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Overview
If you do any kind of research or analytics in your job, Microsoft Excel Charts can transform massive amounts of data into meaningful, actionable insights. Master data visualization and present your findings with charts and graphs that are easy to understand and visually appealing. Follow along as Microsoft MVP Deb Ashby walks you through all you need to chart your course to success and make your data points crystal clear!
In this course, you'll learn:
- Foundational data visualization principles
- How to create and customize charts
- Various chart types and use cases
- Chart shortcuts
- How to create pivot charts and dashboards
Plus, get loads of practice exercises and quizzes to help you remember what you’ve learned. Enroll now and turn numbers into narratives!
Summary
Instructor
Syllabus
Introduction Free Lesson
1
Data Visualization Free Lesson
1
Data Visualization Principles
Understand the 3 principles of data visualization to ensure you create charts that are relevant, clear, and well-designed.
2
Examples of Good and Bad Chart Design
Explore some examples of good and bad chart design.
Create and Customize Excel Charts
1
Make Sense of Chart Elements and Chart Formats
Build your first chart and explore chart elements and chart formatting options.
2
More Formatting Options
Explore the advanced formatting options available in the Format Pane.
3
Brand Charts with Custom Themes
Use company colors in charts by creating a custom theme.
4
Dynamic Charts with Excel Tables
Create a dynamic chart that automatically updates when new data is added using Excel tables.
5
Change Chart Type and Add a Secondary Axis
Learn how to change the chart type and add a secondary axis to represent two data series.
6
Use Custom Number Formatting in Charts
Makes numbers more meaningful by using Custom Number formats in Charts.
7
Create a Chart Template
Save time by creating a reusable chart template.
Chart Types Free Lesson
1
The Good All-Rounders: Column and Bar Charts
Visualize and analyze datasets using column and bar charts.
2
Time-Based Data: Line Charts and Trendlines
Visualize time-based data using line charts and trendlines.
3
Comparing Data: Pie and Doughnut Charts
Create a Pie or a Doughnut Chart to effectively represent comparison data.
4
Show the Composition of Data: Area Charts
Create an Area Chart to show the composition of data.
5
Show the Distribution of Data: Histogram and Pareto Charts
Create a Histogram and a Pareto Chart in Excel to show a graphical representation of the distribution of numerical data.
6
Scatter Plots
Create a scatter plot chart in Excel to display a graphical representation of the relationship between two sets of data.
7
Bubble Charts
Create a bubble chart in Excel to display three dimensions of data.
8
Box and Whisker Charts
Create a Box and Whisker (Box plot) chart in Excel to display the distribution of data based on a five-number summary.
9
Treemaps and Sunburst Charts
Create a treemap and sunburst chart in Excel to visualize hierarchical data in different ways.
10
Waterfall Charts
Create a Waterfall Chart to visualize how an initial value is affected by a series of intermediate positive or negative values, leading to a final value.
11
Stock Charts
Create a Stock Chart in Excel, also known as a financial chart, to visualize the price movements of a stock over a certain period.
12
Radar Charts
Create a Radar Chart in Excel, also known as a spider chart or web chart, to display multivariate data in the form of a two-dimensional chart.
13
Funnel Charts
Create a funnel chart in Excel to represent stages in a process, showing the flow and drop-off of data at each stage.
14
Dumbbell Charts
Create a Dumbbell Chart to show the difference between two data points.
15
Geographic Data: Map Charts
Create a Map Chart in Excel to represent geographic data overlaid on a map.
16
Use Images in Charts
Create a chart that uses images, icons, or shapes to represent the columns.
Chart Tips and Shortcuts
1
The Quick Analysis Tool
Use the Quick Analysis tool in Excel to quickly analyze and visualize data without extensive manual formatting or calculations.
2
Charts with Conditional Formatting
Use Conditional Formatting along with Charts and formulas to highlight key values.
3
Create Dynamic Chart Titles
Create chart titles that dynamically update when the chart changes.
In-Cell Charts
1
Heat Maps: Color Scales
Apply Color scales to a dataset to visually represent the relative values in a range of cells using colors.
2
Data Bars
Apply Data Bars to values in Excel to visually represent the relative values in a range of cells using horizontal bars within the cells.
3
Create Dynamic In-Cell Charts with the REPT Function
Use the REPT function to create in-cell charts using symbols that dynamically update when the data changes.
4
Sparklines
Use Sparklines - small, condensed charts that fit into a single cell - to provide a visual representation of data trends or variations.
Pivot Charts and Slicers
1
Create a Pivot Chart
Create a Pivot Table and Pivot Chart from a dataset.
2
Filter Pivot Chart Data with Slicers
Use Slicers to filter Pivot Table data.
3
Connect Slicers to Multiple Charts
Connect slicers to multiple charts.
Course Close
1
Course Close
Course Close and instructor goodbye.