Video•Feb 9, 2026
Storytelling with Data Podcast: #95 Structure Liberates – Why Your Data Needs a Style Guide with ...
The episode of the Storytelling with Data podcast delves into the need for formal data‑visualization style guides, arguing that a clear structure actually frees creators to concentrate on narrative impact rather than pixel‑level decisions. Host Simon introduces Maxine Graves, a senior data‑visualization engineer at King, who shares how the "structure liberates" mantra translates into branding‑consistent, accessible visual assets.
Maxine outlines a practical, product‑design‑inspired workflow: begin with an audit of existing charts, gather stakeholder pain points, then define core tokens such as color palettes and typography—often the most contentious elements. From there, she builds components (chart types) and patterns (time series, uncertainty) while keeping the guide tool‑agnostic so it works across React frameworks, Excel, PowerPoint, or any future platform. This incremental approach reduces decision fatigue, speeds onboarding, and ensures accessibility standards are baked in from day one.
Key moments include Maxine’s reminder that "a style guide is a breath of relief" after countless rabbit‑hole design debates, and Simon’s anecdote about a manager critiquing color choices when no guide existed. These examples illustrate how guidelines shift feedback from superficial aesthetics to substantive content.
The broader implication is clear: organizations that institutionalize visual standards gain consistency, brand cohesion, and faster insight delivery, while analysts reclaim time for deeper storytelling. By iterating the guide with user testing, firms future‑proof their visual communication against tool changes and evolving data needs.
By Storytelling with Data