Projects Category: Standard
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The Situation:
Market Mindz is a fictional marketing data by a firm called Market Mindz that specializes in Food and Beverage products. The dataset contains information about marketing strategies, customers, and products. Our goal is to transform their raw data into meaningful insights and recommendations for management. More specifically, we need to:
- Track KPIs (customers, average income, online/in-store purchases, average age etc.)
- Compare campaigns performance
- Purchase drivers
The Data:
We’ve been given a collection of raw data (CSV files), which contain information about products, platform (online, in-store), customers, and campaign data, spanning from the years 2012 to 2014.
The Task:
We are tasked with using solely Microsoft Power BI to:
- Connect and transform/shape the data in Power BI’s back-end using Power Query
- Build a relational data model, linking the 8 fact and dimension tables
- Create calculated columns and measures with DAX
- Design a multi-page interactive dashboard to visualize the data in Power BI’s front-end
The Process:
1. Connecting and Shaping the Data
Firstly, we imported the data into the Power Query editor to transform and clean it. The next process involved:
Removing Duplicates: Duplicate entries were removed from the dataset to ensure accurate analysis.
Handling Null or Missing Values: For some columns, missing values were replaced with defaults or averages. Null values in “key” columns were removed using filters.
Data Type Conversion: Columns were converted to appropriate data types to ensure consistency. Dates were converted to Date type, numerical columns to Decimal or Whole Numbers, and text columns to Text.
Column Splitting and Merging: Several columns were split to separate concatenated information, or merged to create a unified name (such as Customer Full Name).
Standardizing Date Formats: All date columns were formatted consistently to facilitate time-based analysis. This step was important for ensuring accurate time-series analysis in Power BI.
Removing Unnecessary Columns: Irrelevant columns were removed to streamline the dataset. This helped focus the analysis on relevant information, reducing memory usage and improving performance.
2. Building a Relational Data Model
Secondly, we modeled the data to create a snowflake schema. This process involved creating relationships between the dimension and fact tables, ensuring cardinalities were one-to-many relationships.
Enabling active or inactive relationships, creating hierarchies for fields such as Geography (Continent-Country-Region) and Date (Start of Year-Start of Month-Start of Week-Date), and finally hiding the foreign keys from report view to ease the data analysis and visualization steps and reduce errors.

3. Creating Calculated Columns
In Power Query editor, we created calculated columns such as customer age bins, birth year, amount juices, amount fruit, amount meat etc.
4. Visualizing the Data
The final step of the project was creating a multi-page interactive dashboard, including a range of visuals and KPIs that could serve management and lead to informed decision-making. We used several visuals and tools to demonstrate and visualize the data across the 3 report pages, including KPI cards, line and bar charts, matrices, gauge charts, maps, donut charts, and slicers. We made sure the report was fully interactive and simple to navigate, with icons used to enable filters, cancel filters, and guide users to each report page with ease. Features such as drill-through, bookmarks, parameters, and tooltips were also used throughout the dashboard, further enhancing its usefulness and impact on management.
Executive Dashboard: The first report page provides a high-level view of Market Mindz overall performance throughout different campaigns. We used card visuals to present Key Performance Indicators such as overall sales for juices, meat, baked, fish, fruit and sweet products. Using clustered columns charts, stacked bar charts and clustered bar charts to find out campaigns with the most purchases, campaigns with highest revenue, product sales by each campaign, preferred platform in each campaign, revenue by product, and preferred platform by buyers.

Buyer Composition: The second report page throws a light on buyers’ behavior. It lists Key Performance Indicators like total customers, average income, average age, purchases from different sources like online, in-store etc., and monthly website visits.
To further study about customers, we have used bar chart to list the count of buyers by education level, column chart to visualize average income of customers by each campaign, column chart for count of customers by marital status, donut charts to display whether customers had kids/teens at home and the most interesting chart here is the stacked column chart that visualizes purchase preferences with age.

Purchase Drivers: The third report page focuses on finding about what led the buyers to make a purchase. Here we used Key Influencers visual that uses AI to find out keys factors that drive an event.
The first visual shows the key factor that led a customer to become part of a campaign is Income. Others contributing factors are also shown in the visual.
The second visual shows the key factor that contributed in increase or decrease of sales. The visual clearly shows that the main factor that leads to decrease of sales in income below average.

Oodles of Noodles (Power BI)
The Situation:
Oodles of Noodles is a fictional collection of data related to its sales across the United States. It encompasses various attributes, such as revenue, customer preferences, shipment time, etc. Our goal is to transform their raw data into meaningful insights and recommendations for management. More specifically, we need to:
- Track KPIs (revenue, meal kits sold, shipments, customer rating)
- Compare regional and state-level performance
- Identify high-value subscription plans and cuisine types
The Data:
We’ve been given a collection of raw data (CSV files), which contains information about shipments, returns, meal kits, customers, sales territories, and reviews, in a total of 9 tables, from the years 2020-21.
The Task:
We are tasked with using solely Microsoft Power BI to:
- Connect and transform/shape the data in Power BI’s back-end using Power Query
- Build a relational data model, linking the 9 fact and dimension tables
- Create calculated columns and measures with DAX
- Design a multi-page interactive dashboard to visualize the data in Power BI’s front-end
The Process:
1. Connecting and Shaping the Data
Firstly, we imported the data into the Power Query editor to transform and clean it. The process involved:
Removing Duplicates: Duplicate entries were removed from the dataset to ensure accurate analysis.
Handling Null or Missing Values: For some columns, missing values were replaced with defaults or averages. Null values in “key” columns were removed using filters.
Data Type Conversion: Columns were converted to appropriate data types to ensure consistency. Dates were converted to Date type, numerical columns to Decimal or Whole Numbers, and text columns to Text.
Column Splitting and Merging: Several columns were split to separate concatenated information or merged to create a unified name (such as Customer Full Name).
Standardizing Date Formats: All date columns were formatted consistently to facilitate time-based analysis. This step was important for ensuring accurate time-series analysis in Power BI.
Removing Unnecessary Columns: Irrelevant columns were removed to streamline the dataset. This helped focus the analysis on relevant information, reducing memory usage and improving performance.
2. Building a Relational Data Model
Secondly, we modeled the data to create a snowflake schema. This process involved creating relationships between the dimension and fact tables, ensuring cardinalities were one-to-many relationships.
We enabled active or inactive relationships, creating hierarchies for fields such as Geography (Continent-Country-Region) and Date (Start of Year-Start of Month-Start of Week-Date), and finally hid the foreign keys from the report view to ease the data analysis and visualization steps and reduce errors.

3. Creating Calculated Columns and Measures
Next, we used Power BI’s front-end formula language, DAX, to analyze our relational data model and create several calculated columns (for filtering) and measures (for aggregation) that we could later reference and use when analyzing and visualizing the data. We used calculated columns to determine whether a customer is active and a loyal member. The list of calculated measures includes key information on revenue, total shipments, reviews, SLA, and more.

4. Visualizing the Data
The final step of the project was creating a multi-page interactive dashboard, including a range of visuals and KPIs that could serve management and lead to informed decision-making. We used several visuals and tools to demonstrate and visualize the data across 4 report pages, including KPI cards, line and bar charts, matrices, gauge charts, and tree maps. We ensured the report was fully interactive and simple to navigate, with icons used to enable filters, cancel filters, and guide users to each report page with ease. Features such as drill-through, bookmarks, parameters, and tooltips were also used throughout the dashboard, further enhancing its usefulness and impact on management.
Executive Dashboard: The first report page provides a high-level view of Oodles of Noodles’ overall performance. We used card visuals to present Key Performance Indicators such as overall revenue, number of meal kits sold, total shipments, and average rating by customers. We also included additional cards to compare current and previous month performances, providing insights into recent trends, a clustered bar chart to show revenue by region, a gauge chart to display ratings by customers, and a tree map to display the top 5 subscription plans by revenue.

Region: The second report page is a drill-through page by region to further analyze the performance in a specific region. It consists of a bar chart that shows revenue by states in a region, a matrix to display cuisine types by the number of meal kits sold and average ratings, a gauge chart to analyze the SLA policy implementation, and a line chart that visualizes the trending revenue from 2020-2021 and highlights long-term performance. This offers insight into Oodles of Noodles’ sales distribution by region and state.

Subscription: The third report page focuses on detailed subscription-level analysis. It displays information such as average monthly shipping fee and total meal kits by subscription plan, a clustered bar chart to visualize loyalty member revenue by state, a matrix that displays the top 30 customers by revenue for the subscription plan, a decomposition tree that displays meal kits by region and month, and a line chart that displays month-on-month revenue trends for the years 2020-2021.

Customer Detail: The fourth and final report page provides deeper insight into customer behavior and value. It uses gauge charts to show revenue comparison for the current and last month and shipments for the current vs last month, a donut chart to show delayed vs on-time delivery to customers, a matrix for the number of meal kits, revenue, and shipments for customers, and a line chart that displays month-on-month revenue.

Adventure Works (Power BI)
The Situation:
Adventure Works is a fictional global manufacturing company that produces cycling equipment and accessories, with activities stretching across three continents (North America, Europe, and Oceania). Our goal is to transform their raw data into meaningful insights and recommendations for management. More specifically, we need to:
- Track KPIs (sales, revenue, profit, returns)
- Compare regional performance
- Analyse product-level trends
- Identify high-value customers
The Data:
We’ve been given a collection of raw data (CSV files), which contain information about transactions, returns, products, customers, and sales territories in a total of eight tables, spanning from the years 2020 to 2022.
The Task: We are tasked with using solely Microsoft Power BI to:
- Connect and transform/shape the data in Power BI’s back-end using Power Query
- Build a relational data model, linking the 8 fact and dimension tables
- Create calculated columns and measures with DAX
- Design a multi-page interactive dashboard to visualize the data in Power BI’s front-end
The Process:
1. Connecting and Shaping the Data
Firstly, we imported the data into the Power Query editor to transform and clean it. The next process involved:
Removing Duplicates: Duplicate entries were removed from the dataset to ensure accurate analysis.
Handling Null or Missing Values: For some columns, missing values were replaced with defaults or averages. Null values in “key” columns were removed using filters.
Data Type Conversion: Columns were converted to appropriate data types to ensure consistency. Dates were converted to Date type, numerical columns to Decimal or Whole Numbers, and text columns to Text.
Column Splitting and Merging: Several columns were split to separate concatenated information, or merged to create a unified name (such as Customer Full Name).
Standardising Date Formats: All date columns were formatted consistently to facilitate time-based analysis. This step was important for ensuring accurate time-series analysis in Power BI.
Removing Unnecessary Columns: Irrelevant columns were removed to streamline the dataset. This helped focus the analysis on relevant information, reducing memory usage and improving performance.
2. Building a Relational Data Model
Secondly, we modeled the data to create a snowflake schema. This process involved creating relationships between the dimension and fact tables, ensuring cardinalities were one-to-many relationships.
Enabling active or inactive relationships, creating hierarchies for fields such as Geography (Continent-Country-Region) and Date (Start of Year-Start of Month-Start of Week-Date), and finally hiding the foreign keys from report view to ease the data analysis and visualization steps and reduce errors.

3. Creating Calculated Columns and Measures
Next, we used Power BI’s front-end formula language, DAX, to analyze our relational data model and create several calculated columns (for filtering) and measures (for aggregation), that we could later reference and use when analyzing and visualizing the data.
We used calculated columns to determine whether a customer is a parent (Yes/No), a customer’s income level (Very High/High/Average/Low), a customer’s priority status (Priority/ Standard), and the customer’s educational level (High School/ Undergrad/ Graduate).
The list of calculated measures is available below and includes key information on revenue, profit, orders, returns, and more.

4. Visualising the Data
The final step of the project was creating a multi-page interactive dashboard, including a range of visuals and KPIs that could serve management and lead to informed decision-making. We used several visuals and tools to demonstrate and visualize the data across the 4 report pages, including KPI cards, line and bar charts, matrices, gauge charts, maps, donut charts, and slicers. We made sure the report was fully interactive and simple to navigate, with icons used to enable filters, cancel filters, and guide users to each report page with ease. Features such as drill-through, bookmarks, parameters, and tooltips were also used throughout the dashboard, further enhancing its usefulness and impact on management.
Executive Dashboard: The first report page provides a high-level view of Adventure Works’ overall performance. We used card visuals to present Key Performance Indicators such as overall revenue, profit margins, total orders, and return rates. We also included additional cards to compare current and previous month performances, providing insights into recent trends, a line chart to visualize the trending revenue from 2020-2022 and highlight long-term performance, and presented the number of orders by product category to aid in understanding product sales distribution, and used a further table to display the top 10 products based on key indicators (total orders, revenue, and return rate).

Map: The second report page consisted of a map visual, an interactive representation of sales volume across different geographical locations. This offered insight into Adventure Works’ global sales distribution and worldwide reach.

Product Detail: The third report page focuses on detailed product-level analysis. It displayed detailed product information for the selected top 10 products from the Executive Dashboard, using the drill-through feature. It also included gauge charts presenting actual performance vs target performance of monthly orders, revenue, and profit, and included an interactive line chart to visualize potential profit adjustments when manipulating the price of the product, aiding in strategic decision-making regarding pricing strategies. This report page also included a line chart including key weekly product information on total orders, revenue, profit, returns, and return rate.

Customer Detail: The fourth and final report page provided a deeper insight into customer behavior and value. It used donut charts to break down customer groups into income level and occupation categories vs. total orders, helping in customer segmentation tactics, and used a matrix aided by KPI cards to identify high-value customers based on order and revenue contributions, aiding in identifying high-value customers and sales opportunities.
