31 Excel Tips
That Could Save You from Working All Night
- Version 1.2 -
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
What is it: The following material was developed for the Seoul office training
program.
Target audience: 1st year associates and business analysts, although there
is nothing wrong doing this training as well with EMs and APs.
Duration: 3-4 hours to walk through the explanations and give everyone a
chance to actually practice.
Faculty: SEO did it with 2 MGMs, which was extremely powerful, since the
seniors showed that they can do and therefore they can expect their team members to do the same.
Final comment: The original material was not intended for self-study
purposes and therefore may be a little be too brief and cryptic in some cases. In case you have any improvement ideas please feel free to e-mail them to the authors.
31 EXCEL TIPS THAT COULD SAVE YOU FROM WORKING ALL NIGHT
1. Split windows and freeze panes 2. Hide and Unhide command 3. Moving around a spreadsheet with Ctrl, Shift, and Arrow keys 16.Auditing features 17.Goal Seek add-in 18.Solver add-in 19.Data tables 20.Scenarios add-in 21.Pivot Tables 22.Protecting cells and worksheets 23.Editing multiple worksheets simultaneously 24.Customize tool bars 25.Changing default workbook 26.Group and Ungroup your spreadsheet 27.Switch off the Microsoft Actors 28.SUBTOTAL function 29.SUMPRODUCT function 30.Conditional formatting 31.Autofilter command
4. Name cells/ranges
5. Sort command 6. Toggling among relational and absolute references 7. Fill down and fill right commands 8. IF function 9. AND and OR functions 10.SUM and SUMIF functions 11. COUNT functions 12.ROUND, ROUNDUP and ROUNDDOWN functions 13.VLOOKUP and HLOOKUP functions
14.Insert Function command
15.Paste Special command
1. SPLIT WINDOWS AND FREEZE PANES
Why you need to know this
Splitting a window allows you to work on multiple parts
of a large spreadsheet simultaneously Freezing the pane allows you to always keep one part of the spreadsheet (e.g., column or row labels) visible
How you use this feature
Drag the split horizontal and split vertical icons to the
desires positions Click on the freeze pane icon from the tool bar to freeze the panes Freeze pane icon Split screen icons
Split the screen so that:
Exercise
The row with column labels shows up in the top pane The column with store names show up in the left pane Freeze the panes
3
2. HIDE AND UNHIDE COMMAND
Why you need to know this
Allows you hide and unhide particular rows or
columns Simplifies working with the spreadsheet Prevent certain information from being seen
How you use this feature
Select the row(s) or column(s) to be
hidden/unhidden Select Format : Row : Hide/Unhide or Format : Column : Hide/Unhide
Exercise
Hide the Avg Sale/Ticket column
3. MOVING AROUND A SPREADSHEET WITH CTRL, SHIFT, AND ARROW KEYS
Why you need to know this
Save you lots of time Move the first or last cell of a contiguous data block
without scrolling
How you use this feature
Ctrl-Arrow : Move to the first/last data cell in the arrow
direction Ctrl-Shift-Arrow : Selects the cells between the current cell and the first/last data cell
Exercise
Select all cells with data using the Ctrl, Shift, and Arrow
keys
4. NAME CELLS/RANGES
Why you need to know this
Allows specific cells or cell ranges to be referred to by
name Allows you to write equations such as = Quantity*Cost instead of =$B$12*$C$4
How you use this feature
Select the cell or cell range Select Insert : Name : Define from the menu bar
Exercise
Define cells A2:A125 as Sequence
5. SORT COMMAND
Why you need to know this
Correctly sorting a series of rows or columns
without disassociating the data is critical to many modeling efforts
How you use this feature
Select all cells in the data range to be sorted Select Data : Sort from the menu bar
Exercise
Sort the dataset by ascending store name
6. TOGGLING AMONG RELATIONAL AND ABSOLUTE REFERENCES
Why you need to know this
Saves you lots of time
How you use this feature
F4 key toggles through the different options
7. FILL DOWN AND FILL RIGHT COMMANDS
Why you need to know this
Saves you lots of time Allows for copying of cell content to contiguous cells
with a single keystroke
How you use this feature
Select the cell with the content to be copied and drag to
select the cells to which the content should be copied Ctrl-R to fill right Ctrl-D to fill down
Caution!!
Double-check your formulas for absolute vs. relative
references!!
Exercise
Calculate the total daily sales for each store
8. IF FUNCTION
Why you need to know this
Conditional comparisons are used in virtually all
spreadsheets Knowing how to use IF in a nested manner and in combination with other functions will save hours of time
How you use this feature
IF(Comparison,TrueAction,FalseAction) IF(Comparison,TrueAction,) ==> Cell shows 0 if
condition is false IF(Comparison,TrueAction,) ==> Cell shows blank if condition is false
Create a Seoul variable
Exercise 1 if the store is in Seoul 0 if the store is in other places
10
9. AND AND OR FUNCTIONS
Why you need to know this
Used with the IF function to enable more complicated
logical comparisons
How you use this feature
AND(Comparison 1,Comparison2,Comparison3,) OR(Comparison 1,Comparison2, Comparison3,)
Create a variable that calculates daily sales per pyung
Exercise only for: KFC stores in Seoul with size larger than 50 pyung All BK stores
11
10. SUM AND SUMIF FUNCTIONS
Why you need to know this
SUM is used in virtually all spreadsheets SUMIF can save lots of time in most spreadsheets if you
know how to use the function
How you use this feature
SUM(Range1,Range2,Value1,) SUMIF(Range,Comparison,SumRange)
If a SumRange IS NOT specified, SUMIF sums the cells meeting the Comparison criteria in the specified Range If a SumRange IS specified, SUMIF sums the cells in SumRange where the corresponding cells in Range meets the Comparison criteria NOTE: The signs must be used for the Comparison value
Calculate the total store space for stores larger than 50
Exercise pyungs Calculate the total daily sales for all stores larger than 50 pyungs
12
11. COUNT FUNCTIONS
Why you need to know this
Prevents you from wasting time counting items manually
or creating dummy variables to count such items
How you use this feature
COUNT(Range1,Range2,Value1,...) ==> count the number
of cells containing numbers COUNTA(Range1,Range2,Value1,...) ==> count the number of non-empty cells COUNTBLANK(Range) ==> count the number of empty cells in the range COUNTIF(Range,Criteria) ==> count the number of cells in the Range containing the Criteria. NOTE: The signs must be used for the Criteria value
Exercise
Calculate the number of KFC stores in the dataset
13
12. ROUND, ROUNDUP AND ROUNDDOWN FUNCTIONS
Why you need to know this
Many situations exist when you need to have exact
numbers instead of various fractions in your calculations (e.g., there cannot be 536.235 bank branches)
How you use this feature
ROUND(Number,Digits) ==> Round the number (or cell)
to the specified number of digits If Digit = 0, then Number is rounded to nearest integer If Digit > 0, then Number is rounded to the specified number of decimal places If Digit < 0, then Number is rounded to the specified number of digits left of the decimal place ROUNDDOWN(Number,Digits) and ROUNDUP(Number,Digits) work the same way as ROUND, but the direction of rounding is specified by the function
Exercise
Calculate a rounded Avg Sale/Ticket variable, rounding
to the nearest 10 Won
14
13. VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP FUNCTIONS (CONTINUED)
Why you need to know this
Allows you to automatically lookup a particular cell of
data from a larger data range. This is especially useful when you have A large data section that contains information for multiple records somewhere on the spreadsheet (e.g., a small database) A calculation area somewhere else, and you need to refer to some specific data elements for specific records
15
13. VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP FUNCTIONS (CONTINUED)
How you use this feature
VLOOKUP and HLOOKUP allows you to find a specific cell of data
in a larger data range Use VLOOKUP when each row contains a separate record and the associated columns contain data for that one record Use HLOOKUP when each column contains a separate record VLOOKUP(SearchValue,Range,ColumnNumber,Error) ==> look for a value in the row specified by SearchValue and the column specified by ColumnNumber SearchValue indicates the match key (i.e., find the row that contains the SearchValue in the first column) Range specifies the cells containing the data ColumnNumber specifies the column that contains the data element you want Error determines what happens when Excel does not find the exact SearchValue you want. FALSE leads Excel to display a #N/A when an exact match cannot be found. TRUE leads Excel to display the next smaller value than SearchValue HLOOKUP(SearchValue,Range,RowNumber,Error) ==> look for a value in the column specified by SearchValue and the row specified by RowNumber NOTE: The 1st column of data must be sorted in ascending order when using VLOOKUP, and the 1st row of data must be sorted if using HLOOKUP
16
13. VLOOKUP AND HLOOKUP FUNCTIONS
Define a name for the cells containing the data and use
Tip that name as the Range. Do not include the row/column label in the named range because this would break the ascending sort rule above. Insert an extra row above your column label to number the columns
Exercise
Use VLOOKUP to find out how many seats are in the
Duksung store? How passers-by for the store?
17
Number the columns to easily check your formulas
Define a name for cells in your data Range
Need to sort in ascending order for VLOOKUP function to work properly
18
14. INSERT FUNCTION COMMAND
Why you need to know this
What do you do if you do not know what functions are
available or how to enter the arguments for a function?
How you use this feature
Select the cell Select Insert : Function from the menu bar
Exercise
Calculate the median daily ticket count for all the stores
19
15. PASTE SPECIAL COMMAND
Why you need to know this
Saves you lots of time
Retyping formulas Converts formulas into values Reformatting cells Transposing cells (i.e., convert row-entered data blocks into column-entered ones)
How you use this feature
Copy the cells of interest Place the cursor where you want to past the information Select Edit : Paste Special from the menu bar Select the appropriate options from the dialog box that appears
Exercise
Convert the Rounded Avg Sale/Ticket calculations into values
(i.e., get rid of the formulas) Copy and paste the entire dataset into a new spreadsheet in transposed manner
20
16. AUDITING FEATURES
Why you need to know this
Quickly find the cells referenced by a formula and/or
quickly find which cells reference a particular cell of interest
How you use this feature
Select View : Toolbars : Customize from the menu bar.
Check the Auditing box from the Toolbars tab Click on the cell of interest Select the Trace Precedents or Trace Dependents icon from the Auditing Toolbar
Exercise
Find the cells that references the Daily Ticket Count for
the Ansan store
21
17. GOAL SEEK ADD-IN
Why you need to know this
Easily find what one input variable needs to be to
achieve some desired result in a calculation
How you use this feature
Select the calculated cell Select Tools : Goal Seek from the menu bar Enter the desired resulting calculation into the To
Value form in the dialog that appears Enter the input cell in the By changing cell: form
Exercise
How many additional daily tickets would the Achasan
store need to have a total daily sales of 2,000,000 Won?
22
18. SOLVER ADD-IN (CONTINUED)
Why you need to know this
Allows you to use linear programming to find the optimal
inputs to achieve some desired calculational result (e.g., maximize revenues by increasing daily tickets, increasing store size, average sale/ticket, etc. simultaneously) Use Solver instead of Goal Seek when: You need to place constraints on the input variable (e.g., cannot open a store for more than 24 hours a day) More than 1 input variables are involved You want to minimize or maximize the resulting calculation in addition to just setting the calculation to a predetermined value
23
18. SOLVER ADD-IN
How you use this feature
Select the final calculated cell, then select Tools : Solver
from the menu bar Select what you want to do from the Equal to section (I.e., maximize, minimize, or set to a specific value) Reference the input cells (note, separate cells by using a comma or : if cells are contiguous If the input values have constraints, click on Add to enter the constraints Click on Solve
What is the maximum daily sales per pyung for the
Exercise
Ansan store if: The store can be opened a maximum of 18 hours/ day, 7 days/week Store size can expanded up to a maximum of 87 pyung
24
19. DATA TABLES COMMAND (CONTINUED)
Why you need to know this
Simplest way to run sensitivity analyses
How you use this feature
Input the values you want to test for a particular variable on
separate rows (e.g., A6:A13) In the cell above and to the right of the first sensitivity value, reference the final result of your calculations (e.g., A5 = C3) Select the cells containing the calculation and input variables (e.g., A5:B13) Select Data : Tables from the menu bar Input the cell referenced by the formula in theColumn input cell(e.g., A2). This example uses in Column input cell because the value to test in the sensitivity analysis are arranged in a single column
25
19. DATA TABLES COMMAND
What daily total sales would the Achasan store have its
Exercise daily ticket counts ranged from 400 to 600 each day (in increments of 50)?
26
20. SCENARIOS ADD-IN
Why you need to know this
Youve created a model and need to run various scenarios. Then
use the scenario function under the tools menu. Keeps your inputs and outputs from the model nicely together
Assign names to the excel cells that act as input parameters for
How you use this feature
your model Start the scenario function by selecting Tools : Scenarios from the menu bar. Click Add to enter your first scenario Create a name Select ALL cells that will be your input to the model. Assign the desired scenario value to each input parameter. Add more scenarios as needed When finished click on summary and select scenario summary (the pivot table is not so helpful)
27
20. SCENARIOS ADD-IN (SIMPLE EXAMPLE)
Objective: You want to build a simple model to understand under which scenarios Airbus should build the A3XX a next generation super large airplane with more than 600 seats
Simple model: Profit = number of planes sold x price x margin development cost
Scenarios No. of planes Price (million. USD) Margin R&D
Worst case 200 120 20% 13 billion USD
Realistic 350 130 25% 12 billion USD
Best case 500 150 30% 11 billion USD
28
21. PIVOT TABLES
Why you need to know this
Most powerful tool to arrange huge amounts of data in a more
structured way than pure sorting. In particular helpful to run quick sums, averages, distributions, etc. in combination with a structure criteria, e.g. total number and average sales per store size band
How you use this feature
Select Data: PivotTable Report
Step 1: Microsoft Excel list
Step 2: Select the relevant data area
Step 3: Drag and drop data elements
on row and column (this is your table structure), the data you want to analyze on the data area Step 4: Just press Finish
29
21. PIVOT TABLES
Draw a distribution chart for the number of stores per
Exercise size in pyung bucketed each 10 pyung wide Arrange the store distribution by store size (each 10 pyung) and daily tickets (each 100 tickets) and show the number of stores per each category
30
22. PROTECTING CELLS AND WORKSHEETS
Why you need to know this
Sometimes you want to give your Excel file to someone else and
prevent them from changing the formulas for seeing some hidden cells
Protecting a spreadsheet or workbook involves two steps
How you use this feature
Designating which cells to be locked or hidden Protecting the spreadsheet or workbook Note several weird peculiarities: The default for all cells in a spreadsheet if LOCKED. So if you want the receiver of your worksheet to change the content of a cell, unlock the cell before protecting the spreadsheet The formulas in a cell can be seen even if the spreadsheet is lock -- UNLESS you hide that cell before protecting the spreadsheet To lock/unlock and hide/unhide a cell, select the cell(s) and select Format : Cell. Select the Protection tab when the dialog box appears To protect/unprotect a spreadsheet, select Tools : Protection : Protect Sheet
Exercise
Protect the dataset spreadsheet
Allow the user to change the data Lock and hide the formulas you entered
31
23. EDITING MULTIPLE WORKSHEETS SIMULTANEOUSLY
Why you need to know this
Avoid having to redo your work on multiple
spreadsheets in a single workbook
How you use this feature
Select the first spreadsheet to be edited Hold the Ctrl key while clicking on the additional
spreadsheets Do your editing
Exercise
Try it
32
24. CUSTOMIZE TOOL BARS
Why you need to know this
How many icons on the tool bar to you use regularly? How often do you have to use the menu bar or mouse to
do something you wish were accessible with a single click?
How you use this feature
Select View : Toolbars : Customize Click on the Commands tab Drag items on and off the toolbar as you wish
Exercise
Modify your toolbar as desired
33
25. CHANGING DEFAULT WORKBOOK
Why you need to know this
How often do you use the menu bar to change the normal
font or number formats? You can create the basic number and font formats you use regularly, save it as a template, and have Excel use that template every time you create a new workbook
How you use this feature
Create a workbook with the formatting you use regularly
and save it under the name Book and Template format Move the Book template to the Microsoft Office : Office : Xlstart folder
Exercise
Create your default workbook
34
26. GROUP/UNGROUP PARTS OF SPREADSHEETS
Why you need to know this
How often would you like to hide or unhide parts of a
complex spreadsheet? If your answer is very often. You will like to group/ungroup function instead of the hide/unhide command, since you will be able to toggle between hidden or displayed columns or rows.
Mark the row or column that you would like to fold, I.e.
How you use this feature hide for the moment. Click on Data: Group and Outline: Group To fold click now on the minus sign outside of your column or row You may also group or ungroup hierarchically
Tip
Group some parts in your spreadsheet Also try to remove the grouping
Use the two arrow buttons, which you find on the pivot
table toolbar (right click on any toolbar and select PivotTable)
35
Exercise
27. SWITCH OFF THE MICROSOFT ACTORS
Why you need to know this
Also find the Microsoft Actors more disturbing than
helpful? Always popping up at the wrong moment
How you use this feature
Start the Windows Explorer Go to the directory Program Files: Microsoft Office:
Office: Actors Rename the directory Actors to Dead Actors
Exercise
Try to eliminate the Actors
36
28. SUBTOTALS AND TOTALS
Why you need to know this
Want to add lines with subtotals in your P&L or balance
sheet, but still need to run the total over all numbers? Dont want to get confused with nested subtotals and totals in your spreadsheet?
How you use this feature
Instead of =sum(range) add =subtotal(9, range) where
you need a subtotal or total. You may nest this function as you like. Excel keeps track of everything
Exercise
Create a simple column with various numbers Add various subtotals running over various parts of your
spreadsheet and finally over the whole column
37
28. SUMPRODUCT FUNCTION
Why you need to know this
If you need to multiply two column and need the sum of
the multiplication, sumproduct comes easy.
How you use this feature
Insert =sumproduct(range1, range2)
Exercise
Multiply two columns or rows and get the sum of it
38
29. NPV FUNCTION
Why you need to know this
Of course you can create your own discounting table and
then calculate the NPV of your cash flow series or just use the NPV function
How you use this feature
Insert =NPV(discount rate, cash flow numbers, ...) The discount rate is in percent The cash flow numbers are either an array or individual
numbers in individual cells Attention: The first cash flow number is in period 1, e.g. the end of the period. If you have for example an initial investment in period 0, just type =NPV()+period 0 payment in your calculation
Exercise
Create a list of random cash flows and calculate the NPV
with the NPV function
39
30. CONDITIONAL FORMATTING
Why you need to know this
Sometimes you would to color the output of cells in
different colors, e.g. negative numbers in red, positive numbers in black, or add a frame, etc.
How you use this feature
Mark the relevant fields and select Format: Conditional
Formatting Select the criteria for the format and adjust the format. You can actually change the font, the border and the color Click on Add to select additional criteria for the formatting
Format a cell to be in red font, with blue background for
Exercise negative numbers and in bold font with thick border, if the value is above 10
40
31. AUTOFILTER COMMAND
Why you need to know this
You have a huge pile of data and quickly want to find
some specific information, e.g. all sets that meet a criteria or the top 10 items etc.
How you use this feature
Click into your table or better mark the data area and
select Data: Filter: Autofilter Using the drop-down boxes per item allows you to display only specific filtered information Selecting multiple matches (up to 3 maximum with autofilter) you can narrow down your search Or add your own criteria for filtering by clicking on the custom criteria
Find the stores who belong to the top 10% in terms of
Exercise
average sales per ticket AND the top 10 in terms of store size in pyung
41