For business users of Microsoft Excel.
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Published Now and Again for Business Users of Microsoft Excel.    

Bullet Graphs + Normal Distributions
+Try Excel 2007 in Your Browser

Charley Kyd

Wednesday, July 12, 2006


If you like this newsletter, please forward it to other Excel users.

This month, you'll find two major new articles at ExcelUser.

Excel Bullet Graphs

In recent years, gauges have become The Big Idea in management reporting. If gauges are a good idea for operating your car, the reasoning goes, software versions of those gauges are a great idea for operating your company.

But gauges offer several significant problems, as I explained in my article, Down With Gauges! They consume way too much real estate in a typical report. They distract the eye with massive amounts of "chart junk". And Excel does a poor job supporting gauges.

Stephen Few has invented an excellent alternative to gauges: bullet graphs. They provide the same information that gauges do; but they present the information more clearly in less space. And Excel can generate them nicely. I recently completed an article that explains how to create bullet graphs in Excel. You'll find the bullet graph article at this link.
 

Excel Functions for Normal Distributions

It's amazing how many things in the world are normally distributed...from the width of the stripes on a zebra to the magnitude of errors in many kinds of business metrics.

Fortunately, Excel provides several spreadsheet functions for working with normal distributions. Unfortunately, many of us have forgotten everything we ever knew about statistics.

This month, in An Introduction to Excel's Normal Distribution Functions I took special effort to describe what each statistics function actually means, and to provide an illustration of its use.

Also, I provide two different methods for returning a random number from a normal distribution.
 

Try Excel 2007 Today

As you probably have heard, Microsoft has delayed the ship date for Office 2007 to the end of this year. However, you can test out Excel 2007 and the other Office 2007 products today.

Microsoft offers two ways that you can do this. First, you can sign up for the Office 2007 beta, then download and install the program. Second, you can work with it using only your web browser.

You can find links and other information here.

My concern about Excel 2007 is that its new user interface will make Excel users -- particularly experienced Excel users -- less efficient than they are today. However, I could be wrong.

The page that I linked to above includes several questions that I hope you'll answer about your own experience with Excel 2007. After you get the chance to try the product, I hope you'll tell me what you think of it.
 

Recently Answered Questions

As I mentioned last month, if you have any questions about using Excel in business, send them my way. Some of my responses are the length of full articles.

Here are links to recent questions and answers:

Use VBA Functions to Return Excel Document Properties. VBA functions can return information about your document, information that spreadsheet functions don't. Here's an introduction to Excel's BuiltinDocumentProperties property.

Strategies for an Excel System For Invoicing or Estimating. Do you sell specific products or services? This item discusses ways to design a spreadsheet system to prepare your invoice or estimate.

Read a Text File with VBA, And Write the Text to Excel. This macro illustrates how to read a text file into Excel and then write it to a spreadsheet.

Consolidating Excel Data From Many Workbooks. Many workbooks with many sheets, each with many rows and columns of data. How can a company consolidate it all?

Use a Combo Box with many criteria in an Excel database. How can users look up a part number in an Excel database using several different items that describe the product?

Enough for now.

More later,

Charley

 

 


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