The Basics of Pivot Tables
Pivot tables are awesome. You can take a range of data, apply a little magic to it, then manipulate that
data in so many ways to make analyzing and predicting much easier. It’s a great way to compare and
manipulate data on the fly in a meaningful matter. They seem as if they are really difficult and esoteric
things to create, and people who can use them well are very much valued. While a Pivot Table in Excel
can seem quite complex, I want to let you in on a little secret:
The Basics of a Pivot Table are Easy
The first thing you need is a large range of data. For this exercise, we have four friends who are
competing for the first six months of 2017 to see who gets the highest step count (fitness-minded
fellows that they are) I’m not going to post the whole table, as 180 entries would be eye-crossingly
boring. And you know, that’s the point. But the source table is going to start something like this:
Date
Grady
Rich
Derek
John
1/1/2017
10532
12637
8679
12129
1/2/2017
11329
18430
9393
9221
1/3/2017
12475
16594
14010
13990
So, we have five columns – one for the date and one for each of the contestants. They record their step
counts each day. But at the end of the contest, they want to analyze that data to see how they did not
only by day but by month or week.
Without Pivot Tables, this would be a royal pain. So, let’s make one.
To make a Pivot Table
1.
2.
3.
4.
Select any cell in a data rage that includes a heading for each column in the top row.
Activate the Insert tab.
In the Tables group, click the PivotTable button to open the Create PivotTable dialog box.
In the Table/Range box, verify that the range in the box is the range you want. By default, it will
display the continuous range that has the selected cell in it, but you can also select the cells with
the mouse if you wish.
The Basics of Pivot Tables
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5. Select a location for the PivotTable. You can place the PivotTable in a
new or existing worksheet. I almost always go with a new worksheet.
6. Click OK.
Add Pivot Table Fields
You can add fields to a PivotTable to specify the data you want to display.
The Fields of the source data appear in the PivotTable Field List task pane.
To add a field, drag a relevant field from the top of the PivotTable Field List
to one of the four areas at the bottom of the task pane. You can add more
than one field to an area, and you don’t need to add all fields to the table.
This example was a fairly simple one, as the relevant headers were merely dates and the contestants’
names. I dragged the Date field to the Row box. I then dragged each of the contestants’ names to the
Values box.
As of this writing, the current version of Excel does something pretty nifty and will automatically
collapse the dates by month, using the sum of the values as the default.
See the plus signs beside each name? From here, you can click on the plus sign if you want to see the
value for each date.
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But let’s say you wanted to give this to someone who isn’t very patient with learning how to manipulate
Excel, but still needs to filter the data sometimes. What can you do to make this easy on the user?
Slicers in Pivot Tables
Slicers are just buttons that work as filters. To create a Slicer, go to
the Pivot TablesTools|Analyze tab. In the Filter group, click on
Insert Slicer.
I’ve chosen Months as the option here because the guys want to
see how they do month by month as well as how well they’ve done
in total.
When we click on each month, we will then display the data only
for that month. The beauty here is that the source data is still safe.
You can manipulate how you display the data in a Pivot Table, but
the source data is always unchanged. You will also notice that in a
Pivot Table, the Grand Total always reflects the data that is being
currently displayed – no extra formulas or functions to write. Just
change on the fly to display what you need!
These are just the basics of Pivot Tables. You can get a lot more complex with them if you want to, and I
urge you to play and explore. But these basics should be enough to help amaze your co-workers and
excite your boss.
As always, if you have any questions, just comment, and I’ll try to help you out.
The Basics of Pivot Tables
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