Best Microsoft Excel Bloggers

Friday, October 26, 2012

LinkedIn- Privacy/Email Settings

LinkedIn - Privacy / Email Settings

I just finished writing a CPE EBook entitled LinkedIn for Accountants- What is it and What Do I Do with It?
Everyone talks about Privacy Settings on Facebook but no one ever mentions LinkedIn. It may not be as worrisome as it is not "personal information per se "however you should be aware of how and to whom your information is displayed.  I also thought I would help you understand how to change the frequency of emails you might be receiving if you belong to a number of different groups.


If you start joining a lot of groups and start getting a lot of emails, you can change the frequency of communication by clicking on Groups, Companies and Applications and making some changes

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Become an Excel VBA Master!

I wanted to tell you about Daniel Ferry's Excel Academy.
Daniel is a Microsoft Excel MVP and runs a really interesting Excel enthusiast blog.
If you have not discovered it yet, definitely check it out. It’s called Excel Hero. What makes Daniel's blog interesting is that he does all sorts of things with Excel that no one has ever seen before. Some really fun things as well as some very important and useful business things as well.

The Excel Hero Academy that he runs  has been extremely popular and is now in its fourth year. Excel Hero Academy (EHA4) opens on October 1.  This program teaches you how Excel “thinks” and how to leverage that to be drastically more productive at work. This makes you a valuable commodity in today’s competitive workforce.  You will be an expert by the time you finish it.

This 16-week course will teach you to craft proper VBA, including truly understanding and leveraging the Excel object model, modularization, functions and UDFs, classes, branching, looping, and interfacing with external applications such as Access. But this is not a theory course, it’s hands-on, applied learning focused on business solutions including extraordinary Dashboards and other methods of reporting. Heavy emphasis is on database functionality both by using Excel exclusively, and with using Excel as the front-end to a real database.

Daniel says “We will push Excel hard, seeing just what is possible without any VBA coding at all (a fun example of this is my Excel Chess Game Viewer), but then Discovering the Next Level of power and the universe of possibilities that VBA brings to the table.”

The Excel Hero Academy is extremely in depth and is video based. If you can dedicate three to four hours a week for the next four months, the course will revolutionize the way you solve business problems.

 

There is homework and I want to be clear -you need to have the time for this course - you just can't squeeze it in and think you can do it in ten minutes. I tried it and that does not work :(
I will also state that I personally would only recommend this for high intermediate to advanced Excel users and those having an interest in learning more about VBA. You jump right in – if you have been looking to move to the next level in Excel and VBA this is it. I will be attending this program again and hope to see you there.

Daniel is committed to continually improving the Excel Hero Academy and the results speak for themselves. Just take a moment to peruse the many dozens of student reviews on his LinkedIn Profile. Here is just one: “Daniel is an Excel genius who does extraordinary things with Excel, and uses his considerable skills to create exceptional training opportunities. ...inspiring!” – Doug Kim, Senior Editor, Office.com, Microsoft”

If you enroll in the class, you will be glad that you did. I have worked with Daniel and have secured a $50 discount for you. To learn more and enroll in the course click here

Your $50 discount code: CPASELFSTUDY.

If you sign up let me know. I always appreciate feedback particularly when I am recommending something. Daniel and I are still talking about ways to set up this course for CPE credit down the road so all comments etc. are appreciated. I also want to let you know that I do receive a small commission for anyone who signs up.



Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Page Orientation - 2 Ways to Change It.

The other day, I was sitting there changing the page orientation in Excel to LANDSCAPE AGAIN and thought AGAIN that there has to be a better way. I was also doing a lot of muttering about Microsoft and why the heck they have the default as portrait instead of LANDSCAPE anyway. Seriously, how often do you change your page orientation and think why am I doing this AGAIN?

Anyway.. I digress... of course I am thinking that I should stop being so lazy and complaining and just change it. So, I am sitting here thinking about changing something in Options or creating a macro because even though I use templates and create them from time to time - I totally spaced it and did not consider the obvious solution.  I was discussing this with some members of the Excel BlackBelts group on LinkedIN and of course a number of people immediately pointed out that I should just create a template or edit the existing  template.
(Great group by the way- if you are looking for an intermediate to advanced Excel group).

James Travers, a member of ExcelBlackBelts, gave me such as great example that I knew a lot of you would find it useful. His comment is below:

The default workbook is a template file called book (with the appropriate template extension .xlt, .xltx or .xltm) .
The default worksheet is a template file called sheet (again with the appropriate extension). These are in your xlstart folder which by default is in (on an XP machine) c:\Windows\Application Data\Microsoft\Excel\XLStart or c:\Documents and Settings\username\Application Data\Microsoft\Excel\XLSTART but you can specify a different one in Excel Options.

Any other workbooks that are in that folder are automatically loaded on Excel start up.
I have my defaults set up with the company standard header & footer, print settings, corporate theme, cell styles, pivot, slicer & table styles. I also have an add-in to apply these settings to any other workbook on 1 click of a custom ribbon command button.

We've rolled the same settings out to the entire company through a log-on script meaning that all workbooks that get created now automatically have the correct format and any legacy workbooks can be updated with 1 click.

If you are interested in the add-in, feel free to contact James Travers, on LinkedIN.


If you can't change your template due to network restrictions etc, another option that was pointed out is to add the Orientation button to the Ribbon. To do this, go to File>Options and select Customize Ribbon. From the Choose Command from drop-down arrow, select All Commands. Scroll down and click on the first Orientation icon. Click Add and specify where on the Ribbon you want it to display. When you go back to Excel you will see the Orientation icon on the ribbon and when you click on it, you have the option of Landscape or Portrait.
Be still my heart..........look how much clicking this is going to save you!

Monday, August 13, 2012

Excel 2013 is coming!

Yes- I know that many of you are still using Excel 2003, Excel 2007 and Excel 2010 and quite happily however apparently Microsoft cannot wait until 2013 to release Office 2013. It is on its way.

At this point, I have not tried it simply because I still use XP and did not want to to upgrade after witnessing the debacle of Windows Vista however now I will be forced to since Office 2013 requires Windows 7 or better.  It looks to have several interesting things - one of which is that PowerPivot is now incorporated into Excel instead of just being an add-on.   The big thing though is that it will be cloud based which I know offers some security concerns for businesses.

As soon as I get it and play around with it, I will update you.

If any of you reading this blog, have tried the beta version, I would be interested in your comments.

http://www.microsoft.com/office/preview/en/try-office-preview

http://betanews.com/2012/07/22/a-preview-of-microsoft-office-2013/

Mobile Apps for Finance



If you are into stocks and investing I thought you might be interested in this link.
It discusses the top 17 Must Have Mobile Apps for Finance - some of the apps are free and some are pricey but a lot of interesting ones.

http://www.businessinsider.com/17-must-have-mobile-apps-for-investors-2012-8


Ms. Excel- Resident Excel Geek