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Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Date post: 17-Jan-2016
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Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable
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Page 1: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Excel 2013 PivotTablesMaking Information Usable

Page 2: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Here’s a list of law firms, their locations and revenue

Page 3: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

But so what?

Page 4: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Just looking at the list isn’t much good

Page 5: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

How about making it easier to see information in a way that makes sense to you?

Page 6: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

For instance listing firms by state and city

Page 7: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Or maybe you’d like to make some calculations

Page 8: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

For instance showing the total revenue by state

Page 9: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Or by city

Page 10: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Or both - either with company names

Page 11: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

or without them.

Page 12: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

In order to do that, the information must be organized in a certain way

Page 13: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

The “field names” (types of information) must be in the top row.In this example they’re Company, City, State and Revenue in Millions

Page 14: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

The “records” (the information itself) must be in the following rows

Page 15: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

And there can be no blank rows or columns in the “range” (group of contiguous cells.)

Page 16: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Let’s create a PivotTable together. Please turn on Excel and open Sample PivotTable.xlxs, which should be on the desktop.

Page 17: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Click on any data cell,

Page 18: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Then on the Insert tab and the PivotTable button

Page 19: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Because you began by clicking on a data cell, Excel automatically assumes that you want to select that range.

Page 20: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

It also assumes that you’d like the PivotTable to appear in a new worksheet.

Page 21: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Since that’s the case, please click on OK

Page 22: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Here’s the new worksheet. Let’s look at it piece by piece.

Page 23: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

First of all, the new worksheet is automatically called Sheet1

Page 24: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

While the data remains on the original worksheet

Page 25: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

This area on Sheet1 is where the new PivotTable will appear.

Page 26: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

In order to create it, you’ll choose from the field list

Page 27: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Which was automatically created from the original worksheet

Page 28: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

You’ll drag and drop field names into the following areas

Page 29: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

If you drag the Company field into the FILTERS area the field name will appear in cell A1

Page 30: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

and a selection arrow will appear in B1

Page 31: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

If you click on the selection arrow you can filter to see one or more records in that field.

Page 32: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

If you drag the field from Report Filter into the COLUMNS area the names will appear in columns

Page 33: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Excel columns stretch up and down like the columns in the Parthenon

Page 34: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

If you drag a field into the ROWS area the names will appear in rows

Page 35: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Excel rows stretch from side to side like row boats

Page 36: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

If you drag a field into the VALUES area Excel will calculate its value. This example shows that there are 34 companies in the spreadsheet

Page 37: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Excel will calculate a field’s value based on its contents. If the field consists of text, as Company does, Excel will automatically count the records.

Page 38: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

If the field consists of values, Excel will automatically sum (add) them.

Page 39: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

To demonstrate, please look in the PivotTable Field list and click on the check-mark prior to the word “Company”

Page 40: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

All the fields have been removed from the PivotTable.

Page 41: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Drag “Revenue in Millions” into the VALUES area and you’ll see that there is a total of 37099.5 million dollars in the spreadsheet.

Page 42: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Why do they call them “PivotTables”?

Page 43: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

To demonstrate, please drag “City” into the COLUMNS area, “State” into ROWS and leave “Revenue in Millions” in VALUES.

Page 44: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Now reverse the positions of City and State

Page 45: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Oddly enough, PivotTables don’t automatically update if the records change.

Let’s make a simple example.

Page 46: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Click in the check box prior to “State” to remove that field from the PivotTable

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We see that the total Atlanta revenue is 677.5 million dollars

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Click on the DATA_FEED worksheet tab.

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Cell D2 contains $677.50

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Please change it to $10000.00

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Please click on the Sheet1 tab

Page 52: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

And you’ll see that the Atlanta total still shows 677.5

Page 53: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

To update it, please click on the Analyze tab, the Refresh Button and “Refresh All”

Page 54: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

And the total will update

Page 55: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Extra credit (if there’s time)

Page 56: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Double-click in cell B10, which shows that the total New York revenue is 15487 million dollars

Page 57: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

A new worksheet appears with the details of all New York companies

Page 58: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

This is called “drilling down”

Page 59: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Please click on the Sheet1 tab again

Page 60: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

To show that you can customize the field names in the PivotTableClick in A3 and type “City,” Click in B3 and type “Total Revenue in Millions”

Page 61: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Click on the triangle next to Total Revenue . . .

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Then click on Value Field Settings

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Click on Number Format, Currency and OK

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When you click on “OK” again you’ll see the millions formatted as currency

Page 65: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Click on the triangle next to Total Revenue again

Page 66: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Then click on Value Field Settings again

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When you click on “Summarize By” and scroll you’ll see that you can count, average, show the maximum value and more.

Page 68: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Click on “Cancel”

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Click on the triangle next to Total Revenue again

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Then click on Value Field Settings again

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When you click on the “Show values as” tab and scroll you’ll see that you can show each value in various ways including as a % of the total

Page 72: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Click on “Cancel”

Page 73: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Click on the Design tab and the check box prior to “Banded Rows”

Page 74: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

What’s new in Excel version 2010?

Page 75: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Recommended PivotTables

Page 76: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Recommended charts

Page 77: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

“Slicers” (custom filters you can use by clicking on field names)

Page 78: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Here’s an example of a chart with slicers showing all fields.

Page 79: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

And here it is when only the states of CA, NY and TX are selected

Page 80: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Here’s another slicer showing all of the fields

Page 81: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

And here it is when only the states of CA, NY and TX are selected

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Notice that only the cities, companies and revenue in those states are listed.

Page 83: Excel 2013 PivotTables Making Information Usable.

Questions?

Comments?


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