Radar Chart
Learn how to build a radar chart that shows each viewer their own scores, and how to record video clips that match those scores.
Introduction
The radar chart is a spider-shaped diagram that plots scores across a few different areas. Unlike the personalized modules you've seen before, this one is driven entirely by scores you define.
Each viewer gets their own chart based on the answers they gave. Here's how to set it up.
How to set up your radar chart
You'll pick your points, build each score from questions and answers, and preview the result.
- Step 1: Choose how many points your chart has, five by default, up to seven, or fewer if you want.
- Step 2: Name each point. The name you type shows up on the chart.
- Step 3: Click the button to the right of a score's name to edit it.
- Step 4: Toggle on the questions you want to feed into that score. You can use one question or many.
- Step 5: Give points to each possible answer. Scores run from 0 to 100.
- Step 6: Open the test section to pick sample answers and see how the chart renders.
Details
How scoring adds up
When more than one question feeds a score, the points are added together. If answer 1A is worth 10 points and answer 2B is worth 20, someone who picks both gets 30.
The score caps at 100. Anything higher still shows as 100.
Not every question has to be scored, only the ones you toggle on count.
Recording video clips for the chart
Find the radar chart in your recording plan by clicking its 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 changes based on where each viewer lands.
Making subgroups more granular
Click the segment, then the gear icon to create subgroups. You might use 0–24, 25–49, 50–74, and 75–100, or go even finer. There's no limit.
More subgroups mean a more personal talk track.
Keeping the clip count down
With several scores built from different answers, the recording plan covers every combination. Five scores can mean a lot of clips.
Learn more
The radar chart works best when you test your scoring before going live and trim the clip list to what you'll realistically record. That way each person sees a full, personal chart without burying you in takes.