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Monday, May 9, 2016

Microsoft Excel 2016 Tutorial For Beginners Part 2 Full Intro Learn How to Use Excel 2016



From Subjectmoney

This is a Microsoft Excel 2016 Full Tutorial for beginners & intermediate users.In this crash course Excel video tutorial you will learn how to use Excel 2016 formulas and functions, Excel 2016 new features, Excel 2016 Charts along with many other necessary features that you must know how to use when using Excel 2016.

Excel Charts Tutorial
How to Excel charts
Formatting Excel Chart
Chart Styles in Excel 2016
Microsoft Excel 2016 Tables Tutorial
Excel tables tutorial
how to Excel Tables
Excel Tables for beginners
How to insert pictures in Excel
How to insert word art in Excel
Insert shapes in Excel

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Microsoft Excel 2016 Tutorial for Beginners Part 1 Full Intro Learn How to Use Excel 2016



From Subjectmoney 

Excel 2016 Tutorial for beginners

This is a Microsoft Excel 2016 Full Tutorial for beginners & intermediate users.In this crash course Excel video tutorial you will learn how to use Excel 2016 formulas and functions, Excel 2016 new features, Excel 2016 Charts along with many other necessary features that you must know how to use when using Excel 2016.

1:38 The Excel Ribbon
2:10 Ribbon Groups and Commands in Excel 2016
2:30 Data Entry in Microsoft Excel
3:08 How to enter data in to a cell in Excel
3:22 How to enter data into the formula bar in Excel
3:50 How to Navigate through Microsoft Excel
4:24 How to navigate and select cells in Excel with keyboard
8:01 Autofill in Excel 2016
9:15 Autocomplete in Excel 2016
10:32 How to zoom in and zoom out Excel 2016
10:50 Formulas & Functions Tutorial in Microsoft Excel 2016
11:25 Addition in Excel
13:04 Autosum Function in Excel
14:03 The Sum Function in Excel 2016
15:45 Subtraction in Microsoft Excel
16:12 Multiplication in Excel 2016
17:15 The Product Funtion/Formula in Microsoft Excel
17:44 How to Find/Search for a function in Excel using the insert function command in the Function Lirbrary
19:29 Division in Microsoft Excel
19:46 the Quotient Function in Excel
21:25 Exponential formulas in Excel
22:20 Concatenation in Excel
23:06 Logical Comparison in Excel
23:08 Equal to logical comparison in Excel
24:17 Logical Comparison Greater Than in Excel
24:36 Less Than Logical Comparison
24:58 Greater than or equal to
25:42 Not Equal to Excel 2016
26:14 Combining Formulas and Functions in Microsoft Excel 2016
29:18 Cell Reference Tutorial in Microsoft Excel
29:57 Types of cell reference in Excel
30:07 Relative Cell Reference in Excel 2016
32:04 Using Autofill for formulas and cell reference
32:25 Show formula in Excel 2016
33:15 Absolute cell reference in Excel 2016
33:10 How to lock cell reference
34:40 Mixed Cell Reference locking only the row or column
39:27 How to refer to cells in another worksheet in Excel
40:06 How to refer to another workbook in Excel
40:35 How to clear/remove/delet content in a cell
40:52 Autofill dates in Excel
41:15 How to delete a row or column in Excel
46:36 How to style and Excel worksheet
46:50 How to format numbers in Excel
47:50 increase of decrease decimals in Excel
48:54 How to format dates in Excel (short date, long date)
40:32 How to resize cells columns and rows in Excel
50:35 the Today function in Excel Today()
51:54 Formattin and styling cells in Excel
52:05 How to add color fill in Excel
52:55 How to add borders in Excel
53:44 How to copy and paste a range of cells in Excel
54:23 Cell Styles in Excel 2016
55:27 Text direction and how to angle diagnal text content and numbers in Excel
57:00 How to Merge cells in Excel
57:53 Merge across in Excel
58:18 Change height or width of cell in Excel
58:49 Font Style in Excel
1:01:37 content alignment in Excel 
1:02:20 Conditional Formatting in Excel 2016

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Thursday, May 5, 2016

What-If Analysis - Data Tables

From excel-easy.com

Instead of creating different scenarios, you can create a data table to quickly try out different values for formulas. You can create a one variable data table or a two variable data table.

Assume you own a book store and have 100 books in storage. You sell a certain % for the highest price of $50 and a certain % for the lower price of $20. If you sell 60% for the highest price, cell D10 below calculates a total profit of 60 * $50 + 40 * $20 = $3800.


One Variable Data Table
To create a one variable data table, execute the following steps.

1. Select cell B12 and type =D10 (refer to the total profit cell).

2. Type the different percentages in column A.

3. Select the range A12:B17.

We are going to calculate the total profit if you sell 60% for the highest price, 70% for the highest price, etc.


4. On the Data tab, click What-If Analysis and select Data Table from the list.

Select Data Table


5. Click in the 'Column input cell' box (the percentages are in a column) and select cell C4.

We select cell C4 because the percentages refer to cell C4 (% sold for the highest price). Together with the formula in cell B12, Excel now knows that it should replace cell C4 with 60% to calculate the total profit, replace cell C4 with 70% to calculate the total profit, etc.

 Column Input Cell


Note: this is a one variable data table so we leave the Row input cell blank.

6. Click OK.

Result.


Conclusion: if you sell 60% for the highest price, you obtain a total profit of $3800, if you sell 70% for the highest price, you obtain a total profit of $4100, etc.

Note: the formula bar indicates that the cells contain an array formula. Therefore, you cannot delete a single result. To delete the results, select the range B13:B17 and press Delete.


Two Variable Data Table
To create a two variable data table, execute the following steps.

1. Select cell A12 and type =D10 (refer to the total profit cell).

2. Type the different unit profits (highest price) in row 12.

3. Type the different percentages in column A.

4. Select the range A12:D17.

We are going to calculate the total profit for the different combinations of 'unit profit (highest price)' and '% sold for the highest price'.

Two Variable Data Table in Excel


5. On the Data tab, click What-If Analysis and select Data Table from the list.

Select Data Table


6. Click in the 'Row input cell' box (the unit profits are in a row) and select cell D7.

7. Click in the 'Column input cell' box (the percentages are in a column) and select cell C4.

We select cell D7 because the unit profits refer to cell D7. We select cell C4 because the percentages refer to cell C4. Together with the formula in cell A12, Excel now knows that it should replace cell D7 with $50 and cell C4 with 60% to calculate the total profit, replace cell D7 with $50 and cell C4 with 70% to calculate the total profit, etc.



8. Click OK.

Result.



Conclusion: if you sell 60% for the highest price, at a unit profit of $50, you obtain a total profit of $3800, if you sell 80% for the highest price, at a unit profit of $60, you obtain a total profit of $5200, etc.

Note: the formula bar indicates that the cells contain an array formula. Therefore, you cannot delete a single result. To delete the results, select the range B13:D17 and press Delete.

What-If Analysis - Goal Seek


What if you want to know how many books you need to sell for the highest price, to obtain a total profit of exactly $4700? You can use Excel's Goal Seek feature to find the answer.

1. On the Data tab, click What-If Analysis, Goal Seek.


The Goal Seek dialog box appears.

2. Select cell D10.

3. Click in the 'To value' box and type 4700.

4. Click in the 'By changing cell' box and select cell C4.

5. Click OK.


Result. You need to sell 90% of the books for the highest price to obtain a total profit of exactly $4700.



What-If Analysis - Scenario Manager

From excel-easy.com

What-If Analysis in Excel allows you to try out different values (scenarios) for formulas. The following example helps you master what-if analysis quickly and easily.

Assume you own a book store and have 100 books in storage. You sell a certain % for the highest price of $50 and a certain % for the lower price of $20.



If you sell 60% for the highest price, cell D10 calculates a total profit of 60 * $50 + 40 * $20 = $3800.

Create Different Scenarios
But what if you sell 70% for the highest price? And what if you sell 80% for the highest price? Or 90%, or even 100%? Each different percentage is a different scenario. You can use the Scenario Manager to create these scenarios.

Note: You can simply type in a different percentage into cell C4 to see the corresponding result of a scenario in cell D10. However, what-if analysis enables you to easily compare the results of different scenarios. Read on.

1. On the Data tab, click What-If Analysis and select Scenario Manager from the list.


​The Scenario Manager dialog box appears.

2. Add a scenario by clicking on Add.


3. Type a name (60% highest), select cell C4 (% sold for the highest price) for the Changing cells and click on OK.


4. Enter the corresponding value 0.6 and click on OK again.


5. Next, add 4 other scenarios (70%, 80%, 90% and 100%).

Finally, your Scenario Manager should be consistent with the picture below:


Note: to see the result of a scenario, select the scenario and click on the Show button. Excel will change the value of cell C4 accordingly for you to see the corresponding result on the sheet.


Scenario Summary
To easily compare the results of these scenarios, execute the following steps.

1. Click the Summary button in the Scenario Manager.

2. Next, select cell D10 (total profit) for the result cell and click on OK.


Result:


Conclusion: if you sell 70% for the highest price, you obtain a total profit of $4100, if you sell 80% for the highest price, you obtain a total profit of $4400, etc. That's how easy what-if analysis in Excel can be.