|
Courses >
Accounting > Intermediate Microsoft Excel 2010
Master
advanced features of Microsoft Excel 2010, including charting and
PivotTables, and discover how this powerful MS Office program can boost
your productivity. In this practical, hands-on course, you'll learn how
to create informative and eye-catching charts, as well as how to
harness the power of Excel 2010's filtering techniques.
You'll
see how Excel 2010 can give you further insight into your valuable
data. And by learning how to create macros that eliminate repetitive
tasks, you'll earn your coworkers admiration and gratitude. With your
macro knowledge, you'll be able to manipulate data with the push of a
button.
You'll also discover how to use Goal Seek and Solver and
apply them to real-world problems. And you'll set yourself apart from
the casual Excel user by learning how to use Excel's VLOOKUP, INDEX
& MATCH, and other time-saving functions.
So get ready for six fun, action-packed weeks that will take your Excel skills to the next level!
To purchase this course, click the Enroll Now button below:
Recommended Courses:
Students who enrolled in Intermediate Microsoft Excel 2010 were also interested in the following courses:
Introduction to Microsoft Excel 2007
Advanced Microsoft Excel 2003
Introduction to QuickBooks 2008
Introduction to Microsoft Office Accounting Professional 2008
Introduction to Microsoft Access 2007
Syllabus:
All
courses run for six weeks, with a two-week grace period at the end. Two
lessons are released each week for the six-week duration of the course.
You do not have to be present when the lesson is released, but you must
complete each lesson within two weeks of its release.
A new
section of each course starts on the second or third Wednesday of each
month. If enrolling in a series of two or more courses, please be sure
to space the start date for each course at least two months apart.
| Week One |
| Wednesday - Lesson 01 |
In
our first lesson, you'll discover why Excel 2011 is such a powerful and
user-friendly charting tool. To you, a workbook's numbers might tell an
interesting story. But to others, that story might not be quite so
obvious—they might just see plain old numbers. So today, you'll find
out how to choose the right chart for telling your story, and then how
to create, format, and edit your chart to help others clearly visualize
that story.
|
| Friday - Lesson 02 |
There
are so many great charting features and enhancements in Excel 2011,
there's no way we could cover all of them in a single lesson. So today,
we'll continue exploring Excel's charting options—this time looking at
the lesser-known options that are available to you. Even though they
aren't well known, these options can add tremendous value to your
worksheets in the right situations. We'll walk through a few of them
step-by-step so you'll see the value for yourself.
|
| Week Two |
| Wednesday - Lesson 03 |
Working
with data in Excel can be quite easy—and sometimes even fun—when you
know about the extra tools that are available once you have your data
arranged in a table format. One of these great tools is the Auto Filter
command. In today's lesson, you'll learn how to use Auto Filter to
limit your table information to just the records you want. Not only
does Auto Filter allow for finding exact matches, but it can also
filter and sort based on cell shading or font color. How great is that?
|
| Friday - Lesson 04 |
Normally,
you'll use your Excel workbooks as a place to enter formulas and get
answers. But what if the formula isn't returning the answer you want?
If you know what you want but you just don't know what formula will get
you there, then Excel's Goal Seek is exactly what you need. This tool
will help you avoid the trial-and-error approach that most Excel users
go through to get to the right answer. In this lesson, we'll walk
through multiple examples together, exploring several ways to apply
this great feature.
|
| Week Three |
| Wednesday - Lesson 05 |
Today,
you'll learn how to use one of the best features of Excel: the
PivotTable. If you've heard about PivotTables before, then you know
what I mean. There's no greater what-if analysis tool to summarize,
reorganize, and report data. When we practice creating a PivotTable,
you'll discover how "pivoting" your data helps you gain valuable
insights by seeing the same information from a different perspective.
This is a lesson you won't want to miss!
|
| Friday - Lesson 06 |
Just
like charting, Excel's PivotTables are too big a topic to fit into one
lesson. So today, we'll take PivotTables to the next level by taking a
tour through some of Excel's more advanced techniques. You'll learn how
quick and easy it is to group your data to give your PivotTable even
more power. Then you'll find out how a PivotTable can serve as your
source and inspiration for some really nice charts, specifically, the
PivotChart.
|
| Week Four |
| Wednesday - Lesson 07 |
Have
you ever worked with a financial model in Excel and wondered how you
could speculate different outcomes by changing different input amounts?
The Excel Solver can do just that. In this lesson, you'll learn how to
use Solver to solve a complex problem based on the criteria and
constraints we provide it. If you liked the Goal Seek lesson, then this
Solver lesson is going to knock your socks off.
|
| Friday - Lesson 08 |
Back
by popular demand, it's Solver! Today, we'll continue with our topic
from the prior lesson, but this time, we'll throw in a little bit of a
wrinkle. Instead of me guiding you step-by-step through a practical,
hands-on experience with the Solver, I'm only going to guide you to a
point because I want to help you master a tool that's as complex as it
is powerful. By the end of this lesson, and mostly on your own, you'll
have successfully mastered using Solver!
|
| Week Five |
| Wednesday - Lesson 09 |
Today's
topic is a student (and instructor) favorite. In this lesson, you'll
find out how to use macros to turn boring, repetitive, time-consuming
tasks into automated Excel functions. Tired of doing the same
formatting on the same report month after month? Here's your chance to
see how to record a macro that performs that time-consuming task in
seconds with just one swift click of a button! How will you spend all
the extra time that this lesson will save you?
|
| Friday - Lesson 10 |
If
you've used Excel for a while, you know there are hundreds of functions
at your disposal. We're going to spend the last three lessons of this
course going over exactly how and why you'd use them. We'll start today
by going through a quick overview of all the categories of functions
and the different methods you can use to create them. Then, later in
the lesson, we'll ease into creating various functions using some from
the Text category.
|
| Week Six |
| Wednesday - Lesson 11 |
Next
to learning how to create macros, most students want to learn as much
as they can about Excel functions. In today's lesson, we'll dig a
little deeper into using some of the slightly more complex functions
that you'll find in the Math & Trig category. Specifically, we'll
look at two of my favorites, the SUMIF and COUNTIF functions, and
discuss how to use one of Excel 2007's new functions, SUMIFS. If one of
your objectives in taking this course is to learn more about functions,
you're in for a treat!
|
| Friday - Lesson 12 |
Since
functions are such an important and integral part of using Excel, we'll
spend our final lesson going over a few more of them. Today, you're
going to learn how to use the extremely popular VLOOKUP function. If
you're already accustomed to using VLOOKUP, don't feel short changed,
because we're going to add to the complexity. We're going to use the
INDEX and MATCH functions to do something just short of amazing. This
is another lesson you won't want to miss!
|
To purchase this course, click the Enroll Now button below:
This
course includes a knowledgeable and caring instructor who will guide
you through your lessons, facilitate discussions, and answer your
questions. The instructor for this course will be Chad Wambolt.
Chad
Wambolt is a graduate of Boise State University, where he obtained his
bachelor's degree in accounting. He has spent his entire professional
career in the finance field, working for both privately and publicly
held companies with sales ranging from $500 million to $3 billion.
Through the course of his career, Chad has become an expert user of
Microsoft Excel. His knowledge of Excel's capabilities has helped
organizations streamline processes and save countless hours of labor.
Chad has taught Excel to students of varying skill levels since 1997.
To purchase this course, click the Enroll Now button below:
Requirements:
Microsoft Windows Vista or XP, Microsoft Excel 2007 or Microsoft Excel Home and Student 2007 or Microsoft Office 2007 (the Home and Student Edition or Standard Edition
of Microsoft Office 2007 are all acceptable). Please be sure to install
the software on your computer before the course begins; Internet
access, e-mail, the Microsoft Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox Web
browser, and the Adobe Flash and PDF plug-ins
(two free and simple downloads you obtain at
http://www.adobe.com/downloads by clicking Get Adobe Flash Player and
Get Adobe Reader). This course is not suitable for Macintosh users, nor
for users of older versions of Microsoft Excel.
To purchase this course, click the Enroll Now button below:
Student Reviews:
Reviews coming soon! Please check back next month.
To purchase this course, click the Enroll Now button below:
|