Power BI: Recovery and Iteration

Day 16 of 30 · Power BI for Beginners: How to create beautiful and useful analysis in minutes

Learning Goal

Use this lesson to build a practical first version of a Power BI iteration checklist. By the end, you should be able to make one clear decision and turn it into a usable Power BI output.

Who

This lesson is designed for beginners who are new to Power BI and looking to create a simple, effective analysis tool.

What

In this lesson, you will learn how to create a Power BI iteration checklist. You will choose a realistic use case, define the audience, list key metrics, and sketch the first layout for your checklist.

Where

You can work on this lesson on any device with internet access, including desktops, laptops, tablets, and smartphones.

When

This lesson is designed for a single session, approximately 60-90 minutes.

Why It Matters

A beginner-friendly starting point matters because Power BI becomes useful only when one specific business question is turned into a simple visual decision tool. By creating a checklist, you can ensure that your analysis is focused and actionable.

Example

Imagine you need one baseline dashboard sketch for a weekly review. The strongest first move is to choose one audience, one decision, and one small set of measures instead of trying to build a full reporting system at once.

How

To create a Power BI iteration checklist, follow these steps:

  1. Choose a realistic beginner use case.
  2. Define the audience for your analysis.
  3. List the key metrics that are relevant to your use case.
  4. Sketch the first layout for your Power BI iteration checklist.
  5. Keep the scope intentionally small and usable.

Guided Exercise

Choose one realistic beginner use case and follow the steps outlined above to create your first Power BI iteration checklist.

Self-Check

Check whether your draft is specific, useful, and clearly tied to one real decision. If a stakeholder saw the sketch, would they understand what question it answers and what action it supports?

Bibliography (sources used)