
50:34This is really going to change the game in
50:36JetBlue and upskill everybody.
50:37How do you put a price on that? That is
50:38like priceless to me as a person who tries
50:40to run a data organization.
50:42We are definitely on our own cloud
50:44transformation journey and we're really
50:47just scratching the surface.
50:49Good stuff.
50:50[Applause]
50:56Okay.
50:57Woo.
50:59Wow. It's so amazing to see the impact
51:02Tableau Cloud is having at JetBlue.
51:04Now to walk through some of the exciting
51:06new features in Tableau Cloud.
51:07There he is.
51:08Please welcome Alex Caldwell-Wedman.
51:10Oh, Alex.
51:11Okay.
51:12[Music]
51:13This is not Devs on Stage yet, or is it?
51:16No, no, no, not yet.
51:17No.
51:18It might be. It might just be just
51:20happening.
51:21[Music]
51:27Thanks, Mark. I'm Alex. I'm a Director of
51:30Product and I'm super excited to share with
51:32you today how easy it is to get started
51:35with Tableau Cloud.
51:36Tableau Cloud is the best of Tableau fully
51:39hosted in the cloud.
51:41It allows your teams to share data and to
51:44collaborate and it's always up to date on
51:47the latest version of Tableau.
51:49So you're going to get access to the latest
51:52and greatest innovations as soon as they're
51:54available.
51:55And you can get up and running in minutes.
51:57Like you just heard from JetBlue, getting
52:00started with Tableau Cloud is incredibly
52:02easy.
52:03In fact, I'm going to show you how right
52:06now with accelerators.
52:08Accelerators accelerate your time to value
52:11with pre-built dashboards.
52:13In Tableau Cloud, we have accelerators for
52:16your most common data sources such as Sales
52:19force, Aliqua, Marketo, and more.
52:22And we have hundreds of additional acceler
52:25ators in the exchange.
52:27Rapidly build out robust dashboards
52:30tailored to your use case and your industry
52:31.
52:31I've been quite critical of accelerators.
52:33The few that were built a long time ago.
52:35All you have to do is download them and go.
52:38The ones they added in the last few months
52:41have been great.
52:42But the community ones look pretty good.
52:45The ones the community are making look
52:47pretty solid.
52:48But that's not all.
52:50Tableau Cloud is a great way to share data
52:53securely with your teams and with your
52:55authentic accelerators.
52:56Keep in mind these accelerators can be used
52:58also if you have Tableau server.
52:59But what if I want to share data externally
53:00with the public?
53:01Just download them.
53:02What if I want to share it with the world?
53:04Well, Tableau Cloud is helping with that
53:08too with the ability to share publicly.
53:13This is really cool though. I know what
53:14this is.
53:15JetBlue shared how invested they are in
53:17championing sustainability.
53:19Andre and I have to be careful with that
53:20giveaway.
53:21Using their data from net zero cloud and
53:23the environmental, social, and governance
53:25impact accelerator that we looked at
53:27earlier,
53:27they were able to easily create this
53:29dashboard so that they can share their
53:32environmental impact data.
53:34And they want to share it with their
53:36customers, their shareholders, and the
53:38public.
53:39So let's take a look and make sure that
53:42this dashboard is ready to go.
53:44And it looks good.
53:46And now we're going to confirm that we're
53:48ready to share it with the public.
53:50And embedding my dashboards with Tableau
53:52Cloud is easy and intuitive.
53:54I'm even given the code that I need to
53:56embed this on my public-facing site.
53:58And I can embed it anywhere I want.
54:01It could be a portal, it could be a website
54:03, it could be a wiki.
54:05JetBlue is using Salesforce Experience
54:07Cloud.
54:08So let's take a look.
54:11JetBlue has shared out their environmental
54:14impact dashboard.
54:15And they've also added information about
54:17how their customers can use their true Blue
54:19Points to make charitable donations.
54:22In case they're looking for even more ways
54:25to give back.
54:26You've just seen how Tableau Cloud makes it
54:29easy to create, share, and embed your dash
54:32boards.
54:33But it's not just about ease.
54:34Yeah, these sections will be available
54:35after the conference.
54:36It's also scaled for enterprise.
54:38To tell you more, I'd like to introduce my
54:40partner in crime and the person who
54:42approves my expense reports, Kitty Chu.
54:48Great content.
54:49Someone didn't get the holiday.
54:56Thanks, Alex.
54:58To Ravi's point, it's not on-prem.
55:01And I'm so excited to be here today.
55:04You just heard from Alex about how quickly
55:07anyone can get started in Tableau Cloud.
55:11But when you have more people, when you
55:14have more data, and when you have more
55:17insights,
55:18you need the fastest and most secure way to
55:20bring all those moving parts together.
55:23We are making it easy for administrators to
55:26manage Tableau Cloud at enterprise scale
55:30with better security,
55:32more compliance, and better governance.
55:36Customers have been asking us for the
55:39ability to have sites in Tableau Cloud so
55:42that they can manage security and content
55:45more easily.
55:46Well, we listened, and I'm thrilled to be
55:49introducing multi-site management for Table
55:52au Cloud.
55:53Woo! Woo woo!
55:56Perfect.
55:57Let's take a look.
55:58It's not working. I think I killed it in
55:59the audio channel.
56:00Here, imagine that I'm the administrator
56:02for JetBlue's Tableau Cloud deployment.
56:05So this is for what Tableau Mind customers
56:08have wanted for years now.
56:10And I'm taken to a summary view of all the
56:12sites in my Tableau Cloud deployment.
56:14Yeah, that's pretty cool.
56:16Tableau Adoption has been really taking
56:17part in that.
56:18I'd be interested in the licensing model
56:19around it.
56:20In fact, my supplier team has just reached
56:21out to me, and they're interested in
56:23onboarding to Tableau.
56:25With Tableau Cloud, sites are your easy
56:27button for governance.
56:29That's interesting.
56:30And due to the nature of supplier contracts
56:32, I want to create a new dedicated site for
56:34them.
56:35Okay.
56:36Well, I can do that right through those
56:37experience.
56:38I put a lot of embedding use case, because
56:40this is super useful.
56:41And I select a location.
56:43I can pick from any region.
56:45Like specific regions.
56:46That is very good.
56:48This is for embedding so good.
56:50That is good.
56:51With the sharing features, yes.
56:55100%.
56:57Nice.
56:59That just literally knocked on-prem out of
57:03the park.
57:04Because I said the number one thing people
57:07ask for on-prem to deploy in different
57:09regions.
57:10Tableau Cloud is where it's at.
57:12And they're probably using the AWS backbone
57:15for that.
57:16Hopefully.
57:18Love it.
57:22Okay.
57:26Nice.
57:32That's pretty good.
57:37And once this encryption key is created, I
57:41have full control as an administrator over
57:43managing and rotating this encryption key.
57:47Customer managed encryption keys and more
57:49will be part of our new advanced management
57:52offering coming later this year.
57:54Here we go.
57:56They rebranded server management into this
57:59new advanced.
58:00But wait.
58:01There's more.
58:02As an administrator, it's so important for
58:05me to be able to see and understand data.
58:07About how Tableau is being used in my
58:09organization.
58:10So I can help drive adoption or diagnose
58:13issues.
58:14With Tableau Server, administrators have
58:17access to the Postgres repository, which
58:19gives them all the metadata about how Table
58:21au Server is being used so they can
58:22understand Tableau Server performance.
58:25Well, with Tableau Cloud, we are providing
58:29you that same data via Admin Insights.
58:32Admin Insights comes with every Tableau
58:36Cloud site.
58:37It is a set of published data sources and a
58:39starter workbook.
58:41You have to enable it, though.
58:42This is Tableau on Tableau.
58:45We are using Tableau to understand the
58:49usage of your Tableau deployment.
58:53Let's drill in and take a look.
58:55Yeah, you have to enable it.
58:57It doesn't come switched on.
58:59I can see that most of my seats are
59:02assigned and I still have plenty of space.
59:06That's beefy online deployment.
59:09What I'm really interested in is
59:10understanding adoption.
59:121,500 seats.
59:13What views are people on my site accessing?
59:16It's called ARPO, I think.
59:18Here I see the traffic to my site.
59:22Interesting.
59:23I see that there was a spike in traffic on
59:25April 24th.
59:26Someone wants to share their dashboards on
59:29MySpace.
59:30I think the '90s called.
59:32It looks like it's coming from the JetBlue
59:35ESG dashboard that Alex just published.
59:39It must be the environmental and social
59:42governance impact dashboard that she shared
59:45publicly.
59:46And it's really taking off.
59:48Interesting.
59:49You know what?
59:50I'm going to have to invite Alex to our
59:51next JetBlue internal user groups meeting
59:53so she can share her best practices and
59:55tips and tricks.
59:56Nice.
59:57But that's just the tip of the iceberg.
59:59Always is.
60:00All these dashboards are built on published
60:02data sources.
60:03Published data sources.
60:04Which means you can customize and explore
60:06this data however you want.
60:07And we are continuously expanding admin
60:10insights with more dashboards and data
60:13sources
60:14so you can answer more questions.
60:16Yeah, exactly.
60:17And it refreshes data, I think.
60:18Tableau Cloud administrators will now have
60:19the tools and data they need
60:21to fully manage, secure, and govern your
60:26Tableau Cloud deployment at enterprise
60:28scale.
60:29Back to you, Mark.
60:32Woo!
60:37Fist bump.
60:38Oh, fist bump.
60:39Awesome.
60:40Thank you, Alex and Kitty.
60:41It's how we're out of COVID.
60:42Great stuff.
60:43Fist bump's back.
60:44So we've shown you how you can move faster.
60:46Now let's talk about how we can make data
60:49make work matter.
60:51Make work matter.
60:52CEOs and others are really concerned today
60:55about attracting and retaining talent.
60:57Over the last couple of years, we've been
60:59all examining the work that we do and why
61:02we do it.
61:03People want their work to matter.
61:06They want it to have meaning.
61:08And data can certainly help us figure out
61:10what a good employee experience looks like.
61:13But we have to realize that data doesn't
61:16just point us toward the answer.
61:18Data is the answer.
61:21In fact, almost 80% of employees said that
61:24they'd be more likely to stick around if
61:26their company offers data training.
61:28Because think about what you're really
61:30offering.
61:31It's not just data skills.
61:33You're fostering creativity.
61:35Would you stay with the company?
61:36You're helping everyone grow and learn and
61:38grow in their jobs.
61:39You're giving people an opportunity to take
61:41an active role in what they do.
61:43The future of work is data driven.
61:47This is the future of work.
61:49Probably some Slack integrations we're
61:50getting now.
61:51To be fulfilled in what they do every day.
61:55Training.
61:56Now let's hear from a Tableau customer that
61:59's established a truly inspiring data
62:01culture.
62:02One that has revolutionized how the company
62:05uses and interacts with data.
62:07I think the Tableau blueprint will come up.
62:09Standard Chartered Bank is a global
62:11financial leader that has more than 87,000
62:14employees.
62:15Its executive director and chief product
62:18owner has been driving what he calls their
62:20YouTube for data.
62:22It's gotten more than 3 million views.
62:25Here all the way from Singapore, please
62:27welcome Sandeep Biswa.
62:30Welcome.
62:32I wonder what the hosting cost for that is
62:37like.
62:383 million views.
62:40That's serious.
62:41Thank you so much for being with us here
62:42today Sandeep.
62:43Thanks for coming all the long way and I
62:45hope that you've gotten used to the Vegas
62:47time zone by now.
62:48So welcome to TC.
62:50So let's leave this off by talk a little
62:52bit about what data means to Standard
62:53Charter and why it's important to the bank.
62:56Thank you so much Mark for the welcome.
62:58Such an honor and pleasure to be here at TC
63:01.
63:01It's probably not just Tableau as well.
63:03Before I answer the question I would say
63:05Tableau Conference is one of the most
63:06meaningful.
63:07Someone in the Slack channel has a t-shirt
63:10that says, "We Tableau'd your Tableau so
63:13you can do more Tableauing."
63:15I have benefited a lot from the past.
63:19Learning from other customers of Tableau
63:22and from experts and best practices.
63:25So it's a great event and such a pleasure
63:28to be here.
63:29Now coming to the question, there's a
63:32popular phrase, "Data is the new oil."
63:35Oh, there it is.
63:37Data is water and oxygen.
63:39It is very critical for businesses to
63:41survive and thrive.
63:43It helps to make better decisions faster.
63:46It helps to understand the past and predict
63:48the future.
63:49Now if I talk about Standard Charter Bank,
63:53it is in our DNA.
63:56It is a bank that manages a lot of risk.
64:00Credit risk, operational risk, fraud risk.
64:03So it is a critical enabler for doing data
64:07risk management.
64:09It helps in business development and client
64:11experience.
64:12The key.
64:13It also helps in improving our productivity
64:17.
64:17It is enabling our sustainability and net
64:19zero objectives as well.
64:21And it is a critical enabler for overall
64:23performance management of the bank.
64:25And we have gone a step ahead.
64:26We are giving analytics to our clients as
64:28well so that they can succeed.
64:30We are providing them working capital
64:33analytics and all of that.
64:35So it's really important for Standard
64:37Charter Bank.
64:38It accelerates business outcomes.
64:40The thing that the critical help there is
64:42every organization says that.
64:44The key thing is how.
64:46Awesome. Thanks for that.
64:47I love the line that says, "Data is like
64:48air and water."
64:49It's so much better for our customers.
64:51Yeah, measuring success is very difficult.
64:54So let's talk a little bit about how did
64:55you build a data platform
64:57and a data practice to meet all those goals
65:00?
65:00There we go. Come on. Tell us.
65:01That's a great question.
65:02As I just explained why data is critical to
65:03the bank.
65:04They won't say. It's a USP.
65:06The question is how to make it simple,
65:08accessible,
65:09to all at scale and speed so that everyone
65:11in the organization
65:12can make better decisions faster.
65:14So we built up our analytics platform on
65:17Tableau.
65:18We rolled it out across geographies and
65:20multiple functions.
65:22We scaled it from 100 users to 10,000 users
65:25in four years.
65:27Yeah.
65:29Wow.
65:32Is it on Tableau Cloud?
65:33One of the most important things was our
65:35democratizing analytics.
65:36Exactly, Jesse.
65:37We wanted to give it in the hands of--
65:38Tableau's role in it.
65:40--who understand businesses, who understand
65:42processes.
65:43So we did a lot of work on data literacy
65:46and data skills.
65:47And the platform is like a YouTube of
65:48analytics
65:49where people can come and create content,
65:51like analytics content, publish it,
65:53and people can consume content as well,
65:55right?
65:56So data is growing exponentially, and you
65:59need a platform--
66:00I should give him a call.
66:02--basically grow as well.
66:04And you need to think like a YouTube kind
66:05of a platform.
66:06So Tableau for us is very simple to use,
66:11and it has clearly lowered the bars to
66:14analytics.
66:15People have benefited a lot from this whole
66:17upskilling program.
66:19People have changed roles as well.
66:21No, they haven't left, hopefully.
66:2380% needs to stay.
66:241,000 plus dashboards.
66:26And anything is available on our platform
66:30today.
66:31Interesting.
66:32That's awesome.
66:33It's amazing to hear how you've scaled,
66:34and obviously it resonates with the
66:35audience.
66:36It's something for us all to strive for.
66:38So as we've talked about this, you've
66:40said the solution is inside the box.
66:42Maybe you want to explain what that means.
66:45Thanks, Mark.
66:46I would like to reiterate the solution is
66:48inside the box.
66:49So the context is like we constantly hear
66:51that we
66:52don't have enough data people.
66:54We don't have data people engineers in the
66:57organization.
66:59But if you look in the organization,
67:01we have thousands of people who are
67:02passionate,
67:03who have business expertise, who are eager
67:05to learn.
67:06This is a fair statement, but I don't think
67:08he's saying how.
67:09The question is how to make our people the
67:11data people.
67:12The solution is inside the box.
67:13We have people in the organization.
67:16So I would like to recommend that Empower
67:21your workforce with data skills.
67:25Don't stop at that.
67:27Give them tools like Tableau.
67:29He's just talking about culture.
67:31This is just the comments.
67:32There's nothing-- there's no feature here.
67:35So the question is, is he talking about
67:37Tableau Public?
67:39He's just talking about the Tableau
67:41deployment
67:42in his company and how they scaled.
67:46If there was only a tool that can show us
67:48how he can display scale, right?
67:51Available as well.
67:53Because it would be great to see user
67:54numbers increase,
67:55number of training sessions you've run, all
67:57those things.
67:58All right. Thank you so much to him.
68:00It's such a good example of the difference
68:02that a strong data culture can make.
68:04Yeah.
68:05And another great reminder why it's so
68:06important--
68:07I am not sold on that whole segment.
68:09I'm sorry.
68:10Now, six months ago, we announced our
68:12pledge--
68:13So many organizations make that pledge.
68:16This is what they said, 10 million, right?
68:18This is both our commitment to bridge the
68:20data literacy gap.
68:21Mm-hmm.
68:22And a call to action for everyone who
68:25believes
68:25in the power of data.
68:27The response has been overwhelming.
68:3139 universities have joined us.
68:33OK.
68:34Partners like Snowflake, Pathstream, and
68:36Coursera
68:37have committed time and resources.
68:39You can feel the momentum building.
68:42If you want to join us, come to the Data
68:43Village and--
68:45[AUDIO OUT]
68:48--silent.
68:49It's a stream.
68:52Everywhere and for everyone.
68:56Awesome.
68:57Now, next, to talk about how to do more
68:59with data,
69:00please welcome--
69:01It's getting slower now.
69:02--our Chief Product Officer, Francois Agen
69:04stadt.
69:05[MUSIC PLAYING]
69:06There we go.
69:07[APPLAUSE]
69:12Woo!
69:14[APPLAUSE]
69:16Changing pace.
69:17Hello, DC!
69:19It is so great to be here.
69:21Nice.
69:22I have missed this so much, and I've missed
69:25you so much more.
69:27Believe it or not, this is actually
69:29my 11th Tableau conference.
69:31That's crazy.
69:32Oh, yeah.
69:34And it kind of blows my mind to think
69:37how far we've come together.
69:39Yeah.
69:40You know, this entire data family,
69:42we've achieved so much together.
69:44Not only is this the time for data,
69:47it's the time for all of us.
69:49And the data revolution is on.
69:52And every single one of us, every single
69:55one of you,
69:56you have a front row seat to this
69:58revolution.
69:59So let's think back to the earliest days of
70:02the revolution
70:03and the earliest days of Tableau.
70:05Data was an underground thing.
70:09Only a very small number of people were
70:11using data.
70:13But those who did, they absolutely loved it
70:17.
70:17And when Tableau arrived, it sparked a
70:20movement.
70:21And a little community with a shared
70:24passion took shape.
70:26Data was punk rock.
70:29It was the Clash, the Ramones, the Sex Pist
70:31ols.
70:32And the community that formed around data,
70:35that's all of you, our punk rock data rock
70:39stars.
70:40Oh, yeah.
70:42Now, when we started Tableau,
70:44our goal was to get data in front of as
70:47many people as possible
70:49because we knew, we knew that data deserved
70:54a bigger audience.
70:56So what did we do?
70:58We took data out of the underground,
71:00we took it out of the dark little clubs,
71:03and we put it on the biggest stages in the
71:06world.
71:07And now, I mean, look around you.
71:10Look at where we are.
71:12Tableau Conference, it's a rock concert.
71:15There's literally a rock band right over
71:18there.
71:19Punk rock has arrived, and this is our time
71:23.
71:24This is the time for data.
71:28Francois really knows how to sort of rev
71:30people up, right?
71:31Uh-oh.
71:32And the thing is, he's just making this up
71:34while he's on stage, right?
71:35Yeah, yeah, he's ad-libbing here.
71:37For 15-year-old Francois.
71:39[CHEERING]
71:42[LAUGHTER]
71:44That's really me.
71:46And somebody's going to have to figure out
71:48why those cow slippers.
71:49No freaking clue.
71:53But for 15-year-old Francois, I was a punk-
71:55loving kid
71:56who more than anything in the world, I
71:58wanted to be a rock star.
72:00Good work.
72:01Well, right now, this, this is a dream come
72:03true.
72:04I'm now a data rock star.
72:07[CHEERING]
72:10And we're on this giant stage surrounded by
72:13my fellow rock stars.
72:15So thank you.
72:17And together, we're making incredible music
72:21.
72:21What's the word?
72:22And together, we're using data to build a
72:26better world.
72:28The corporate messages didn't quite land, I
72:30don't think.
72:30And seeing how customers like you are using
72:32data to make a difference,
72:34well, that's what motivates us every day.
72:36It's why we're so innovative.
72:38It's why we build more capabilities in our
72:39product.
72:40They prefer the use of the word data-
72:42informed instead of data-driven.
72:45So you're actually being informed by data
72:47rather than everything you do is driven by
72:49it, right?
72:51Not everyone spends their whole life in
72:52Tableau.
72:53They're just being informed by Tableau, and
72:55then they move on to the next task.
72:58That's a really good sort of nuance.
73:00Data is truly a force for good.
73:04And to show you that impact,
73:07I want to share a customer story that's
73:09close to my heart.
73:11Feeding America. Roll the video, please.
73:14[Music]
73:17A hundred percent agree.
73:18Francois.
73:19These stories are actually quite cool
73:20always.
73:21Feeding America has an aspiration where
73:25every single person
73:27has access to the foods that they prefer
73:30and the foods that they need
73:32in order to live rich, full lives.
73:36There is hunger in every single county in
73:38the United States.
73:40Even the ones that you think are the
73:41wealthiest,
73:42there are folks that are in need of
73:43charitable food assistance.
73:45We're a network of 200 food banks,
73:47and those food banks work with a network of
73:4960,000 partner agencies.
73:52We were using data that was a lot more
73:54static at the time,
73:55data that we were collecting quarterly or
73:57annually.
73:58The access to real-time data about the
73:59people that we're serving,
74:01it allows us to act in more real time to
74:03meet their needs.
74:04Previous methods of tracking the number of
74:06people we were serving each month
74:10is really archaic in an old school way.
74:13Spreadsheets, things of that nature.
74:18First we need to understand where are our
74:19neighbors who are facing hunger
74:22so that we can be in the communities to
74:24serve them.
74:25We need to know what kinds of foods do they
74:26want and need in their daily lives
74:29and are those the kinds of foods that we
74:30can provide.
74:32We can bring those two data sets together
74:34to say
74:34where are we distributing the food, what
74:35kind of food are we distributing,
74:37and who are the people that are receiving
74:39that food.
74:40That really starts to tell a much more
74:42comprehensive picture
74:43about what food banks and their networks
74:45really do.
74:46And that's the kind of thing that we're
74:47able to do with that daily data
74:49is make it more real and then react in real
74:52time.
74:53What is beautiful about a partnership,
74:57like the partnership that we have with
74:59Tumblr,
75:00is that it helps us to understand more
75:02deeply
75:03what it is that people do prefer.
75:05It helps us to understand what people need.
75:09It helps us to understand whom it is that
75:12we're serving all at once.
75:15Feeding America is here to build a movement
75:17, to catalyze a movement,
75:19to inspire this country to decide that food
75:22insecurity here is unacceptable.
75:25Data is helping us to do that.
75:27[Music]
75:31See, that message landed with me, I think.
75:33Such a much better message.
75:35Yeah, exactly.
75:37Wasn't that amazing?
75:39That's such powerful stuff, and it shows
75:42really the impact
75:42it can have on our communities and the
75:44people all around us.
75:46And today we're honored and remembered to
75:48have Feeding America
75:50as a chief operating officer.
75:52Katie, come on up.
75:54What a real use case is that.
75:57Exactly.
75:58There she is.
76:00[Music]
76:04What is that? A high five again.
76:06Welcome to TC.
76:07Thank you. I'm so happy to be here.
76:09It's great to be with all of you.
76:10It's fun listening to you.
76:11Yeah, turn that down.
76:13Well, Katie, I mean, let me tell you, it's
76:15incredible.
76:16The mic is really dialed in.
76:17You guys are going through a massive data
76:18transformation.
76:19Tell us a little bit about where you guys
76:20are and what you're doing.
76:22Yeah, I can illustrate for you all how
76:25impactful the modernization
76:27of our data has been by asking you all to
76:30imagine what it would be like
76:33if you only had data on your customers
76:36every four years.
76:40Okay, this was our reality.
76:43We relied on a quadrennial survey of people
76:47experiencing hunger
76:48across the country and used that and extrap
76:51olated from that for years.
76:52And now with our Client Service Insights
76:55platform,
76:56we have data in real time on a daily basis
76:59to understand
77:00what people facing hunger need and want in
77:02communities all across the country.
77:04That's really awesome.
77:05That's amazing.
77:07This is actually where real time is very
77:10important,
77:11which something Tableau has been not the
77:13best at, but it's improving.
77:16Online might be able to change that, right?
77:18We really have to be thoughtful about how
77:20we bring a national network
77:22of 200 food banks and 60,000 community-
77:25based organizations
77:26along on this journey.
77:28And we did that by first building our
77:30platform with the people
77:32who are going to use it, nothing new to all
77:34of you,
77:35people who are working in food pantries and
77:37soup kitchens
77:38and community-based organizations.
77:41And then we removed the barriers for their
77:43utilization of that platform.
77:46It's offered at no cost to them.
77:48Thank you to the Tableau Foundation and
77:50others.
77:51Graham, I agree with you on that.
77:53And we provide grants and technical
77:54assistance to help them use it.
77:56I'll start that comment and I'll come back
77:57to it a little later on.
77:58It's really important, which is making sure
78:00that data comes alive for them
78:03so that it's easy to see and understand.
78:06And again, the Tableau visualization makes
78:09that possible
78:10for people all across this country trying
78:12to do good.
78:13Amazing.
78:15So, Laura, what comes next?
78:16Where is data going at Feeding America?
78:18Yeah, so we are in the throes of adoption
78:21and we still have a lot of work to do.
78:23Like I said, we have a big network
78:25and we cover every county in the United
78:27States, including Puerto Rico.
78:29So we're working really hard to make sure
78:31everyone is using this data.
78:33The second thing, though, is we can see
78:35already
78:36the power of predictive analytics for our
78:38ability to be able to anticipate
78:41where demand for food assistance may occur
78:44so we can get the right food to the right
78:46people at the right time.
78:48I think these people have some breakout
78:49sessions as well during the conference,
78:52right?
78:52Yeah.
78:53Because it would be good to actually see
78:54their product
78:55and see what they're doing.
78:56Exactly.
78:57And harnessing the power of data to be able
79:00to connect
79:01and see where food insecurity is and how to
79:04get food there is our biggest problem.
79:05The toughest bit is the cultural bit.
79:07It's never really the solution.
79:09The solution is Tableau, of course.
79:11But it's how they've actually done it with
79:13people.
79:14Okay, one last question.
79:15What's one piece of advice you have for
79:17this community
79:18and the leaders all around us?
79:20Keep doing what you're doing.
79:22Keep doing it.
79:23Make data easy to understand for us non-
79:26data people.
79:28Keep it understandable.
79:30Allow it to be visualized so that we can
79:32get it into the hands of people who are --
79:36so many of you working with people who are
79:37making a difference in this world.
79:40That has been the gift that you all have
79:41given us
79:42and we're so much better for it.
79:44Well, thank you so much.
79:45Give it up for Katie Fitzgerald.
79:47That was great.
79:48Excellent.
79:49That landed better with me.
79:50I don't know why.
79:52Now, you know, when we hear stories like
79:54this,
79:55it's easy to see the difference that data
79:57can make.
79:58Yet study after study after study have
80:01shown that less than 30% of people
80:04have access to data and BI technology.
80:06Right.
80:07Think about that.
80:08That means that more than 70% of people don
80:11't have access.
80:13Seventy percent.
80:15That's crazy.
80:17That means that the majority of people
80:19around the world,
80:20they are hearing the music like you and I.
80:23So how do we reach them?
80:25How do we reach the other 70% of people?
80:28Well, one way is to make data speak the
80:32language of people.
80:34Now, most people, they don't speak data.
80:38And the thought of exploring data, that's
80:40just terrifying.
80:42So what do they do?
80:44They turn to somebody else.
80:46They call their fellow analysts, a data
80:48rock star,
80:49to do the analysis for them.
80:51And that person will have to go in and
80:53explore the data
80:54and pull out the insights every single time
80:56.
80:57Have you ever done a monthly business
80:59review?
81:00Basically what you're doing on behalf of
81:02the others.
81:03Now, for most analysts, that's a lot of
81:05work.
81:06That's tedious.
81:07It's time consuming.
81:08Well, we want to simplify that.
81:11What if the software could write the story
81:15for you automatically
81:18and pull out those insights automatically?
81:20I know where this is going.
81:22And that way, people could be able to use
81:24your data
81:25more effectively and reach more people.
81:28Caleb, I think what Francois means is that
81:31they don't have the means to interact with
81:34the data if they need it.
81:36So this is probably people that have been
81:38surveyed.
81:39So like, hey, do you have the right data to
81:41make decisions?
81:41And the answer is no.
81:43Well, we think this is the next step in the
81:46data revolution.
81:48And it's what we've done with data stories
81:51for Tableau.
81:52Are you guys ready to see it?
81:54Sounds pretty cool.
81:55All right, let's bring out Katie Hughes to
81:57see data stories.
81:58There she is.
82:14There's a wide band as well.
82:15It's pretty cool.
82:16Thank you, Francois.
82:18Hi, everyone.
82:19I'm another Katie.
82:21And I am so excited to show you how the
82:23power of storytelling
82:26will help you enable more data rock stars
82:29across your organization.
82:31Let me show you how.
82:33Their mics are really close to their mouth.
82:36Imagine you're an analyst at Pune America.
82:37Your organization does incredible work
82:39across the country
82:40in the fight against hunger.
82:42And you want to show that off.
82:45However, even with a great dashboard like
82:48this,
82:49it's not always obvious to your
82:51stakeholders
82:52and sometimes even you what's important.
82:56Now, with data stories, all you need to do
83:01is drag and drop,
83:05choose the worksheet you want to better
83:07understand,
83:09confirm the data is all pulling in
83:12correctly,
83:14choose the story, and voila.
83:18You automatically have an approachable
83:21story
83:22so that any user can understand the so what
83:27behind their data.
83:29Without a single click, a user can quickly
83:34and easily see
83:35that the increase in the number of meals
83:37distributed
83:38over the last quarter was driven by
83:41Minnesota, New York, and Pennsylvania.
83:45Yeah.
83:46And the increase in Minnesota specifically
83:49was pretty significant
83:51at 31%.
83:54Now, as I focus to understand the trend
83:58over the past year,
84:00you will see stories dynamically update.
84:03This is basically a Tableau extension, I
84:07think,
84:07because this is after an acquisition they
84:09've done
84:10about a year ago, I think.
84:12Was it Narrative Science?
84:14Were they acquired?
84:16And I have a feeling this might be
84:20either, I'm not sure where it's hosted.
84:23There's an extension that might be on your
84:24Tableau server
84:25or somewhere else.
84:27To ensure our Minnesota team is equipped to
84:30help
84:30the food banks match supply with demand.
84:32We'll talk more about this in a second.
84:39Well, there's a sound we all know and love.
84:41Ooh, slack.
84:42I thought that was my slack.
84:44Yeah, I was confused as well.
84:45I was like, hey, I turned all the
84:46notifications off.
84:48And this was all directly in my Tableau
84:51dashboard.
84:52Just think how long this would have taken
84:54me
84:54without data stories.
84:56Spoiler alert, it's many, many hours.
85:00I've tried.
85:02But zooming back out, even though the
85:04stories
85:05are built automatically, they're also
85:07customizable.
85:07Sam is super excited for this.
85:09So I as an analyst can go into the settings
85:11.
85:11Yeah, Frank made a good comment here about
85:14so what you can't do at the moment is
85:16communicate
85:17between the actual component that is being
85:21dragged in.
85:22Which is the number formatting based on my
85:24organization's
85:24preferences.
85:25And that it then starts filtering the rest
85:27of your
85:27dashboard.
85:28That would be great.
85:29That would, yeah.
85:30And update the confidence interval when
85:32relevant.
85:33Yeah.
85:35That would also be good training for
85:36something
85:37like Ask Data, right?
85:38If you could show that then people might
85:40need
85:40to write those kinds of sentences.
85:42Or bumping up the font in case you find
85:45yourself
85:45presenting in front of thousands like us.
85:48Yeah, so Ravi's talking about some formats.
85:51You can set some formatting here.
85:53And now streamline the communication of
85:55data
85:55insights via automatic dynamic customizable
85:58stories.
85:58Yeah, it's definitely in Power BI as well.
86:02But that's a Microsoft product.
86:04And look great on mobile.
86:07It's probably why it's here.
86:08What did I tell you?
86:09It looks really good, right?
86:12I want mobile as well.
86:13Even when I'm on the go and traveling,
86:15which all of us
86:15are doing for so now, I can explore and get
86:17value from my data,
86:18call from my mobile.
86:19Yeah, exactly.
86:20But it's a web component, so it should be
86:21fine.
86:22Just think how many new data rock stars
86:25there will be.
86:28And we won't have to wait long.
86:31Data Stories is already available in beta
86:33in Tableau
86:34Cloud and will be available in Server later
86:37this year.
86:38And this is only our first time.
86:40I'm always skeptical about this kind of
86:42stuff though because--
86:43Wait, sorry, did you hear the announcement?
86:45--created for business people.
86:47Just wait a sec.
86:48This is automated data storytelling.
86:52And this is the future.
86:55[APPLAUSE]
86:56Back to you, Francois.
86:57I think she said it's now in Tableau Cloud
87:00and will be for Tableau on-prem, so Tableau
87:02Server a little bit
87:03later.
87:04Amazing job, Katie.
87:05What did you guys think?
87:06Pretty cool?
87:07Yeah.
87:08It does feel like a magic trick when you
87:10see that story come
87:11alive.
87:12It is so cool.
87:13And it's another great example of how Table
87:15au is making it
87:17easier for everyone to just rock with their
87:20data.
87:21You know, that's what Tableau has always
87:23done.
87:24For years, we put a guitar in every data
87:27rock star's hands.
87:29And we've made it easy for everyone to just
87:33play.
87:34But you can only do so much with a guitar.
87:38If you want to add dimension, if you want
87:40to have bigger sound,
87:42you need more instruments.
87:45You need a bass.
87:47You need drums.
87:48You need a keyboard and effect pedals and a
87:51wall of amplifier.
87:52Astro, there he is.
87:54Well, there they are.
87:55Now, when talking about data, adding more
87:58instruments means
87:59adding more sophistication.
88:01You need to understand concepts around
88:03statistics.
88:04They are now talking about features.
88:06Oh, hi, friends.
88:07Hi.
88:08Machine learning.
88:09Now, talking about features now.
88:11And Python.
88:12You need to program a lot of stuff.
88:15Well, that's not for everyone.
88:16It's for the specialists.
88:18It's for the few.
88:19It's time consuming and it's complicated.
88:22Mm-hmm.
88:23Does that sound familiar?
88:25Yeah.
88:26It's exactly what Tableau did 18 years ago
88:28when we were founded.
88:30So, what did we do back then?
88:31We reimagined the whole analytic --
88:34Created Python and R integrations.
88:36Tableau made the complex simple.
88:38We brought data to the people and we made
88:41it easy.
88:42So, that got us thinking.
88:44Can we do the same thing with advanced
88:46analytics?
88:47Could we do to data science what Tableau
88:50did to BI?
88:51Well, so we started talking to customers.
88:53We talked to customers that were going
88:54through the data science process.
88:56And a pattern emerged.
88:58We found that the same thing was followed
89:00over and over again.
89:02The same steps.
89:03First, you connect to your data.
89:05Then you wrangle your data.
89:07You prepare it to make it just ready for
89:09analysis.
89:10Then you build some models and find the
89:11right models for your data.
89:13And then you visualize it.
89:14And then you refine that cycle over and
89:17over again.
89:19Well, that's when it hit us.
89:21We're actually kind of almost there.
89:23With Tableau today, you can connect over
89:26100 different data sources right out of the
89:29box.
89:30We have incredible data prep capabilities
89:32with Tableau prep.
89:33So, you can wrangle your data together,
89:35filter it, pivot it, and get it just right
89:38for analysis.
89:39And we have the best visual analytics tool
89:41in the world so you can see and understand
89:44that data.
89:45There's just one missing piece of the
89:48puzzle.
89:49The ability to build models.
89:52Well, that's changing today.
89:54We're introducing Model Builder for Tableau
89:58.
89:59This feels like -- I think we saw this at
90:02last conference.
90:04With Model Builder, we're bringing
90:05predictive analytics to Tableau.
90:07We did see this at last conference.
90:08Predictive analytics, yeah.
90:09It's fully integrated.
90:10So, you can build models as easily as you
90:12can build a workbook or a prep flow.
90:15And it leverages all of the amazing work
90:17you've already built in Tableau.
90:19Your data connections, your security, your
90:20governance.
90:21This is coming from --
90:22[ Audio cutting out ]
90:30Model Builder is built on top of Salesforce
90:33's Einstein AI platform.
90:35Oh, yeah.
90:37Somebody's excited over there.
90:39Einstein today generates more than 152
90:42billion predictions per day.
90:45Yeah, I thought this was just software.
90:46Think about that.
90:47152 billion predictions.
90:49And it's part of every Salesforce cloud.
90:52So, now we're bringing the power of
90:54Einstein and we're putting it right into
90:56Tableau and right into Model Builder.
90:58So, you get that power, too.
91:00Okay.
91:01And Model Builder is part of our broader
91:03portfolio around business science.
91:05So, along with scenario planning, Einstein
91:08discovery, now domain experts can finally
91:12apply advanced analysis to even more
91:16problems.
91:17And more importantly, you can make better
91:19decisions faster.
91:21Essentially, this is data science for
91:25business users.
91:27So, here to show how it works, give it up
91:30for Bobby Brill.
91:32[ Applause ]
91:43Thank you, Francois.
91:45I'm Bobby, a product manager at Salesforce.
91:48Focus on bringing Einstein into Tableau.
91:51Ah, there you go.
91:52Einstein empowers businesses to make
91:54smarter decisions how to buy data.
91:56He spells it out. I like that.
91:58We heard from Feeding America about their
92:00vision of an America where no one is hungry
92:03.
92:04That may mean connecting certain folks with
92:07services that go beyond just food banks.
92:11By looking at the millions of neighbors the
92:13Feeding America network has served in the
92:15past,
92:16machine learning can be used to determine
92:19those that are most likely to benefit from
92:21a service referral.
92:23Well, thanks to Tableau Model Builder
92:24powered by Einstein discovery,
92:26the Feeding America network analysts can
92:28solve this machine learning problem using
92:31clicks, not code, and without ever leaving
92:35Tableau.
92:36Predictive models are now native.
92:38Clicks, not code, yeah.
92:40I create a predictive model just like I can
92:42create other assets.
92:44Let me just --
92:45Let's see how this works.
92:46Yeah, this is the one to see.
92:47I'll start by connecting to a published
92:49Tableau data source.
92:51Because Tableau prep is built into the flow
92:53, I can further clean and filter my data.
92:57Okay.
92:59Then I'll choose the field I want to
93:01predict.
93:02I'll choose my goal, and I'll choose my
93:05modeling algorithm.
93:07I hope there is a whole bunch of education
93:09around this.
93:10I was just about to say this.
93:12And just like that, Tableau and Einstein
93:14are working together behind the scenes to
93:17build --
93:18Well, it's a clean interface, so there must
93:19be some space for kind of educational
93:22content around the different models.
93:25And when the model completes, I get
93:28guidance on how I should proceed.
93:31I can see how well this model can classify
93:34data.
93:35I can even see how my data is impacting my
93:38predictions.
93:40I can improve my model performance.
93:42I can follow a list of data alerts that
93:44guide me in updating my model so I can
93:46avoid common machine learning problems like
93:49multi-collinearity and data leakage.
93:51If it's coaching you, that might be sort of
93:52like a --
93:53When I'm done examining my model --
93:55A way of doing it as well.
93:56I'm ready to publish it.
93:57Yeah, and in another tool called Ultrix,
94:00you have that kind of assisted element that
94:01will watch you through a wizard.
94:03And click deploy.
94:07So now my model is live in Tableau.
94:11But the real value of this model is when I
94:13connect it to my data so my analysts can
94:16consume the predictions and make smarter
94:19decisions.
94:20Because this is all done in Tableau --
94:22The other thing is that the model's
94:22specific to --
94:23It's all native.
94:24No other integrations are needed.
94:25-- specific data sources, so this is not --
94:27Let me show you how to add this to a work
94:28book.
94:29I'd love to know how it works with
94:29something like a virtual connection.
94:31I just choose my workbook.
94:33Choose the dashboard I want the predictions
94:35to show up.
94:36Choose a worksheet where there's data that
94:38--
94:38So how do we deploy this?
94:39So that's probably the last step on the
94:40left-hand side.
94:41Deploying is kind of important.
94:44Will this run on your Tableau online or --
94:46Sorry, Tableau Cloud cluster or --
94:48Now let's see what that looks like.
94:50This is an online only feature.
94:51Here on the right, I have the Einstein
94:54predictions dashboard extension where I get
94:58real-time predictions on the fly.
95:01This allows my Feeding America network
95:03analyst to better understand the average
95:06likelihood of benefiting --
95:08Definitely running the cluster.
95:09-- from referrals nationwide.
95:11And I can further drill into my data and my
95:16predictions update on the fly.
95:20But I built this predictive model to make
95:23smarter actions.
95:25My business wants to prioritize the
95:26neighbors with the highest likelihood of
95:28benefiting from a service referral.
95:30This is a fair comment.
95:31It is a new user interface for Tableau
95:32business science.
95:33Wouldn't it be awesome if I can connect
95:34this with the amazing power of the business
95:37automation built on Salesforce?
95:39Well, thanks to Tableau actions and Sales
95:42force flow, I can do just that.
95:44With the click of a button, I can pass data
95:47from this viz directly into any Salesforce
95:50flow.
95:51And this allows my businesses to make
95:53smarter decisions.
95:55That's how Feeding America goes from
95:57insight to action.
95:58Someone in the Slack channel says, "This
96:00isn't what Einstein would have imagined or
96:03would have wanted."
96:05Do you know that Salesforce actually pays
96:08quite a lot of money for the brand Einstein
96:11every year?
96:13They have to, right?
96:14Yeah.
96:15Well, thanks to Tableau Scenario Planner.
96:20We're aiming to make this problem a whole
96:22lot easier.
96:24With Scenario Planner, building scenarios
96:27is easy, visual, and interactive.
96:30I can create what-if simulations and I can
96:32compare results.
96:34Let's see how Feeding America's disaster
96:36relief team works with them to move things
96:40to provide food and emergency assistance to
96:41communities by event of a disaster.
96:44Could use this tool to simulate some
96:46scenarios around the potential impact of a
96:48California wildfire.
96:50I wonder, was this demoed at Trailblazer DX
96:52?
96:53That's my question.
96:54Because that to me seems like the audience
96:57that would be excited.
96:59Well, they say not code but clicks.
97:04Yeah, so Trailblazer is very much focused
97:06on developers.
97:08I guess.
97:10I can connect my data with parameters that
97:12let me make quick what-if adjustments on
97:14the line.
97:15Well, to be honest, I see some really nice
97:17UI elements which can also go into Tableau
97:19desktop.
97:20It would be great to have that range filter
97:21that we have on the left-hand side, right?
97:24Yeah.
97:26That will come in weapons space 100%.
97:29Einstein will help with scenario
97:31suggestions.
97:33And thanks to explained data, I can better
97:35understand the reasons why a scenario dev
97:37iates from a baseline.
97:39Oh, that's embedded as well.
97:41Then all I need to do is share this with my
97:43team in Slack and then they can better
97:45understand the trade-offs.
97:48Share in Slack.
97:51Okay, now we only need MuleSoft integration
97:55and the 360 is complete.
97:59Back to you, Francois.
98:03I think they should have put some music in
98:05here.
98:06They should have put some music in.
98:07All right. Thank you, Bobby.
98:08Amazing job.
98:09We've seen a lot today.
98:11Model builder, data stories, new advances
98:13for Tableau Cloud.
98:15There's one little cloud left.
98:18It's great to see how you're going to take
98:20these capabilities and put them to action
98:22for your organizations.
98:24But we're not done.
98:26We've got more for you.
98:28You guys want more?
98:30Yeah.
98:31One more thing.
98:32You want more?
98:34Now we're talking.
98:36All right.
98:37Well, Tableau's in-house band is here.
98:43We call them the Devs on Stage.
98:48Here we go.
98:51Here we go.
98:52And they have come here to rock.
98:55All right. Here we go.
98:56You guys ready to see them?
98:58All right. Let's get them out here.
98:59Maybe we're now getting like a quick-fire
99:01round of new features.
99:03To be honest, we really need it at this
99:06rank.
99:07She's the heartbeat.
99:08It's Samantha Kwab.
99:11Okay. Four seats.
99:13So we're getting plenty of product managers
99:17here.
99:18Nice.
99:22All right.
99:24On base, holding down the low end.
99:27He's in the pocket.
99:29He's bringing the rumble.
99:30He is John Wong Lam.
99:34Woo.
99:35There he is.
99:42He played air guitar like air guitar when
99:43he was younger.
99:44And finally.
99:45Nice.
99:46Shredding on the lead guitar.
99:49He's Dev's own Eddie Van Andrex.
99:53The one, the only Nathan Mannheimer.
99:58Yeah.
100:04All right.
100:05It's time for Devs on Stage.
100:07Because he has a pineapple in his hand.
100:08Nathan, take it away.
100:11Yeah.
100:13The pineapple is here.
100:15Love it.
100:16All right.
100:17Thank you, Francois.
100:18Good morning, everyone.
100:19My name is Nathan.
100:20I'm a product director here at Tableau.
100:22You may recognize me from such features as
100:25Devs on Stage last year.
100:27Well, this year, I'm back to show you some
100:29of the magic that we're building into Table
100:30au's data layer.
100:32Can't make bricks without clay.
100:34And you can't tell incredible visual
100:35analytics stories without a solid data
100:37foundation.
100:38Let's take a look.
100:40So here, I've got a data set of my
100:41organization's operations.
100:44We have some fact tables that cover our
100:45planning and our actual expenditure.
100:48Data model.
100:49I know what we're seeing here.
100:52I've seen a demo of this before.
100:53But in today's data model, when I want to
100:55actually compare our actual outlays to the
100:58budget, I have to choose a single dimension
101:01to relate them on.
101:03You have the table extension on the bottom
101:04left, if you saw that.
101:06It means that if I wanted to get really
101:07deep, I might have to write some complex
101:09analytical SQL or even create multiple
101:11different data sources.
101:13This could be what Power BI has where you
101:15can invent multiple tables.
101:17With our first feature here today, shared
101:19dimensions.
101:20That problem is a thing of the past.
101:23This is good.
101:25Okay.
101:26Shared dimensions is going to allow you to
101:28take multiple fact tables and relate them
101:31together with multiple shared dimensions.
101:34This means that I can explore sophisticated
101:36data sources like SAP or even Salesforce,
101:39drag and drop, easy.
101:40Salesforce would absolutely need this.
101:43I can build a single data model that
101:43answers all kinds of questions and share it
101:44up, scale it across my entire organization.
101:48It means I can go in, take, say, our budget
101:51, break it down by a dimension like date and
101:54another department, and then take our
101:56actual expenditures and compare them just
102:00like any other data in Tableau.
102:03Sometimes, though, the challenge isn't so
102:04much working with a sophisticated data
102:06source.
102:07It's actually even getting to that data at
102:09all.
102:10All across the Internet, there are APIs and
102:11sources that allow us to pull down
102:13information that makes us understand the
102:15way the world's working up to the minute.
102:18Well, we've had the Web Data Connector in
102:19Tableau for a while, but setting one up has
102:22meant, you know, servers and infrastructure
102:25and handing out those URLs to your
102:27consumers.
102:28And that slows you down.
102:29I'm not sure.
102:30I didn't see.
102:31With our next feature today, the Web Data
102:33Connector 3.0, adding new connectors to
102:35Tableau is as easy as it looks.
102:37I've seen that one before.
102:38You've seen this.
102:39You saw it live on stage, right?
102:43It's really cool.
102:47By Salesforce.
102:49Interesting.
102:56We demoed this at Trailblazer.
102:58Nice.
102:59You built that connector, right?
103:03I didn't build it, no.
103:06Someone did, yeah.
103:08I have some tweets here, and I recognize
103:11some familiar names from the community.
103:13B. Gordon, Ken Flurlidge, Cesar Pico, and
103:16we really appreciate that you're talking
103:19about Tableau and maybe even saying this is
103:22the best devs on stage ever.
103:23But I'm curious.
103:24What are you actually saying?
103:25You know, I have the text of these tweets
103:29here.
103:29But I want to get into it.
103:30I want to get a little deeper.
103:32I could maybe write some string counts,
103:33number of tweets per day.
103:34I could even bring in a Python or R calc
103:37and do some sentiment.
103:38But if I want to go deeper, if I want to
103:41really restructure the data and answer
103:43questions like what are the topics that are
103:44being mentioned, how frequently do they
103:46occur, I'd have to step outside Tableau and
103:49maybe go into R or Python and really
103:50manipulate, reshape the data, and then
103:53bring it back in.
103:53And that would slow down my flow of
103:56analysis.
103:57Well, with our last feature here today, one
104:00that I have to say is very close to my
104:02heart, we're bringing the power of R,
104:04Python, and predictive analytics from
104:06Einstein Discovery right to the core of
104:07Tableau's data model.
104:08Interesting.
104:09Want a new table extension?
104:10Yeah.
104:12With table extensions, I can bring out a
104:15new object into my model that works just
104:17like any other.
104:17You can shift data in and out.
104:22So, yeah, there you go from your web data
104:25connector.
104:26But I can put a script right into this
104:28object, make it bigger or even blow it up
104:32full screen, and paste this in.
104:34So this is Python code that's going to pull
104:37the data that Tableau is creating and allow
104:39me to transform it, shape it, store it with
104:43predictions, do anything I want, and the
104:45best part is, it's live.
104:47It's that it was running on localhost, so
104:49he has a separate server.
104:50I know that's its extension, right?
104:53It's probably using TabPy.
104:57If you're on Tableau Online, where's that
105:00running? That was going to be my next
105:02question.
105:02Well, the thing is that web data connectors
105:05will soon be running on Tableau Cloud as
105:08well.
105:08So I think they will be managed.
105:11The thing is that with regular dashboard
105:14extensions, they have figured out how to
105:16sandbox them, so I think we will see
105:18something sandboxed here as well.
105:20This is the power of our Python APIs,
105:22Einstein Discovery, right in Tableau's data
105:24model, and it opens up a world of
105:26possibility.
105:27And we've seen some really cool features
105:29here today that are going to turbocharge
105:31what you can do with data in Tableau.
105:32And honestly, I can't wait to see the kinds
105:34of really innovative, exciting things that
105:36will be available.
105:36This is bringing a bit more of that sort of
105:38data science. Is it really data science?
105:40Not really. This is more sort of data
105:41science.
105:41You can do anything here.
105:44So we saw it really quickly, but Nathan
105:46pasted in some code to do sentiment
105:49analysis. It's kind of the typical thing
105:51you do on tweets.
105:52You could do data transformation here if
105:55you want to, or you could call maybe an API
105:57.
105:57I don't know.
106:00Well, thank you, Nathan. And hello, TC.
106:03Hello.
106:06Hi, my name is Samantha Guac. I'm vice
106:09president of product development.
106:11In my role, I get a ton of data-driven
106:13questions from across the company on many
106:15different topics.
106:16And it can be extremely time-consuming to
106:19clean and prep the data even before
106:22analysis.
106:22So I'm always looking for ways to make that
106:24process more efficient and empower people
106:27to answer questions themselves without
106:29needing to come to me.
106:31Let me show you how our team is making that
106:33even easier with the latest innovations in
106:36Tableau Prep and Ask Data using this
106:39dataset on electric vehicle sales.
106:41Each record is a sales transaction.
106:44Now, how often have you wanted to retain
106:47the order of the records in your data?
106:49Oh, this is a 2022 feature.
106:53Add a new column with the road number.
106:55This is in preview right now.
106:58Now, I simply insert the road number and
107:01create it as a new field in just three
107:04clicks.
107:05Yay, finally.
107:10Like a raw idea, right?
107:11Yeah, it's just a road counter.
107:13When I brought in this data, it didn't have
107:15values for each row. And I want to fill in
107:16the missing values.
107:17We clap for those kinds of things.
107:19Again, in just three clicks, I can insert,
107:23select fill, create it as a new field, and
107:28Tableau Prep has automatically filled in
107:30all of the numbers using the previous value
107:31.
107:31That only works if you have specific data
107:33types, right? But dates, it will know it.
107:35Numbers and dates.
107:36Yeah.
107:37Now, there's just one more thing I need to
107:39do to prep the data.
107:39So it's a multi-row formula for those that
107:41have been using Ultrics.
107:42Yeah, the interface for those look like a
107:44slight tweak on what we've already got.
107:47It's not new necessarily, if that makes
107:49sense.
107:49You could already fill dates with numbers
107:52and rows. Two versions.
107:53Multi-row calculations directly in Tableau
107:56Prep.
107:56Here we go.
107:59Where's Carl when you need him?
108:03Dr. Prepper himself.
108:05Carl, if you're on stream, I expect you to
108:09smash the comments with enthusiasm.
108:11Yeah.
108:13I'm moving sum as selected by default, and
108:15selecting each value shows me a preview.
108:17Oh, running sum. Oh, my God.
108:22Wait, you couldn't do this?
108:24No, you couldn't do a running sum easily.
108:26No, you couldn't.
108:27Oh, wow.
108:28It's ridiculous. That's why I'm like this.
108:30I'm like, "Fuck, God."
108:32Now all the flows I have to go and fix are
108:37coming back to me.
108:39Moving average, running sum.
108:41Oh, but that's actually quite cool. It's
108:43like the table calculations basically.
108:44Yeah. It shouldn't be a game changer, but
108:47it is. It is.
108:48Yeah.
108:49This is going to make Prep much, much more
108:54...
108:54But how does it work? Because Prep is
108:57running on a sample of your data.
108:59Well, the same with Row Fill. It's always
109:02worked on a sample.
109:02I think the way it samples sort of fixes
109:06for that.
109:07Okay.
109:10How have I solved that in the past? I think
109:12I've just pushed all the data through it
109:14because I want to see everything coming
109:15through.
109:15Yeah, of course.
109:16It's a good question. It's a good question.
109:18But wait. I was actually interested in the
109:21average range, and that definitely does not
109:23look like an average number.
109:24Ask data. Okay.
109:25Now, we know not everyone speaks data.
109:28Right.
109:29Sometimes asking the right data question or
109:32even knowing where to begin can be
109:34challenging.
109:36That is why we're introducing Phrase
109:38Builder, which offers a guided workflow...
109:40This is not new. This is 2020.2.1. That's
109:45all I'm going to do in the stream. Call out
109:48the stuff that's already been released.
109:50Now, that's looking a lot more like what I
109:53was expecting.
109:53The thing with Ask Data is that for me it's
109:56natural language, so I should see someone
109:59type this in.
109:59Yeah.
110:00But she's clicking, which you can do with
110:02normal Tableau.
110:03Yeah.
110:05So for me Ask Data should literally be like
110:07that you type stuff in.
110:08You get some answers, and then you continue
110:11your analysis after, or you share that with
110:13someone.
110:13I think...
110:14It should be for quick, ad hoc things.
110:16I think you're right, but the problem is
110:18that people didn't know what to ask, so
110:20this is sort of prompting you to click your
110:22way through building the question, if that
110:24makes sense.
110:25And I think it's an important step, because
110:29for those people who aren't data savvy,
110:33knowing what to ask...
110:35I don't mean the question. I'm talking
110:37about the average, the sum broken down by
110:40category.
110:40That kind of stuff is really hard to think
110:42of.
110:42No.
110:43It provides you with suggestions based on
110:47how other people have asked questions on
110:49the same data.
110:50Right.
110:51Let's try one of the suggestions and break
110:55this down by make.
110:56Cool. It looks like Tesla has consistently
111:00been the leader for having the best average
111:02range.
111:02With the new Ask Data's Phrase Builder and
111:05Phrase Recommendation, you have even more
111:08options and flexibility to explore data.
111:11And the best part?
111:13Phrase Builder is already part of the 22.1
111:16release, and Phrase Recommendation will be
111:19available later this year.
111:20Thank you.
111:22Good stuff.
111:27With that, I'd love to introduce you to our
111:30next Dev on stage, John.
111:32Multi-rival prep is huge. Absolutely huge.
111:41Hey, everyone. My name is John, and I'm a
111:45Dev here at Tableau.
111:46I don't know about you, but for the last
111:48couple of years we've been getting a lot of
111:51new hires.
111:51And in this era of remote work, it's hard
111:54to know what team someone is on or where
111:57someone is located.
111:58So...
112:02Skip.
112:03I think we lost some of the notes.
112:05No, no. It comes back. The stream pauses,
112:09then skips, then catches up.
112:12The new hires, they keep on asking, "How do
112:16I use this dashboard?"
112:18Has anyone ever been asked that question
112:20before?
112:20Yeah.
112:21Or maybe you're the ones asking it.
112:24I've made a Wiki, even a how-to video to
112:27help explain all this, but they're not able
112:30to find it.
112:30And the questions just keep on coming.
112:35If only there was something at this
112:37conference that could help make this better
112:39.
112:39But wait. What's that sound? Is that a
112:43little TC excitement I hear?
112:46Woo! Okay. There it is.
112:50What if everything a user needed to get
112:53familiar with the dashboard was in one
112:56place?
112:56This looks familiar.
112:57A place where they could understand the
112:59context of a dashboard, or what a field
113:01means, or whether the data can be trusted
113:04or not.
113:04I like this feature.
113:05Imagine no more. Introducing the data
113:09orientation pane.
113:10Yeah.
113:13Now I can easily include helpful
113:15information for my users right in the
113:16dashboard.
113:16This is such a good feature.
113:19I can add a description, links to external
113:23resources, like my how-to video.
113:25I think you should be joining us again in a
113:28bit.
113:28We get a list of data sources and which
113:31fields are being used.
113:32Absolutely.
113:33And we can also see any interesting outlier
113:37marks, which is being powered by Tableau's
113:40ask data.
113:41Sorry. My feet keep on dropping.
113:43No worries. It's fine.
113:45If I select a viz, we get this applied
113:48filter section that tells me at a glance
113:50how the filters I selected are affecting
113:53the viz that we're selecting.
113:53This is very good.
113:56Woo!
113:57Yeah. More people should be excited about
113:58this.
113:58Guys, ask for it.
113:59Further down, we have this data summary
114:02area that shows me things like how many
114:04records there are or how the data is being
114:08pre-filtered on the viz.
114:10So no more guessing.
114:12We can see which marks are being applied at
114:16every level in one place.
114:18And, Jerry on top, if I select a mark, like
114:23Francois, we get all this insight tailored
114:27at the mark level too.
114:29Yes.
114:31Come on, people.
114:32There you have it. That's the power of the
114:35data orientation.
114:35I think they're not that... I don't think
114:37there's that many people in the audience.
114:39It's literally like maybe four or five
114:41hundred or something.
114:42Yeah.
114:44Woo!
114:45All right. Well, that's a wrap. And we'll
114:50see you guys at the next TC.
114:52Oh, what's that?
114:54You guys want more?
114:56One more thing.
114:58Woo!
115:00He's carrying the character well.
115:03But it's missing something.
115:05Pictures! I want to see people's faces.
115:10Has your work colleague ever used a profile
115:13picture that's not of them? Or even worse,
115:16the default Slack profile picture?
115:19We're in the era of remote work. Text and
115:22bar charts only take us so far.
115:26But adding images in Tableau is harder than
115:29it should be.
115:30We've heard from so many of you on the
115:33Tableau idea forums, and it's a pain to do
115:36this for things like product catalogs or
115:38employee listings, using things like custom
115:41shapes for action URL hacks to bring your
115:43images in one by one.
115:44Love it.
115:45And if you want to keep your images updated
115:48, good luck. You've got to do that work all
115:52over again.
115:52Oh, with shapes, right?
115:54Look over here. I have this profile image
115:58field that contains links to everyone's
116:01lovely mugs.
116:02With one click, I can drag this onto my viz
116:07and boom!
116:08Image links! Oh, my word!
116:11Image roll feature!
116:15Woo! Give it up for the devs!
116:17In FMCG, that is huge.
116:20Now you can just bring in your field of
116:25image links and bam! Dynamically rendered
116:29images in Tableau! It's finally here!
116:32That is really good. That is really good.
116:35There you have it folks. The data
116:38orientation pane and image rolls are two
116:40new features that Tableau is bringing you
116:42to help people better see and understand
116:45their data.
116:45That is...
116:46Thank you very much.
116:47When? When?
116:49Back to you, great work!
116:51Yeah, when? That's a good point. When?
116:57Alright, I hope you liked that keynote.
117:01This is it. Now have an amazing Tableau
117:04conference.
117:04That was really good. That was a good final
117:07night. That was a good final night.
117:08Yeah, it's good that the Datsun stage is at
117:10the end.
117:10Check out Hannah Fry's keynote. Join us for
117:13Data Night Out tomorrow night.
117:14Lace up your shoes. Show up at the crack of
117:17dawn tomorrow. I'm actually running.
117:19Almost the first. And most of all, let's
117:24turn data to 11 and let's rock out together
117:28. Have a great Tableau conference.
117:30Yeah, exactly.
117:31Thank you everybody.
117:32I'll turn this down.
117:40Well, what did everyone think? I think
117:43everyone was... some people were quite
117:44excited about these later speeches, I think
117:46.
117:46Yeah, yeah. So that final one is huge for
117:49fast moving consumer goods.
117:51Anyone who works in retail, anyone who
117:54works in gaming, anyone who works in any
117:56sort of digital asset where it helps to see
117:59the product alongside the data.
118:01That is a stellar, stellar thing. That and
118:06multi-row from prep as well. Two really,
118:09really, really good features.
118:11So let's... Oh, there's a little bit of a
118:13...
118:13Oh, what's this?
118:15Hold on. There's a little bit of after...
118:18after... this is new.
118:19Hmm.
118:20Let's see.
118:21You can see people at the back. They walk
118:23out of the keynote.
118:23Data village. Maybe you'll say data at the
118:25end of this. We just finished the keynote.
118:26Data village.
118:27I was watching it just over here. It is
118:30freaking awesome. All the really cool
118:31announcements that were just made.
118:33So if you missed it, key highlights for you
118:36to remember. We've got Tableau Cloud, we've
118:39got Data Stories, and we've got Model
118:42Builder, which is really, really cool.
118:43I don't know about you, but I'm really
118:45excited about all these really amazing
118:47announcements.
118:47And don't worry if you missed out. You can
118:50always catch up on it later.
118:52Some of the highlights for me from that as
118:55well. There was a performance, which was
118:58amazing.
118:59I definitely really want to rewatch that
119:02again.
119:02Okay. Right.
119:03We've also seen Francois rocking it out in
119:07a data punk rock situation where he had a
119:10whole guitar on everything. It was pretty
119:13hilarious.
119:13It's pretty good.
119:14And at the end of that, it was Devs On
119:16Stage, which is, as you heard from Ravi
119:18before, a community fan favorite.
119:20Absolutely.
119:21So I really, really enjoyed all of that,
119:23and I hope all of you did as well.
119:24But you're probably wondering, what's with
119:27this data village? If you've never been to
119:29Tableau conference before, I'm going to
119:31tell you all about it.
119:32So, data village, we can see around me.
119:34That's pretty cool.
119:35We're a bit early, but it's going to start
119:38filling up.
119:38Let's turn down the volume.
119:39Yeah, let's turn down the volume for this.
119:41So the first one, the top one at the moment
119:44, says, "Want to tell my company to drop
119:46Power BI?"
119:46Yes, you can. But also, they have different
119:51purposes. So I would definitely try to
119:53incorporate both products.
119:54Yeah, exactly.
119:56Yeah, Sophie says she's great. We agree.
120:00Yeah, absolutely.
120:01So, gosh. Overall, I think that was really,
120:05really good.
120:06The higher level message for me is the
120:08Salesforce stuff did not land.
120:10It felt like Mark's section of the keynote
120:15was a little bit of Tableau, but done in a
120:19Salesforce style.
120:20And I don't think it landed as well as
120:23Francois' section, which brought the
120:25customer in, but really painted a story.
120:27The piece about Data Rockstars, I think
120:29that's something we can all relate to. A
120:31lot of us, at least in the community, if
120:33you, however you describe the community,
120:35have picked up Tableau through moments like
120:38what Francois was describing. So it's super
120:40, super useful.
120:41And then ending on Devs on the Stage, I
120:43think, was really, really important because
120:45I think some of those features are things
120:47we've sort of complained about for a while.
120:48Low-hanging fruit, as it were.
120:50Multi-row calculations is one of those
120:52things that sort of separates prep and alt-
120:54tricks a little bit.
120:55So for people who use those tools, that
120:58sort of brings them closer.
120:59I don't think it makes them the same. It
121:01just brings them a little bit closer.
121:02There's more you can now do in prep once
121:05that lands. We don't know when.
121:06So, yeah. I'll always caveat by saying that
121:11everything shown at Keynote doesn't always
121:14end up in the product.
121:15Just because we saw it today doesn't mean
121:17it will end up in the product.
121:18Well, it ends maybe in a different version,
121:21right?
121:21So some of the stuff that they showed now
121:25is kind of tweaked and then you see it
121:27later on.
121:28Exactly.
121:29But no, I think this is some good features
121:31like Tableau Prep. Personally, I've not
121:34really used the product that much, but that
121:36's because I use other tools to prepare my
121:38data.
121:38You're big on DBT, right?
121:40And alt-tricks, of course.
121:42Yeah.
121:43So maybe you should pick it up. The good
121:46thing though is that it nicely natively
121:49runs in the browser now in Tableau Server.
121:51So actually getting to prepping your data
121:54is a lot quicker than having to open up a
121:57desktop application.
121:58Yeah.
121:59Yeah. The Salesforce pitch call is saying
122:02the same Salesforce pitch seems to be
122:04selling to Tableau customers rather than
122:06selling Tableau to Salesforce customers.
122:08Right. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
122:10True.
122:11That's about right.
122:12Yeah.
122:13And they should have taken that to Sales
122:17force conference.
122:18Yeah, exactly. Yeah, this integration
122:22between the two products is something they
122:25still need to figure out.
122:27We are talking to mainly Tableau people
122:30here, right?
122:30Yeah.
122:31So that's why people are like, "Hey, what's
122:34going on?"
122:35But yeah.
122:39But the other interesting thing was I think
122:44the customer, the choice of customer
122:47messaging, I think the one that landed was
122:49the Foodbank.
122:49The first two just, JetBlue was a good
122:53Tableau cloud story.
122:55I was not sold at all by the standard chart
122:59ered sort of example.
123:00They didn't really say how. It was just, "
123:03We do it. Here it is."
123:04Yeah.
123:05No statistics, no sort of evidence, no data
123:07behind it, right?
123:07And we're a data audience. We want to see
123:10the data behind that.
123:10So yeah.
123:12To me, the structure of this keynote was a
123:15bit, so Andy Kotbrief came on stage, but he
123:18didn't do anything, right?
123:18Right. Yeah.
123:19He was just like running around.
123:20He didn't compare anything else. Yeah.
123:21So he didn't do anything.
123:22And then we had Mark Nelson trying to chat
123:25to some customers, which is great.
123:27Customer chats are very important.
123:30But they've also at the back of those
123:33customer sessions, stories,
123:36they added new features.
123:38So it didn't feel like one complete keynote
123:42.
123:42It was more like, "Hey, we have some new
123:45features which we'll put at the end."
123:47So yeah.
123:48Then to me, it was a bit unstructured
123:51because maybe they wanted those three
123:54features that they mentioned about the
123:56model builder, for example, to be big.
123:58But it didn't land in the same way as, for
124:01example, DAS on stage.
124:01If you show something simple as, not simple
124:04, but as like, "Hey, add a row number to
124:05Tableau Prep."
124:06And everyone's like, "Yeah, we need this.
124:08This is going to improve my life tomorrow."
124:10"This is going to improve my work tomorrow
124:13."
124:13Whilst what we see with that model builder
124:16is like, "Hey, we really need to figure out
124:17how that works."
124:17"Is there licensing?"
124:19All of those things.
124:21Yeah.
124:22There's a huge, I think it's a huge
124:25challenge for Tableau going forward where I
124:27think it's traditional customers, the
124:30author.
124:30That's the person who builds dashboards.
124:33They're pivoting a lot of their features
124:36away from that audience.
124:37They're trying to build a lot of AI,
124:39machine learning, storytelling capabilities
124:42to enable the non-author.
124:43And everyone in the audience is not that
124:46audience, right?
124:47The non-authors don't tune into conference.
124:49So I always worry when they sort of lead
124:51with those in conference because of course,
124:53like, you know, I'm an author.
124:55Why would I get excited?
124:56I know how to do all this.
124:57I can answer my own questions.
124:58That's sort of what comes to mind.
125:00And then the other customer is like the
125:02Salesforce customer who's supposed to get
125:06the value of Tableau, but maybe doesn't get
125:07it yet.
125:07And then vice versa, the Tableau user who
125:10maybe has access to Salesforce, who doesn't
125:12get the value of Salesforce.
125:13And then there's the other customer, which
125:15is the person who has both, but doesn't
125:17think they work well together.
125:18Yeah.
125:20If you saw your poll, like your pie chart
125:23thing, one of the things that had the
125:25lowest amount of votes is around, was it
125:28like,
125:28I want to see features for dashboard
125:31consumers.
125:31Yeah, exactly.
125:32Exactly.
125:33And yeah, that's definitely a thing.
125:35Like this is a product conference.
125:38Like people who use Tableau as such, they
125:42don't really go to those places.
125:44So yeah, as you can see.
125:47Oh, wait, people.
125:48Yeah.
125:49So features that make my life easier as a
125:52consumer only had two votes.
125:54So yeah, it might also be like where you
125:56drop this particular service.
125:58Yeah, exactly.
125:59Within the communities.
126:01So of course, all the other features came
126:05up.
126:05Carl's asking a good question here.
126:07Desktop seemed very absent in this keynote.
126:09Was this a surprise?
126:12I don't think so.
126:15I don't think so for two reasons.
126:18I think a lot of all the demos were in the
126:21browser.
126:21That was sort of something that I noticed.
126:25They didn't open a desktop product
126:28whatsoever.
126:28I think that's a very deliberate play by
126:31Tableau to sort of get you thinking about
126:34the cloud
126:34and everything working in the browser and
126:37the cloud because that's where they're
126:40heading.
126:40We didn't see any authoring features in
126:43desktop other than the data modeling
126:45features.
126:45The data modeling feature was the only
126:47thing and that was a pretty important
126:49feature.
126:49But I think with desktop, it's quite a
126:52mature product.
126:53Is it feature complete?
126:56I think you were talking about this, Andre.
126:58Is desktop close to being feature complete
127:01from Tableau's perspective?
127:03That's the key question I'm asking.
127:06Not do we think it's feature complete.
127:08From Tableau's perspective, is it close to
127:10being feature complete?
127:12And that's why we don't see much about it.
127:14I don't know. I don't know the answer to
127:16that.
127:16Again, with the Salesforce acquisition,
127:20Salesforce was born in the cloud, right?
127:23Whilst we as Tableau users have been using
127:25Tableau desktop a lot and then when we're
127:28kind of ready with our dashboards, we
127:30publish it.
127:30So we're very used to publishing a finished
127:34state onto our users, even though there's
127:36some iteration, of course, happening.
127:38But now they're moving more and more to,
127:41for example, Tableau prep.
127:42I would not use the desktop product because
127:45I know, hey, if it runs on Tableau Online,
127:46Tableau Server,
127:47there's a lot more kind of power behind it
127:50so I can use a better product in the
127:52browser.
127:52And I think that's why we should think
127:54about this.
127:54They're not desktop features. They're
127:57offering features.
127:59A desktop plus web edit is called offering.
128:02So we should see those as new features.
128:05I think the other thing I'm going to make a
128:08video about this at some point, but we
128:10should stop calling Tableau the company
128:12Tableau.
128:13And just think of Tableau as a product
128:16because I think when we say Tableau are
128:19going to do this, Tableau are going to do
128:21that,
128:21we're actually letting Salesforce get away
128:25with it.
128:25We need to start really appealing to Sales
128:27force.
128:27We need to start talking like Salesforce
128:30customers and saying we're not happy with
128:32Salesforce's direction with Tableau.
128:33That's what we need to start saying for it
128:35to start to matter to Salesforce generally
128:38speaking.
128:38And I think because we're so used to
128:40talking directly with Tableau product
128:42managers and developers and so on,
128:44it's just a habit that's going to take a
128:46while to get used to.
128:47But I think it's going to be a really
128:49important distinction going forward to make
128:52sure that we continue to push those
128:54features that we want to see.
128:55Well, the things like when I went to Trail
128:58blazer, the conference a few weeks ago,
129:00and there were people from MuleSoft, from
129:02Slack and from Salesforce,
129:03they were all kind of talking about the
129:06integration from tools that Salesforce
129:08acquired, say five years ago,
129:10like Commerce Cloud hasn't made it into
129:14like a real product integration.
129:17But we shouldn't see that as necessarily
129:19bad.
129:19We should start thinking about Salesforce
129:23not as an integrated platform,
129:24even though they want to talk about the 360
129:26,
129:26we should think Salesforce as a company who
129:31has kind of loosely connected tools
129:34and highly specialist users can connect
129:38them.
129:38But very often, you don't need to
129:40communicate because not all MuleSoft
129:43customers are Tableau customers,
129:44not all Slack customers are Salesforce
129:47customers.
129:47So as long as we recognize that that is not
129:50a problem and we see it as more like an
129:52opportunity,
129:52then I think that's something you need to
129:55think about.
129:56I've dropped a link to the blog post from
130:00Francois,
130:00in which he kind of summarizes all the new
130:02features in the chat.
130:03So I'm not sure if you can drop this in the
130:05chat somewhere.
130:05Yeah, yeah, yeah, I can do that too.
130:07Let me do that.
130:08So everyone that's still tuning in can see
130:11the blog post from Francois
130:12in which they kind of summarize everything
130:15that's been announced today.
130:17If I drop it in the chat, it's just going
130:19to appear as a really long link.
130:21Yeah, there we go. Cool.
130:25It's posted to YouTube, Twitch and Facebook
130:27.
130:27LinkedIn can't accept links.
130:30That's a pun.
130:32But yeah.
130:35That's a really interesting, really
130:39interesting,
130:39really interesting to see how this goes.
130:41I think just looking at Carl's post here, "
130:43feature complete.
130:45Is it too complex?
130:46It takes so much training for people to be
130:49able to author good analytical content.
130:50Features/functionality needs to become
130:53easier and that would almost be new."
130:55Yeah, I think you're right.
130:57I think it's a different product entirely,
130:59right?
130:59Potentially where they're going with our
131:01stator, right?
131:02A different way of building dashboards that
131:04's a little bit more accessible to people.
131:06Maybe that's not desktop whatsoever.
131:10Another question here from a comment.
131:13"Do you know any Tableau developers who are
131:16clamoring for the modeling features
131:17or is this something being pushed by Sales
131:21force?"
131:21I think what we saw today was the third re
131:27branding of Einstein Analytics, right?
131:29And the first two times it didn't work for
131:33obvious reasons.
131:34We had to go to Salesforce for the first
131:36one.
131:36The second one, it was a very Salesforce
131:39centric feature.
131:40It just didn't land.
131:41This time around they gave us a Tableau
131:44feeling skin for the same functionality.
131:46I think when that feature comes out, I want
131:49to double check that I don't need a Sales
131:52force
131:53account to use those features because if
131:55that is the case, then okay,
131:57maybe I think that's a much better
131:59integration.
132:00But I think the modeling aspects, people do
132:05ask for modeling capabilities in Tableau.
132:08It's not a common ask.
132:09It's quite a niche ask.
132:10It's probably as niche as something like
132:13better mapping capabilities.
132:15If you're still asking for that now, you're
132:17trying to get closer to something
132:18that's more specific for mapping as a
132:20simple example.
132:21Data modeling, I think, is that kind of
132:23thing.
132:23It's not a mainstream feature, but it is an
132:26important corner of the product.
132:27So it is needed.
132:29The people who are asking for it probably
132:31know exactly what they want,
132:32and they probably don't think anything we
132:34've seen today is good enough or advanced
132:36enough.
132:36So you're never going to win in that
132:40respect as well.
132:42Anyone else surprised that Tableau Acceler
132:44ators was given such a place
132:46of prominence at the beginning of the
132:48keynote?
132:48I'm not surprised, no.
132:52The Tableau economy feels like one of those
132:58plays from Tableau
132:59that they really need to work for some
133:02reason.
133:02I can't place why, but...
133:05Well, the thing with Salesforce is that
133:09Salesforce has this epic change.
133:11So when Salesforce acquired Tableau, Mark
133:17Benioff was like,
133:18"Hey, what is your marketplace where I can
133:23use this, put the contents,
133:24and, for example, share it with more users
133:27?"
133:27And that wasn't really there. It didn't
133:30exist.
133:31We had the Tableau Extensions Gallery,
133:33which was very much for extensions,
133:35and you had like 15 little products in that
133:38.
133:38So it's now pushing more and more. They're
133:41called accelerators,
133:42which I'm not sure if that's the right word
133:45because, as we all know...
133:46It's called templates.
133:47Yeah, just call them templates.
133:49Just keep it simple.
133:50I'm not sure if they will accelerate your
133:54work.
133:54Yeah, so...
133:57Yeah, it's a bit of a weird one.
134:00Okay, someone's going to sleep.
134:03Well, good night.
134:08Take care. Thank you for joining, by the
134:10way.
134:10Thank you for staying late.
134:11Yeah, thank you for joining.
134:12You know, staying involved.
134:14We're probably going to give it another 10
134:16minutes,
134:16and then we ourselves will wrap up as well.
134:18And we'll be back tomorrow with a
134:21livestream for IronViz,
134:22which is a little bit later than today's
134:25livestream,
134:25but it will still be fun.
134:27Talking about IronViz, right,
134:29do any of the new features that we saw
134:31today ever make it into IronViz?
134:33So I'd even go back and say,
134:35"Did any of the features from the last year
134:38make it into IronViz?"
134:39Because that, to me, is like the real
134:42showcase
134:42of whether the desktop capabilities are
134:46sort of coming forward.
134:47So what will be interesting to see from
134:53tomorrow's IronViz is exactly that.
134:54Did anything in the last year's worth of
134:57releases
134:57help make that sort of jump go faster?
135:00Next year, I want to see that link image
135:03feature
135:03help do something incredible, right?
135:06Because if you have time to make assets
135:08ahead of time,
135:08like icons and stuff,
135:09and you can drop them in an S3 bucket,
135:12create the links for them in advance,
135:14put that into your data model,
135:15and just build a data model that has all
135:18those links beautifully built in,
135:19and then just load them like that.
135:21Game changer, another game changer, right?
135:23That will be when people realize that
135:27feature is really, really cool.
135:29So yeah.
135:30Really interesting.
135:34I have mixed feelings.
135:35What would you give this keynote out of 10,
135:38Andrei?
135:38Put you on the spot.
135:39I have a score.
135:40The score out of 10.
135:42Score out of 10.
135:43We do out of 10, not out of 5.
135:46Well, I'm already really excited that this
135:50is an in-person keynote
135:50that we can attend, so it'll definitely...
135:54I think a 7 or an 8.
135:567 or 8.
135:57I was going to give it a 6.5,
136:00because I think if you'd cut the keynote in
136:05two,
136:05and then you'd done the devs on stage thing
136:07and the keynote separate,
136:09the keynote would have been even lower
136:12because I think it didn't hit the note with
136:15the community.
136:16It didn't hit the kind of energy that we're
136:20used to,
136:20if that makes sense, right?
136:21And I don't think it was anything to do
136:24with the way it was presented.
136:26It was just purely the messages just went
136:28landing, in my opinion.
136:30Well, we don't know, so we didn't see how
136:34many people were in the crowd, right?
136:35We've been to Tableau conferences,
136:37where I remember a Vegas one where we were
136:40sitting in an arena
136:41where there's thousands of people.
136:44Things like that land a lot better.
136:46Now what we saw at the front was the fancy
136:49seats
136:49that were probably for some visionaries or
136:51some ambassadors, I think.
136:52But maybe there were like 400 or 500 people
136:55behind them.
136:55So we don't know, right?
136:57But you can't measure it based on how many
137:00people were there,
137:01because how many people attend the
137:03conference neither...
137:04It doesn't really factor into this.
137:06Did the keynote...
137:08I assume there's no one in the room
137:12and you're just talking to people in
137:14general.
137:14Did the keynote hit the kind of levels that
137:18we're used to
137:19at Tableau conference in terms of trust and
137:21confidence?
137:21I'm not sure.
137:23Yeah, the thing is I'm monitoring the Slack
137:26channel as well,
137:26which is very difficult because it's very
137:29spammy.
137:29But there is kind of an overall kind of
137:32positive feeling there.
137:34But again, the same as what we were kind of
137:37saying
137:37around the Salesforce messaging doesn't
137:40really land.
137:41But yeah, I think for me the most positive
137:47thing
137:47is that we're back in person.
137:49Yeah, exactly. Don't get me wrong.
137:51I don't want to take anything away from the
137:54community aspect of it.
137:54I just want to look at them as distinct
137:56separate things.
137:57Remember what I said.
137:59I want to critique Salesforce, not Tableau.
138:01Yeah, yeah.
138:03This is a Salesforce keynote in my opinion
138:05and Salesforce organizing this keynote
138:07and if constraints are put on the keynote
138:10that it has to be done in a certain way
138:12that it doesn't land with us as Tableau
138:15users of the product,
138:15then I think, yeah, you know, it is where
138:19it is.
138:19So yeah, like I said, I'm not critiquing
138:22the delivery.
138:23The delivery was great as always.
138:24It's pretty tough. You know this, Andre.
138:26It's pretty tough to get on a stage in
138:28front of even 10 people.
138:29I struggle with that.
138:30Leave alone four or 500 people in that.
138:33Absolutely nail it.
138:34I remember.
138:35[Laughter]
138:37All the people with delivery was absolutely
138:39fantastic.
138:39I'm just talking about the key messages
138:41that they chose to sort of give out there.
138:43I think Salesforce could have done a better
138:45job
138:45of making those land with people.
138:49Yeah, so there's a good point someone, Rod
138:52erick, says.
138:52Like the conference was a bit rushed
138:54if they made it later in the year.
138:56So in September, there's going to be Dream
139:00force,
139:00which is Salesforce takeover of Central
139:04Downtown San Francisco,
139:06which is where Tableau will be featured as
139:10well.
139:10Francois has already mentioned that
139:13publicly on Twitter as well
139:14that there will be some great announcements
139:17there.
139:17So I would definitely keep an eye on Dream
139:21force.
139:21I think it's September 22nd.
139:24Also, there will be some road shows.
139:26So I have a feeling that they're moving a
139:29lot of content
139:29into different conferences.
139:31So there's the road show in London next
139:34month, I think.
139:34The month after that is in New York.
139:37So they're spreading things out.
139:39So yeah.
139:41So I have another theory as well about this
139:44conference,
139:44which is I think we are being softened up
139:47for a move to Dreamforce
139:49because I just can't get the stage set up.
139:53The whole orchestration of this felt very
139:58much like Salesforce.
139:58And I think that's semi-deliberate,
140:00but also it doesn't make sense to have the
140:04features
140:04and the conference at this time of year.
140:06I mean, right now we've also got the Altery
140:09x conference going on.
140:10If you're an Alteryx user, you'll know the
140:12conference is going on.
140:13May doesn't sit in terms of the product
140:16development.
140:17That's not when typically things are coming
140:19out.
140:19Normally, the 2020, the third or the second
140:23release
140:23is normally the big hitter release.
140:25And then after that, you have sort of the
140:27quieter releases
140:27right?
140:29Yeah. The thing though is that
140:32we've not had an in-person conference for a
140:35while
140:35and a lot of other technology companies
140:38have announced like Snowflake.
140:40Last week we had, oh god, now I forgot the
140:46name.
140:46The one with Ask Data. They're only selling
140:50Ask Data.
140:50ThoughtSpot.
140:52Yeah. So they have their own conferences as
140:55well.
140:55And I think there was a little bit of
140:58pressure
140:58to host this Tableau conference.
141:02Interesting.
141:03Yeah.
141:04Interesting. Okay. Well, we'll see. We'll
141:08see.
141:08No, Ask Data doesn't have a conference.
141:11Sorry.
141:11I meant like ThoughtSpot.
141:13I always compare ThoughtSpot with Ask Data
141:15and I forgot about the name of the product.
141:17ThoughtSpot is basically Ask Data
141:20like focused as the leading part of the
141:23product.
141:23Yeah.
141:24Yeah. ThoughtSpot, like I caught a little
141:27bit of
141:27what they did last week and they announced
141:29like a new licensing model which is kind of
141:32cool.
141:32Yeah. Thanks everyone for joining.
141:36So yeah. It's been pretty good. We've been
141:38going
141:38for two and a half hours almost. My word.
141:41That really has flown by. But it's been
141:43super fun.
141:44We're back again tomorrow. So that will be
141:47interesting.
141:48Keep the comments coming in.
141:51Are we going to the sessions?
141:52Yes, we will tune into the sessions.
141:54I tend to do the American sessions.
141:56Although depending on where you're watching
141:58,
141:58you're probably going to be either going to
142:01bed right now
142:01and watching the sessions in another time
142:04zone tomorrow
142:04or watching them straight away now.
142:06So whatever sessions you're going to do
142:08that.
142:08I'll be doing other videos and live streams
142:11throughout the conference just randomly
142:13essentially.
142:14I did a Tableau Public Tour.
142:16I completely forgot to even do the visual
142:20effects, Andre.
142:20Oh my word.
142:21Yeah, we have not had any visual effects or
142:24sound effects.
142:25The sound effects.
142:26We need to fix that for tomorrow.
142:28The sound effects stop working.
142:29I'm playing one now and nothing is coming
142:32through.
142:33The visual effects will definitely have
142:35some for Ironviz as well.
142:36So be sure to check that out.
142:39What is the secret of calculation in Table
142:41au?
142:41I think we've had this question twice.
142:45There is no secret of calculations in Table
142:48au.
142:48The key thing is just understanding how to
142:52do them
142:52and what the functions that you can put in
142:54a calculations work.
142:56And once you've done that, you're pretty
142:58much good to go.
142:59Tons of people do content on that as well.
143:01So I'm not going to go through that list,
143:04but yeah.
143:04Order of operations.
143:06If you know the order of operations in
143:08Tableau, you know a lot.
143:10Yeah, exactly.
143:11The other secret is just get your data prep
143:13done
143:13before you put it in Tableau.
143:16No, we can model it now.
143:17We can model it now in Tableau.
143:20I love it.
143:22I'm going to give a specific shout out to
143:25you, Andre,
143:25because I think your resources are
143:28absolutely fantastic.
143:29Andre has an incredible website.
143:31I'm personally very jealous of Andre's
143:34website
143:34because it showcases pretty much what Andre
143:37does.
143:37He covers a lot of things.
143:39DBT, Snowflake, AWS, the whole lot.
143:42And you also make videos yourself on
143:45YouTube.
143:45So definitely go to Andre's website.
143:47Check out everything that it does.
143:48It's all here, whether he's coding,
143:51teaching, writing.
143:53It's all really, really, really good stuff.
143:55So I didn't want to end the stream without
143:58giving you a proper shout out as well.
143:59Cool. Thank you.
144:01Definitely be back tomorrow.
144:02Absolutely. Absolutely.
144:04Yeah. Thank you.
144:05Wherever you joined in, I think what
144:07everyone did
144:07is they left LinkedIn and came to YouTube.
144:10Okay.
144:11LinkedIn is only till six o'clock, right?
144:14That's when you're working in and
144:16afterwards you relax on YouTube.
144:17You can have LinkedIn open at work
144:19and then you can go home and watch it on
144:20Twitch or something.
144:21So either way, wherever you watch, thank
144:23you.
144:23I think we had about 100 people on YouTube
144:26and 50 or so more people spread across all
144:29the platforms as well.
144:29So thank you very much.
144:31I'm going to call it a day there.
144:33Thank you for watching.
144:34You can add comments to the video once it's
144:37live on YouTube.
144:38So go there for everything if you need it.
144:41But yeah, thank you for joining us on
144:43Twitch.
144:43It's my second stream on Twitch, so...
144:46Amazing.
144:47Cool.
144:48There you go. All right.
144:49Take it easy, everyone.
144:50See you tomorrow.
144:51Thank you. Take it easy, yeah?
144:53Wait.
144:54Okay.
144:56Thank you.
145:00[ Silence ]
Join Andre & Tim as they react live to the Tableau keynote at the Tableau 2022 conference in las Vegas. Share feedback and Suggestions: https://tableautim.canny.io/suggestions