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Exploring Office 2007: Discovering Dashboards in Excel 2007
Working with Excel 2007 Dashboards
Helen Bradley

Often when you are working with data in Microsoft Excel the data you have to work with won't be presented in a way that you need it to be. There are a number of options for displaying your data and one of these is to use what is commonly referred to as a dashboard.

Excel Dashboards are a front end for your data so that, instead of looking at all your data, you look at the subset of the data that you are most interested in. In an enterprise environment dashboards are often created by technical specialists and provided to users so they can see just the data that they need to work with. However, some techniques employed in creating a dashboard are simple enough that you can use them to analyze and display your own data.

In this article we will step through the process of creating a dashboard chart and data display for some hypothetical data from a business. We suggest that you create the data and follow, step by step, as the dashboard elements are created so you get a feel for how the process works.

Once you have completed your first solution you will have the skills and understand the workflow for creating your own dashboard elements. In the process of creating the dashboard element we'll look at some interesting Excel features, including using functions to extract data from a data store, capturing and using pictures of your data, and learning how to create a custom drop-down list from which you can select the data to view.


» Preparing the Data

Step 1
To get started, open a new Excel 2007 workbook. You will need two sheets in the workbook, one called Dashboard and one called Data. To name your sheets, double click on the Sheet tab for each and type the new name for the sheet.

Step 2
So you have some data to work with type these entries into these cells on the sheet called Data:

Cell:	Value:
A1	Office
B1	San Francisco
A3	Product A
A4	Product B
A5	Product C
B2	Q1
C2	Q2
D2	Q3
E2	Q4
In the range B3 to E5 enter some sample numerical data. Now select the range from A1 to E5 and copy that range to cell A8, A15 and A22. Enter these values into these cells:
Cell:	Value:
B8	Houston
B15	Phoenix
B22	Sacramento
You should have four identical sets of data down the left side of your worksheet representing the four offices. Take a little time to create a different set of numbers in the area from B10 to E12, from B17 to E19 and from B24 to E26. Save your work as this data will be the data that we will extract into the dashboard.


» Extracting the Data

Step 3
We will extract the data to display on the dashboard on this worksheet before continuing. So, to create an area for the extracted data to appear, into these cells type these values:

Cell:	Value:
H1 	1
H2	Q1
I2	Q2
J2	Q3
K2	Q4
G3	San Francisco
G4	Houston
G5	Phoenix
G6	Sacramento
As you can see the data that we are trying to extract has a different arrangement from the data in the main data area. To extract the data for this new table we can use a formula. This is the formula that goes in cell H3:
=OFFSET($B$3,CHOOSE($H$1,0,1,2),0)
This data uses the Offset and Choose functions to extract the Q1 values for the San Francisco office for Product A. These functions give us the ability to fill the table using copied formulas rather than having to build each individually.

To create the remainder of the formulas, copy the formula from cell H3 into cells H4, H5 and H6. Alter the reference to cell $B$3 in cell H4 to read $B$10, alter it in cell H5 to read $B$17, and in cell H6 to read $B$24. You can now copy the range H3 to H6 across the worksheet to column K to fill the table.

The data area now extracts the product details for Product A for all four offices from the larger table.

Step 4
The dashboard will display a chart based on the data we have extracted so, to do this, make a selection around the area from cell G2 to K6 and create a simple column chart based on this data. Format the chart as you want it to look.

Step 5
Now that you have the data extracted on the data sheet you can test the formulas by typing the number 2 in cell H1. Notice that the data and chart change to reflect the result for Product B those offices and quarters. If you change cell H1 to read the number 3 you will see data for Product C.

While this is useful we can add even more functionality to the solution by placing the data and chart elsewhere in the workbook and not on a sheet which is cluttered with other data. In addition, we can provide our user (or ourselves) with a combo list from which to select the product to view.

Before we do this, add three more cell entries:

Cell:	Value:
M2 	Product A
M3	Product B
M4	Product C

| Next Page »

Contents:
1. Working with Excel 2007 Dashboards
2. Capturing the Dashboard Images and Creating a Combo Box






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