Visualize any numeric data by country on an interactive world choropleth map. Plot revenue, client count, latency, headcount, or any metric across countries with color-coded intensity and a sortable data table.
Overview
The World Data Map visualizes country-level numerical data on an interactive world map using color intensity to represent relative values. It can be used to display revenue, customer distribution, website traffic, employee headcount, latency measurements, sales performance, market penetration, operational metrics, or any other country-based dataset. The choropleth map provides a fast visual overview of geographic distribution while the accompanying table allows detailed analysis and sorting.
Common Use Cases
Global revenue visualization
Customer distribution mapping
Sales territory analysis
Website visitor geography
SaaS customer locations
International business reporting
Country performance comparison
Market expansion planning
Latency visualization
Employee distribution mapping
Global operations reporting
Business intelligence dashboards
How to Use
1
Choose a label that describes the metric being visualized such as revenue, customers, latency, users, or sales.
2
Select a color scheme for the map visualization.
3
Add countries using their ISO country codes.
4
Enter a numeric value for each country.
5
Review the generated world map where color intensity reflects relative values.
6
Use the data table to compare countries and review exact figures.
7
Adjust values or color schemes to improve visual analysis and reporting.
Example Scenario
Global Customer Revenue Analysis
A SaaS company maps recurring revenue by country to identify top-performing regions, evaluate international growth opportunities, and prioritize future marketing investments.
Technical Notes
Countries are shaded using color intensity based on the relative value assigned to each country.
Country entries are matched using standard ISO country codes to ensure accurate geographic visualization.
Color gradients represent relative differences between countries rather than geographic size or population.
The tool accepts any numerical metric including revenue, customer count, employees, transactions, latency, usage statistics, or operational KPIs.
Maps help identify geographic patterns that may be difficult to detect in spreadsheets or traditional reports.
The sortable data table complements the map by providing precise values for detailed comparison.
Common Mistakes
Using incorrect country codes
Comparing countries without considering population differences
Interpreting color intensity as absolute performance without reviewing actual values
Using inconsistent measurement units across countries
Visualizing incomplete datasets
Ignoring regional trends visible on the map
Using too many similar values that reduce visual contrast
Drawing conclusions without validating underlying data quality
Frequently Asked Questions
Any numerical value associated with a country can be displayed, including revenue, customers, employees, sales, traffic, latency, costs, or operational metrics.
Country codes are standard ISO identifiers such as US, GB, SG, AU, DE, or MY used to map data to specific countries.
Not necessarily. Darker colors simply represent higher values and whether that is positive or negative depends on the metric being analyzed.
Yes. The map is useful for executive dashboards, business intelligence reports, sales analysis, customer distribution, and operational reporting.
Maps reveal geographic patterns, regional concentrations, and international trends that may not be obvious in traditional charts or tables.
Related Topics
Choropleth mapBusiness intelligenceGlobal sales reportingCustomer distribution analysisMarket expansion planningGeographic data visualizationCountry comparisonInternational business analyticsData dashboardsOperational reportingRevenue analysisGeospatial visualization