1 / 37

Advanced Excel for Finance Professionals

Advanced Excel for Finance Professionals. A self study material from South Asian Management Technologies Foundation. Welcome Back to Session 3. Pivot Table. A PivotTable is an interactive table that summarizes a data source such as a list or another table. Creating a PivotTable Report.

leo-shannon
Download Presentation

Advanced Excel for Finance Professionals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Advanced Excel for Finance Professionals A self study material from South Asian Management Technologies Foundation

  2. Welcome Back to Session 3

  3. Pivot Table • A PivotTable is an interactive table that summarizes a data source such as a list or another table.

  4. Creating a PivotTable Report

  5. Creating a PivotTable • Start a PivotTable from Insert menu and provide the required data

  6. Creating a PivotTable • The initial steps include: • Specifying the data source • Specifying the location of the report • a new worksheet • the existing worksheet – if you chose this, be careful to select a blank area in the worksheet

  7. Creating a PivotTable • To complete the design of the PivotTable, specify whether you want to: • use a Layout dialog box • Make selections directly on the worksheet • You can easily set up a PivotTable directly on the worksheet by dragging the names of fields listed in the PivotTable toolbar to the appropriate areas of a PivotTable shell. • Allows you to view the data while you arrange the fields

  8. Creating a PivotTable Report

  9. Specify Data for PivotTable • Create a summary report for expenses against each expense head and purpose. You filter the items online

  10. Have Multiple Dimension • Drag “Mode” to row label and get a granulated report

  11. Multiple Dimensions • Add Date in the row label and further dimension. • You can filter to get different summary

  12. Month Summary • Date fields allow you to group by month • You can also show values other than total in summary – viz. average

  13. PivotTable Management • If we select anywhere on the PivotTable we will get a special menu o the ribbon. • This can be used for many purpose including those we will describe now.

  14. Changing Order of Summary Data • The order in which the field buttons appear in the Row, Column, and Data boxes of the Layout Dialog box determines the order in which data displays in the PivotTable. • To change the order: • Open the Layout dialog box • Drag a field button to the desired location.

  15. Removing, Hiding, and Showing Data • As your information needs change, you may want to display more or less summary data in a PivotTable. • The process for removing a field is opposite that of adding a field. • Drag the field away from the row, column, or Data area in the Layout dialog box. • To show or hide detail in a field just pull down a list of items in a field on the PivotTable and select or deselct the field.

  16. Refreshing a PivotTable • Excel does not automatically update PivotTable. • After making changes to the worksheet, you must refresh (recalculate) the PivotTable. • Right click anywhere on the PivotTable and refresh on the menu. • In complex PivotTables, errors in summary amounts are difficult to detect visually. • It is important to acquire the habit of refreshing PivotTables after any change in worksheet data.

  17. Deleting a PivotTable • Before you can delete a PivotTable, you must select it using a three-step process: • Select Options under PivotTable menu • Choose Select from the shortcut menu • Click Entire Table. • After selecting the table you may clear the table through menu or by ‘delete’ key • When you delete a PivotTable, the source data is not affected.

  18. Pivot Chart • PivotChart needs the same set of operations to be followed. • Instead of the summary report, a chart comes up.

  19. Protecting Your Work • If you are building worksheets that will be used by other people, you may need to protect the work using protection features. • At the file level, you can password-protect a workbook so that only authorized users (people given the password) can open, view, and modify its contents.

  20. Protecting Your Workbook & Worksheet • At the workbook level, you can protect and hide individual tabs containing worksheets, charts, and modules. • At the sheet level, you can protect cells and objects from being modified or deleted.

  21. Protecting Cells, Worksheets, & Workbooks • There are two options under the Review option and Changes group of ribbon • Protect sheet • Protect workbook

  22. Protect Sheet • Protect Sheet option enables the protection feature specifying what is to be protected • Right click on any cell and select format cell. Select Protection tab therein to protect/hide

  23. Warning Dialog Box

  24. Hide Worksheet • Right click on worksheet tab and hide it • To unhide follow the same principle

  25. The Protect Workbook Dialog Box Protect the individual sheets in a workbook and/or the document window display Enter a password to prevent users from removing the protection

  26. Protect Workbook • You can protect workbook in two manner: • Protect the structure of a workbook, by selecting Structure check box. • Keep workbook windows in the same size and position whenever the workbook is opened, by selecting Windows check box.

  27. Password-Protecting a Workbook • Select Save As from Files menu • Click on Tools and select General Options to get password dialog box.

  28. Managing Security and Privacy

  29. Signing a Worksheet • From Insert menu, select insert signature in text group and click on Microsoft office signature line. Enter the necessary data

  30. Signing the Worksheet • A signature pane will appear once you sign the document. Right click the pane and select Sign option.

  31. Signing the Worksheet • If you have a digital signature, use the same else use an image

  32. Complete Signing • Once you complete signing, there will be a message and a signature icon at the bottom. • Any further editing will deactivate the button

  33. Conditional Formatting • A great way of formatting depending on the content of the cell.

  34. Define Format Conditions • Highlight all sales above 2000 and below 500 • Select area / sheet and get conditional formatting in Home menu.

  35. Define New Formatting Rule • Select Highlight Cell Rules and Greater Than and Less Than options

  36. Formatted • You can remove formatting from the same menu by selecting Clear Rules option

  37. Get Ready for Session 4

More Related