We need to produce a concise 450-500 word WordPress blog post in HTML format. Must include title line: “Title: …” then HTML content. Use plain HTML paragraphs and headings with WordPress comment blocks? The instruction: “write as plain HTML paragraphs and headings (e.g.,
…
)”. So we need to output something like:
…
…
But we can also just use plain HTML without the WP comments? The instruction says “write as plain HTML paragraphs and headings (e.g.,
…
)”. So we should include those comment blocks to mimic WP block format.
We need 450-500 words. Must be concise. Let’s aim for about 470 words.
We need to include SEO-friendly title with “AI” and “ai”. Title line: “Title: …” then newline then HTML content.
We must not include placeholders. Must be actionable content.
At the end include a paragraph promoting the e-book with the given link.
We need to use facts from e-book: mention Chart 2: Average Profit by Region, AI caption, annotations, Google Sheets/Excel, RapidMiner/DataRobot, remove chart junk, Tableau Public, column names and data types, for each categorical column list of unique values/top 10, for each numeric column min max mean number of nulls, key findings from Chapter 7 (top correlations, highest/lowest outliers), product category Electronics highest variance in profit, profit positively correlated with Sales (r=0.72), Region West highest average profit, Sales right-skewed, questions: “Is our monthly revenue growing?”, “Where are we losing money?”, “Which product category drives the most profit?” Also mention creating a prompt template: feed input and ask language model.
We need to incorporate these facts naturally.
We need to count words. Let’s draft about 470 words.
We’ll need to count words precisely. Let’s write then count.
I’ll draft then count manually.
Draft:
Title: AI-Driven Visualization Strategies for Solo Freelance Data Analysts
Why Automate Visualization?
Automating the visual‑exploration step turns raw CSV files into client‑ready insights without repetitive manual work. By feeding cleaned data into AI‑assisted tools, you can generate charts, add annotations, and answer business questions consistently for every project.
Start with a Data Profile
Before any chart, capture column names and data types (int, float, string, datetime). For each categorical column list the top 10 unique values; for each numeric column record min, max, mean, and null count. This profile becomes the prompt input for a language model.
Build a Prompt Template
Create a template that sends the profile plus the key questions—“Is our monthly revenue growing?”, “Where are we losing money?”, “Which product category drives the most profit?”—to ChatGPT, Claude, or a custom agent. Ask the model to suggest chart types, draft annotation text, and highlight any outliers or correlations.
Leverage AI‑Enabled Chart Builders
Google Sheets or Excel: insert charts directly from the cleaned data; use AI to write formulas or recommend chart types based on the profile. RapidMiner and DataRobot offer auto‑visualization features that generate standard charts instantly. Tableau Public lets you drag‑and‑drop fields; AI plugins can suggest the most appropriate visual given field types.
Apply Chart‑Design Best Practices
Remove chart junk: no 3D effects, excessive gridlines, or shadows. Every element must serve the data. For example, in Chart 2 – Average Profit by Region – the AI caption reads “West region has higher average profit compared to East and Central.” Add annotations that point to the highest bar, any dip, or outliers. Keep the design clean so the insight stands out.
Connect Visuals to Key Findings
Use the insights from Chapter 7 of the e‑book: profit is positively correlated with sales (r = 0.72); the Electronics category shows the highest variance in profit; the West region has the highest average profit; sales are right‑skewed, meaning many small transactions and a few large ones. Let these facts guide annotation and narrative.
Iterate and Reuse
Save the prompt template and chart‑generation steps as a reusable workflow. When a new CSV arrives, run the profile, feed it to the AI, get chart suggestions, apply the clean‑design rules, and deliver a polished report in minutes instead of hours.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Solo Freelance Data Analysts: How to Automate Client Data Cleaning, Exploratory Analysis Report Drafting, and Visualization Recommendations from Raw CSV Files.
Now need to count words. Let’s count manually.
I’ll copy text and count.
Title line: “Title: AI-Driven Visualization Strategies for Solo Freelance Data Analysts”
Count words: Title:(1) AI-Driven(2) Visualization(3) Strategies(4) for(5) Solo(6) Freelance(7) Data(8) Analysts(9). That’s 9 words.
Now we need to count words in the HTML content (excluding markup?). Usually word count includes visible text only. We’ll count visible words.
I’ll go paragraph by paragraph.
First heading: “
Why Automate Visualization?
”
Visible: Why(1) Automate(2) Visualization?(3) => 3 words.
First paragraph: “
Automating the visual‑exploration step turns raw CSV files into client‑ready insights without repetitive manual work. By feeding cleaned data into AI‑assisted tools, you can generate charts, add annotations, and answer business questions consistently for every project.
”
Let’s count:
Automating1 the2 visual‑exploration3 step4 turns5 raw6 CSV7 files8 into9 client‑ready10 insights11 without12 repetitive13 manual14 work.15 By16 feeding17 cleaned18 data19 into20 AI‑assisted21 tools,22 you23 can24 generate25 charts,26 add27 annotations,28 and29 answer30 business31 questions32 consistently33 for34 every35 project36.
36 words.
Second heading: “
Start with a Data Profile
”
Start1 with2 a3 Data4 Profile5 =>5 words.
Second paragraph: “
Before any chart, capture column names and data types (int, float, string, datetime). For each categorical column list the top 10 unique values; for each numeric column record min, max, mean, and null count. This profile becomes the prompt input for a language model.
”
Count:
Before1 any2 chart,3 capture4 column5 names6 and7 data8 types9 (int,10 float,11 string,12 datetime).13 For14 each15 categorical16 column17 list18 the19 top 1020 unique21 values;22 for23 each24 numeric25 column26 record27 min,28 max,29 mean,30 and31 null32 count.33 This34 profile35 becomes36 the37 prompt38 input39 for40 a41 language42 model43.
43 words.
Third heading: “
Build a Prompt Template
”
Build1 a2 Prompt3 Template4 =>4 words.
Third paragraph: “”
Wait there is a malformed ““. We’ll treat as paragraph.
Count words:
Create1 a2 template3 that4 sends5 the6 profile7 plus8 the9 key10 questions—“Is11 our12 monthly13 revenue14 growing?”,15 “Where16 are17 we18 losing19 money?”,20 “Which21 product22 category23 drives24 the25 most26 profit?”—to27 ChatGPT,28 Claude,29 or30 a31 custom32 agent.33 Ask34 the35 model36 to37 suggest38 chart39 types,40 draft41 annotation42 text,43 and44 highlight45 any46 outliers47 or48 correlations49.
49 words.
Fourth heading: “
Leverage AI‑Enabled Chart Builders
”
Leverage1 AI‑Enabled2 Chart3 Builders4 =>4 words.
Fourth paragraph: “
Google Sheets or Excel: insert charts directly from the cleaned data; use AI to write formulas or recommend chart types based on the profile. RapidMiner and DataRobot offer auto‑visualization features that generate standard charts instantly. Tableau Public lets you drag‑and‑drop fields; AI plugins can suggest the most appropriate visual given field types.
”
Count:
Google1 Sheets2 or3 Excel:4 insert5 charts6 directly7 from8 the9 cleaned10 data;11 use12 AI13 to14 write15 formulas16 or17 recommend18 chart19 types20 based21 on22 the23 profile.24 RapidMiner25 and26 DataRobot27 offer28 auto‑visualization29 features30 that31 generate32 standard33 charts34 instantly.35 Tableau36 Public37 lets38 you39 drag‑and‑drop40 fields;41 AI42 plugins43 can44 suggest45 the46 most47 appropriate48 visual49 given50 field51 types52.
52 words.
Fifth heading: “
Apply Chart‑Design Best Practices
”
Apply1 Chart‑Design2 Best3 Practices4 =>4 words.
Fifth paragraph: “
Remove chart junk: no 3D effects, excessive gridlines, or shadows. Every element must serve the data. For example, in Chart 2 – Average Profit by