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QBM117 Business Statistics Descriptive Statistics Graphical Presentation of Qualitative Data

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QBM117 Business Statistics. Descriptive Statistics Graphical Presentation of Qualitative Data. Objective. To summarise qualitative data using pie charts and bar charts. Graphical Methods for Qualitative Data. Qualitative data are categorical observations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: QBM117 Business Statistics

QBM117Business Statistics

Descriptive Statistics

Graphical Presentation of Qualitative Data

Page 2: QBM117 Business Statistics

Objective

• To summarise qualitative data using pie charts and bar charts

Page 3: QBM117 Business Statistics

Graphical Methods for Qualitative Data

• Qualitative data are categorical observations.

• Qualitative data is often given in the form of a table with one column containing the categories and another column containing the number of observations (frequencies) in each category.

• Qualitative data is best presented as either a pie chart or a bar chart.

Page 4: QBM117 Business Statistics

Example 2.3 from text

The student placement office at a university in New South Wales conducted a survey of last year’s graduates from the Faculty of Economics and Commerce to determine the general areas in which the graduates found jobs. Each graduate was asked in which area he or she found a job. The results are given in the following table.

Page 5: QBM117 Business Statistics

Area of Employment Number of Graduates

Accounting 73

Finance 52

General Management 36

Marketing 64

Other 28

Total 253

Page 6: QBM117 Business Statistics

Pie Charts

• The most popular graphical method for qualitative data is the pie chart.

• A pie chart represents data in the form of sections of a circle.

• Each section represents a category.

• The size of the section is proportional to the number of observations in the category.

Page 7: QBM117 Business Statistics

Constructing a Pie Chart

• First we need to calculate the proportion of observations in each category.

• We draw a circle and divide it in to sections.

• The angle of each section of the circle is equal to the category’s proportion multiplied by 360°.

• Pie charts can be constructed easily using Excel.

Page 8: QBM117 Business Statistics

Example 2.3 revisited

Construct a pie chart of the data.

Area of Employment Number of Graduates

Accounting 73

Finance 52

General Management 36

Marketing 64

Other 28

Total 253

Page 9: QBM117 Business Statistics

Employment

Area

Number of

Graduates

Proportion of

Graduates

Angle of

Circle

Accounting 73 73/253=0.2885

0.2885x360°=104°

Finance 52 52/253=0.2055

0.2055x360°=74°

Management

36 36/253=0.1423

0.1423x360°=51°

Marketing 64 64/253=0.2530

0.2530x360°=91°

Other 28 28/253=0.1107

0.1107x360°=40°

Total 253 1.0000 360°

Page 10: QBM117 Business Statistics

Pie Chart of Area of Employment

Accounting29%

Finance21%General

Management14%

Marketing25%

Other11%

Page 11: QBM117 Business Statistics

Bar Chart

• An alternative graphical method for qualitative data is the bar chart.

• In a bar chart, each category is depicted by a bar.

• The length of each bar represents the number of observations falling into the category.

Page 12: QBM117 Business Statistics

Constructing a Bar Chart

• The categories are placed on the horizontal axis.

• Frequency is placed on the vertical axis.

• A bar is drawn for each category from the horizontal axis to a height that corresponds to the frequency of the category.

• The bars are of equal width.

• Each bar is separated from the others to enhance the visual presentation.

Page 13: QBM117 Business Statistics

Example 2.3 revisited

Construct a bar chart of the data.

Area of Employment Number of Graduates

Accounting 73

Finance 52

General Management 36

Marketing 64

Other 28

Total 253

Page 14: QBM117 Business Statistics

Bar Chart of Employment Areas

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Accounting Finance GeneralManagement

Marketing Other

Areas of Employment

Nu

mb

er o

f G

rad

uat

es

Page 15: QBM117 Business Statistics

Pie Chart or Bar Chart?

• The selection of chart is dependent on the intention of the user.

• If we want to emphasize the proportion of observations in each category then it is best to use a pie chart.

• If we want to compare categories it is best to use a bar chart.

Page 16: QBM117 Business Statistics

Pie Charts and Bar Charts in Excel

• We are going to produce a bar chart of the rank data and a pie chart of the faculty data from Exercise 2.46 from the text.

• We are given the raw data and need to construct a pivot table to summarise the data before we can construct the charts.

Page 17: QBM117 Business Statistics

Bar Chart of Rank of University Academics

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

associate professor lecturer professor senior lecturer

Rank

Nu

mb

er o

f A

cad

emic

s

Page 18: QBM117 Business Statistics

Pie Chart of Faculty of University Academics

associate professor41%

lecturer13%

professor14%

senior lecturer32%

Page 19: QBM117 Business Statistics

Multiple Qualitative Variables

• Often we are interested in more than one set of qualitative data.

• For example, we may have qualitative data for a number of years.

• We could do a separate pie chart for each year.

• Or we could display all the information on a single bar chart.

Page 20: QBM117 Business Statistics

Bar charts for Multiple Sets of Data

• There are two types of bar charts that we use to display multiple sets of qualitative data.

- grouped bar chart

- component bar chart

• The selection of chart depends on the type of data and what you want to emphasize.

Page 21: QBM117 Business Statistics

Grouped Bar chart

Consider the data in Table 2.12 on page 42 of the text (pg 40 abridged).

The data are the new passenger vehicle registrations in Australia by leading car manufacturers for 1997 and 1998.

We will construct a grouped bar chart of this data in Excel.

Page 22: QBM117 Business Statistics

Grouped Bar Chart of the New Passenger Vehicle Registrations in Australia by Leading Car

Manufacturers for 1997 and 1998

0

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

Da

ew

oo

Fro

d

Ho

lde

n

Ho

nd

a

Hyu

nd

ai

Ma

zda

Mits

ub

ish

i

Nis

san

Su

ba

ru

To

yota

Oth

ers

Manufacturer

Nu

mb

er o

f R

egis

trat

ion

s

Oct-97

Oct-98

Page 23: QBM117 Business Statistics

Component Bar Chart

Consider the second table in Exercise 2.52 on page 54 of the text (pg 52 abridged).

The data are the sales revenue ($m) for the different Business Groups within Woolworths Ltd for 1997 and 1998.

We will construct a component bar and a 100% component bar chart of this data in Excel.

Page 24: QBM117 Business Statistics

Component Bar chart of the Sales Revenue of the Business Groups within Woolworths Ltd for

1997 and 1998

0

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

14000

16000

18000

1997 1998

Year

Sal

es R

even

ue

($m

)

Wholesale

Special retail

General merchandise

Supermarkets

Page 25: QBM117 Business Statistics

100% Component Bar Chart of the Sales Revenue of the Businsess Groups within

Woolworths Ltd for 1997 and 1998

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1997 1998

Year

Per

cen

tag

e o

f S

ales

R

even

ue Wholesale

Special retail

General merchandise

Supermarkets

Page 26: QBM117 Business Statistics

Reading for next lecture

• Chapter 3 Sections 3.1-3.6