Maya had a problem. Every Friday at 3 PM, her boss, Derek, would poke his head into her cubicle and ask the same question: "How did we do this week?"
She didn't sleep that night. But not because she was merging CSVs. She was too busy adding a tooltip and a drill-through page for Derek's inevitable follow-up questions. power bi in udemy
Anders didn’t just teach DAX formulas and stacked bar charts. He taught her to think in relationships—to see tables not as dead spreadsheets but as living conversations between customers, products, and time. Maya had a problem
Derek didn't promote her that day. But he did send a company-wide email: "Effective immediately, all weekly reports will be replaced by Maya’s Power BI dashboard. She’s teaching a workshop next Tuesday. Attendance mandatory." She was too busy adding a tooltip and
And in the corner of the dashboard, in tiny grey font, Maya added a footnote: "Powered by a $12.99 Udemy course and one very tired weekend."
"You’re a data analyst, Maya," Derek said one Friday, not unkindly. "But right now, you’re just a very slow calculator."
He went silent. Then he whispered, "Where did you learn this?"