Bar Chart

Learn how to build a bar chart driven by scores, preview it, and record a talk track that fits each viewer.

Introduction

The bar chart is a score-based module, like the radar chart and the score ring. Everything on it shows a score, this time as vertical bars.

By default, you get one bar, and you can add up to five. Each bar is one score, and you can name it whatever you want. That name shows up on the chart.

How to set up a bar chart

Build each bar by picking the questions that feed its score, then give points to each answer.

  • Step 1: Click the button to the right of a score's name to edit it.
  • Step 2: Toggle on the questions you want to feed into that score.
  • Step 3: Give points to each possible answer for those questions.
  • Step 4: Open the test section to preview how the chart looks for different answers.
  • Step 5: Add more bars if you need them, up to five total.

Details

How scoring works

Scores are out of 100. Each person gets points based on the exact answers they picked.

A score can come from one question or many. When several questions feed the same score, the points are added up. So if answer 1A is worth 10 points and answer 2B is worth 20, someone who picks both gets 30.

If the total goes over 100, the bar just shows 100. Every person sees their own chart based on their answers.

Testing your setup

The test section is a preview. You pick answers yourself and watch how the bar chart renders. Use it to check your scoring before going live.

Recording clips for each score

Find the bar chart in the recording plan by clicking the bar chart segment on the left.

By default, each score splits into two clips: one for a low score (0–50) and one for a high score (51–100). Your talk track then adapts to each viewer.

Creating subgroups

Want more detail? Click the segment, then the gear icon to add subgroups. You could split a score into 0–24, 25–49, 50–74, and 75–100, there's no limit on how many subgroups you make.

More subgroups means a more personal talk track.

Keeping the clip count under control

If several bars come from different answers, the recording plan can create a lot of clips, because it covers every combo.

To trim this down, go back to the bar chart segment on the left and pick which scores you want to comment on. Skip the rest.

Tip , Deselecting a score only skips the recording. The viewer still sees that score on their bar chart.

Learn more

Start simple with one or two scores and the default low/high split. Add bars and subgroups once you know which scores are worth talking about.