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Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Date post: 11-May-2015
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The new release of Excel enables business users to do self-service Business Intelligence directly in the client, which now becomes a complete and powerful self-service BI tool - Basically users have all they need in one familiar environment in order to do data modeling, exploration and visualization of the data. New capabilities and features delivered for end users in Excel 2013; - ability to analyze data ranging from a few rows to hundred of millions of rows with extreme analytical performance - opportunity to speed up analysis in Excel by easily cleaning up and shaping your data with Flash Fill and Quick Explore - mash-up and analyze data from virtually any source quickly and create compelling analytical apps with PowerPivot - provide stunning data visualization to discover new insights with interactive and familiar data exploration, visualization and presentation experience with Power View
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Business Intelligence in Excel 2013 Excel, PowerPivot and Power View Stéphane Fréchette Friday April 26, 2013
Transcript
Page 1: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Business Intelligence in Excel 2013Excel, PowerPivot and Power View

Stéphane FréchetteFriday April 26, 2013

Page 2: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Who am I?

My name is Stéphane Fréchette

I’m a Database & Business Intelligence Professional and CEO | Founder of

I have a passion for architecting, designing and building solutions that matter.

Self proclaimed Open Data Hacker/Advocate I founded Gatineau Ouverte a citizen led initiative which aims to promote open access to civic data of the city of Gatineau.

Twitter: @sfrechette

Email: [email protected]

Blog: stephanefrechette.com

Page 3: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Session Outline

• Microsoft Business Intelligence (The Stack)

• Self-Service Business Intelligence

• Excel 2013 (Key new features and demos)• Excel

• PowerPivot

• Power View

• Upgrading from earlier versions

• Data Explorer and GeoFlow

• Summary

• Resources

Page 4: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Analysis Services

ReportingServices

Integration Services

Master Data Services

SharePointCollaboration

Excel Workbooks

PowerPivot Applications

SharePointDashboards & Scorecards

Data QualityServices

ODataFeeds

Line of Business Applications

Hadoop Big Data

Microsoft Business Intelligence

Page 5: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

5

Access

Clean

Mash-up

Explore

Visualize

Share

Challenges:• Multiple BI tools

• High learning curve

• “Spreadmarts”/Silos

• Not scalable

What Do Users want to Do?

Self-Service Business Intelligence

Page 6: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

6

Excel 2013: Complete and Powerful Self-Service BI Tool

Access

Clean

Mash-up

Explore

Visualize

Share

Self-Service Business Intelligence

Publish to SharePoint

Page 7: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Self-Service BI in Excel 2013

• Advances Data Modeling, rich interactive reporting capabilities

• In a single Workbook you can develop a Data Model;• Integrate multiple data sources and different source types

• Encapsulate Hierarchies, Calculations and KPIs

• Reports can be based on that same data model• Power View

• PivotTables, PivotCharts

• CUBE Functions

• Published to SharePoint• Schedule automatic Data Refresh

• Share embedded Data Model and Reports

Page 8: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

8

Gain Insight quickly with guided data exploration and formatting

Quick Explore and Analysis in Excel 2013

Page 9: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Excel 2013 – Key New Features

• Analyze Data in Real-Time Using Quick Analysis

• Flash Fill: Intelligently Organize Your Data

• Follow the Excel Recommendations

• Chart Formatting Control

• Slicer and Timeline

• Extensive List of Data Sources

Page 10: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

DemoExcel 2013

Page 11: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Self-Service BI in Excel 2013 - PowerPivot

• PowerPivot enriches Excel by compressing storage and provide fast querying and reporting from tabular data

• xVelocity in-memory analytics engine (formerly VertiPaq)

• Highlights;• Load data from a variety of sources

• Extremely large volumes can be stored

• Data Analysis Expressions (DAX)

• Can be enriched with Hierarchies, KPIs, Perspectives and Reporting metadata

• First introduced as an add-in with SQL Server 2008 R2

Page 12: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

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Access and mashup data from virtually any source to create powerful reports

PowerPivot in Excel 2013

Page 13: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

PowerPivot in Excel 2013 – Key New Features

• No longer requires separate install add-in

• Basic data model functionality now built in Excel 2013

• Calculated fields (‘Measures’) created automatically when field is numeric

• In-memory analytics engine native to Excel

• Excel and PowerPivot now have a single, uniform Field List

• Data categorization and suggestions from DataMarket

• Support for more languages (40 languages)

• Support for larger file sizes in 64-bit Excel (*unlimited)

Page 14: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

PowerPivot in Excel 2013 – Advanced modeling capabilities

• Optional PowerPivot add-in for advanced modeling capabilities• Filter data when importing

• Rename tables and columns as you import data in PowerPivot

• Manage the model and create relationships with the Diagram View

• Apply formatting for Power View and PivotTable reports

• Define Calculated Fields and advanced DAX calculations

• Define Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

• Create User-defined Hierarchies

• Define Perspectives

• Advanced formulas that use the Data Analysis Expression (DAX)

Page 15: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Creating a Workbook Data Model

• Two integration points;• Implicit – with native Excel capabilities

• Based on internal Workbook tables, and/or external data sources

PowerPivot add-in is not required to be enabled

Manage Data Model (limited) with the PivotTable Field List (Relationships, implicit Calculated Fields)

• Explicit – with the PowerPivot add-in enabled (Data Modeling Window)• Data Model is managed with the PowerPivot Window

PowerPivot add-in must be enabled

Can be based on existing implicit Data Model

Page 16: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

DemoPowerPivot in Excel 2013

Page 17: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Self-Service BI in Excel 2013 – Power View

• Power View provides an interactive data exploration, visualization and presentation experience• Strong visual design experience (WYSIWYG)

• Rich meta-driven interactions

• First introduced with SQL Server 2012 Reporting Services in SharePoint Mode (BI and Enterprise editions)

• Now part of Excel 2013 (need to enable add-in)• Power View sheets can be added to Workbook

• Can be based on a Workbook Data Model, or SSAS Tabular Data Model

(currently not possible for Multidimensional Model)

• Requires Silverlight 5 to be installed

Page 18: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

18

Visually discover and share insight across all levels of the organization

Power View in Excel 2013

Page 19: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Power View in Excel 2013 – Key New Features

• Power View sheets can connect to different data models in one workbook

• Modify the internal Data Model without leaving the Power View sheet

• Power View in Excel Services, Excel Web App and Office 365

• SharePoint Server• Pie charts

• Maps

• Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

• Hierarchies

• Drill up and drill down

• Hyperlinks

Page 20: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

DemoPower View in Excel 2013

Page 21: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Upgrading from earlier versions

• Prior versions of PowerPivot Workbooks must be upgraded if they are to be queried or managed using Excel 2013

• Will be prompted to upgrade the embedded Data Model when:• A new Report (PivotTable, PivotChart) is created

• Existing Report need to be refreshed

• A CUBE Function attempts to connect to the Data Model

• Need to manage the Data Model

• Once the Workbook is upgraded it cannot be opened by a previous version of PowerPivot

* KPIs not migrated need to be redefined

Page 22: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Data Explorer

“Data Explorer" is an Excel add-in that enhances the self-service Business Intelligence experience in Excel by simplifying data discovery and access.

Enable self-service data discovery, query, transformation and mashup experiences for Information Workers, via Excel and PowerPivot

• Discovery and connectivity to a wide range of data sources, spanning volume as well as variety of data.

• Highly interactive and intuitive experience for rapidly and iteratively building queries over any data source, any size.

• Consistency of experience, and parity of query capabilities over all data sources.

• Joins across different data sources; ability to create custom views over data that can then be shared with team/department.

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=36803

*Requires Microsoft Excel 2013

Page 23: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

GeoFlow

Project codename “GeoFlow” Preview for Excel 2013 allows you to plot geographic and temporal data visually, analyze that data in 3D, and create interactive tours to share with others.

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=38395*Requires Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2013 or Office 365 ProPlus.

Page 24: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Summary

• Excel 2013 delivers both advanced Data Modeling and Reporting capabilities• Data Modeling features and capabilities are delivered with the xVelocity in-memory

analytics engine• Power View sheets extend the Reporting capabilities of Excel 2013• Many new features are available in both PowerPivot and Power View

Page 25: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Resources

• PowerPivotPro http://www.powerpivotpro.com/

• Analysis Services & PowerPivot Blog (MSDN) http://blogs.msdn.com/b/analysisservices/

• Kasper de Jonge PowerPivot Blog http://www.powerpivotblog.nl/

• Chris Webb’s BI Blog https://cwebbbi.wordpress.com/category/powerpivot/

• SQLBI – Marco Russo http://www.sqlbi.com/

• PowerPivot-info.com http://powerpivot-info.com/

Page 26: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

What Questions Do You Have?

Page 27: Business Intelligence in Excel 2013

Thank YouFor attending this session


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