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Instructor-led training -

Excel Dashboards for Business IntelligenceExcel Dashboards for Business Intelligence training course

Face to face / Online closed & onsite training. Restaurant lunch included at STL venues.

Designed for Excel 365

Who is this course for?

This course is best suited to anyone in Business Intelligence, data managers, data analysts, or Project Managers. This course would also suit anyone looking to extend their knowledge of Excel to understand some of the more advanced features and how they can be used to work together.

The downloadable post-course material also contains an expanded glossary of further ways to enhance your dashboards with Speedometer charts, Tornado diagrams, Waterfall charts and the Camera Tool. There are also further resources for connecting to external data sources.

You may also wish to consider one of our VBA training courses.

Prerequisites

Completion of our Excel Advanced course or equivalent knowledge.

Benefits

At the end of this course you will understand what makes a dashboard.

You will learn how to build some of the most useful components when constructing your own dashboard reports.

During the course you will build three complete dashboard projects to give you inspiration for your own solutions.

Course Syllabus

What is a dashboard?

Common features of a dashboard
Why use Excel?

PivotTables and PivotCharts

Creating PivotTables
Formatting a PivotTable
Refreshing a PivotTable
Grouping fields
PivotCharts
Slicers and Timelines

Useful functions

Nested IFs
COUNTIFS & SUMIFS
EDATE
INDEX & MATCH
OFFSET
CHOOSE

Conditional Formatting

Formatting values
Colour Scales to show heatmaps
Icon Sets to show at a glance performance

Form Controls

Understanding the different controls
Using them on a dashboard

Working with Charts

Creating charts
Formatting charts
Secondary Axes
Combination charts
Creating chart templates

Working with Sparklines

Creating & modifying Sparklines
Customizing Sparklines

Design & Layout

Gridlines & outlines
Lining up Excel objects
Theming a dashboard

Sample Dashboard Projects

Worldwide Salary Index
Sales Performance Analysis
Helpdesk Efficiency

"What do I get on the day?"

Arguably, the most experienced and highest motivated trainers.

Face-to-face training

lunch

Training is held in our modern, comfortable, air-conditioned suites.

Modern-spec IT, fully networked with internet access

Lunch, breaks and timing

A hot lunch is provided at local restaurants near our venues:

  • Bloomsbury
  • Limehouse

Courses start at 9:30am.

Please aim to be with us for 9:15am.

Browse the sample menus and view joining information (how to get to our venues).

Refreshments

Available throughout the day:

  • Hot beverages
  • Clean, filtered water
  • Biscuits

Online training

online training (virtual)

Regular breaks throughout the day.

Learning tools

in-course handbook

In-course handbook

Contains unit objectives, exercises and space to write notes

Reference material

Available online. 100+ pages with step-by-step instructions

24 months access to Microsoft trainers

Your questions answered on our support forum.

What to expect when training

Training Formats & Services

Training formats available

  • On-site at your company office UK wide
  • Closed group at one of our London training venues
  • Near-site at a location close to you
  • Bespoke one-to-one basis
  • Tailored training courses to your requirements
  • Executive coaching & mentoring

Equifax

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Rhys Howells,
Analyst

Was already familiar with some elements of the course, but as hoped I still picked up some valuable techniques/ideas.

St John Ambulance

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Hai-anh Hoang,
Database And Business Intelligence Manager

Because I was back of the class, it would have been more helpful for the trainer to zoom in to see the formulas more clear to be able to keep up. This is where can easily miss something and get behind

The Open University

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David Yates,
Administrator

Jens is a genius!! His knowledge of Excel is phenomenal and his patience, flexibility and enthusiasm oustanding. I cannot praise him highly enough.

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Resources

Blog

Tutorials and discussions on MS Office

Hints & Tips

MS Office tips to save you time

Cheat sheets

MS Office shortcut keys for all versions

Infographics

Handy info on industry trends

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Free manuals

We are providing a range of our course manuals free of charge.

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Training manual sample

Below are some extracts from our Excel training manuals.

Excel Dashboards for Business Intelligence

Unit 1: What is a dashboard?

Dashboards are a type of report. They help turn often large amounts of data into a digestible page that enables easy analysis. This form of data analysis can be part of Business Intelligence (BI).

Why use a dashboard?

Many companies have access to large amounts of data, perhaps in a data warehouse or spread across multiple file servers. Decision makers often want to cut through this data and look for patterns. Dashboards are an excellent way to turn large amounts of data into usable and actionable reports.

A dashboard is a visual interface that provides at-a-glance views into key measures relevant to a particular objective or business process. A dashboard consists of three key attributes.

  1. Displays data graphically (such as in charts). Provides visualizations that help focus attention on key trends, comparisons, and exceptions.
  2. Displays only data that is relevant to the goal of the dashboard.
  3. Contains predefined conclusions relevant to the goal of the dashboard and relieves the reader from performing their own analysis.

Common features of a dashboard

Dashboards will often have the following features:

  • A single page. One page of information gives a high-level analysis. This one page view forces the most prominent trends to the front.
  • Highly visual. To enable quick takeaways, the data is represented in a very visual way.
  • Interactivity. Simple controls on the dashboard allow the user of the report to modify the view, perhaps choosing different parameters.
  • Timely. Dashboards will be most effective by having a method to be as up to date as possible.
  • Multi-format. To offer different views on the same data, different formats of data representation will be used, combining charts, tables, images and other visualisations.
  • Relevant. Only data appropriate to the dashboard is going to be displayed.

Why use Excel to create dashboards?

There are a wealth of BI tools available to help create dashboards. However the variety of tools available, the ubiquity of Excel on people's computers, combined with the ability to export these interfaces to the Web make it a straightforward tool to use. A formalised BI platform could be overkill and too expensive for a company's needs. Excel is familiar and most companies have already budgeted for installing Microsoft Office.

Preparing to build a dashboard

Before you start

Before you create a dashboard, you should take time to research and define the following points:

  • Define the message - what is the purpose?
  • Establish the audience - what level of user is going to consume the report?
  • Define the measurements - which metrics will support the message?
  • List the data sources - build an inventory of data feeds you will need to create the measurements.

Separating data from presentation

Many people rush in creating charts and directly working with the data. This will work in the short term but you will find as you move forward it becomes harder and harder to maintain. Strive to separate the data sheet from the presentation sheet. Better still, have at least three sheets:

  • Data -source data, cleaned but not extensively formatted. Often driven by a refreshable data feed. Data is often repetitive, with recurring items. Sometimes referred to as a ‘flat file'
  • Analysis - interstitial ‘helper' tables that coerce the source data into a usable format. Often aggregating, totalling etc. This could be in the form of a PivotTable, or a cross-tabular table you have compiled with formulas and functions.
  • Presentation - the formatted report that users will consume. Could be charts, simple tables, images, one line of commentary etc.

How to use this manual

Everyone will have a different use case, a different audience and a different set of reporting metrics required for their industry. In this manual you will walk through a number of Excel features commonly used in dashboard reporting. You can mix and match these features in any combination to create your own reports. In the appendix you will find three projects to give you some ideas of how you could develop a company dashboard. You should select the most suitable components for your report.

Different Excel versions

This manual focuses on the 2010 and 2013 versions of Excel. Most of the following is also possible in 2007, apart from a few PivotTable features such as Slicers and Timelines.

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