Excel® Data Analysis For Dummies®

To view this book's Cheat Sheet, simply go to www.dummies.com and search for “Excel Data Analysis For Dummies Cheat Sheet” in the Search box.

Part 1

Getting Started with Data Analysis

IN THIS PART …

Understand data analysis and get to know basic analysis features such as conditional formatting and subtotals.

Discover Excel’s built-in tools for analyzing data.

Learn how to build Excel tables that hold and store the data you need to analyze.

Find quick and easy ways to begin your analysis using simple statistics, sorting, and filtering.

Get practical stratagems and common-sense tactics for grabbing data from extra sources.

Explore techniques for cleaning and organizing the raw data you want to analyze.

Introduction

The world is bursting at the seams with data. It’s on our computers, it’s in our networks, it’s on the web. Some days, it seems to be in the very air itself, borne on the wind. But here’s the thing: no one actually cares about data. A collection of data — whether it resides on your PC or some giant server somewhere — is really just a bunch of numbers and text, dates and times. No one cares about data because data doesn’t mean anything. Data isn’t cool. You know what’s cool? Knowledge is cool. Insight is cool.

So how do you turn data into knowledge? How do you tweak data to generate insight? You need to organize that data, and then you need to clean it, sort it, filter it, run calculations on it, and summarize it. In a word, you need to analyze the data.

Now for the good news: If you have (or can get) that data into Excel, you have a giant basket of data analysis tools at your disposal. Excel really seems to have been made with data analysis in mind, because it offers such a wide variety of features and techniques for organizing, manipulating, and summarizing just about anything that resides in a worksheet. If you can get your data into Excel, Excel will help you turn that data into knowledge and insight.

This book takes you on a tour of Excel’s data-analysis tools. You learn everything you need to know to make your data spill its secrets and to uncover your data’s hidden-in-plain-sight wisdom. Best of all, if you already know how to perform the basic Excel chores, you don’t need to learn any other fancy-schmancy Excel techniques to get started in data analysis. Sweet? You bet.

About This Book

This book contains 16 chapters (and a bonus appendix), but that doesn’t mean that you have to, as the King says gravely in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, “Begin at the beginning and go on till you come to the end: then stop.” If you’ve done a bit of data-analysis work in the past, please feel free to dip into the book wherever it strikes your fancy. The chapters all present their data analysis info and techniques in readily digestible, bite-sized chunks, so you can certainly graze your way through this book.

However, if you’re brand-spanking new to data analysis — particularly if you’re not even sure what data analysis even is — no problem: I’m here to help. To get your data analysis education off to a solid start, I highly recommend reading the book’s first three chapters to get some of the basics down cold. From there, you can travel to more advanced territory, safe in the knowledge that you’ve got some survival skills to fall back on.

What You Can Safely Ignore

This book consists of several hundred pages. Do I expect you to read every word on every page? Yes, I do. Just kidding! No, of course I don’t. Entire sections — heck, maybe even entire chapters — might contain information that’s not relevant to what you do. That’s fine and my feelings won’t be hurt if you skim through (or — who’s kidding whom? — skip over) those parts of the book.

If time (or attention) is short, what else might you want to ignore? Okay, in many places throughout the book I provide step-by-step instructions to complete some task. Each of those steps includes some bold type that gives you the basic instruction. In many cases, however, below that bold text I offer supplementary information to flesh out or extend or explain the bold instruction. Am I just showing off how much I know about all this stuff? Yes, sometimes. Do you have to read these extended instructions? Nope. Read the bold stuff, for sure, but feel free to skip the details if they seem unnecessary or unimportant.

This book also contains a few sidebars that are marked with the Technical Stuff icon. These sidebars contain extra information that’s either a bit on the advanced side or goes into heroic, often obscure, detail about the topic at hand. Do you need to read these sidebars? Not at all. Does that make them a waste of page real estate? I don’t think so, because they’re useful for folks interested in delving into the minutiae of data analysis. If that’s not you, ignore away.

If your time is very limited (or you’re just aching to get tonight’s binge-watching started), you can also ignore the information contained in this book’s Tip sidebars. Yes, these tidbits offer easier and faster ways to get things done, so skipping them to save time now might cost you more time in the long run, but, hey, it’s a judgment call.

Foolish Assumptions

This book is for people who are new (or relatively new) to Excel data analysis. That doesn’t mean, however, that the book is suitable to people who have never used a PC, Microsoft Windows, or even Excel. So first I assume not only that you have a PC running Microsoft Windows but also that you’ve had some experience with both. (For the purposes of this book, that just means you know how to start and switch between programs.) I also assume that your PC has a recent version of Excel installed. What does “recent” mean? Well, this book is based on Excel 2019, but you should be fine if you’re running Excel 2016 or even Excel 2013.

As I said before, I do not assume that you’re an Excel expert, but I do assume that you know at least the following Excel basics:

  • Creating, saving, opening, and switching between workbooks.
  • Creating and switching between worksheets.
  • Finding and running commands on the Ribbon.
  • Entering numbers, text, dates, times, and formulas into worksheet cells.
  • Working with Excel’s basic worksheet functions.

Icons Used in This Book

Like other books in the For Dummies series, this book uses icons, or little margin pictures, to flag things that don’t quite fit into the flow of the chapter discussion. Here are the icons that I use:

This icon marks text that contains some things that useful or important enough that you’d do well to store the text somewhere safe in your memory for later recall.

This icon marks text that contains some for-nerds-only technical details or explanations that you’re free to skip.

This icon marks text that contains a shortcut or easier way to do things, which I hope will make your life — or, at least, the data analysis portion of your life — more efficient.

This icon marks text that contains a friendly but unusually insistent reminder to avoid doing something. You have been warned.

Beyond the Book

  • Examples: This book’s sample Excel workbooks can be found by searching the book's title online at www.dummies.com or at my website: https://www.mcfedries.com/.
  • Cheat Sheet: To locate this book's Cheat Sheet, go to www.dummies.com and, again, search for Excel Data Analysis For Dummies. See the Cheat Sheet for info on Excel database functions, Boolean expressions, and important statistical terms.
  • Updates: If this book has any updates after printing, they will be posted to this book's page at www.dummies.com.

Where to Go from Here

If you’re just getting your feet wet with Excel data analysis, flip the page and start perusing the first chapter.

If you have some experience with Excel data analysis or you have a special problem or question, use the Table of Contents or the index to find out where I cover that topic and then turn to that page.

Either way, happy analyzing!