Learning Dashboards? – Go thru these 33 Recommended Resources

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During last one week, we had a gala time with Dashboard Week on chandoo.org. To wrap-up the week, I am sharing a list of recommended resources, websites, tutorials & ideas for making dashboards.

[Note: I will be sharing your contributions for dashboard week on Monday]

Recommended Resources, Tutorials, Information on Making Dashboards

Recommended Resources on Making Dashboards:

I have broken down this post in to various sections. Click on the links to quickly access the part you want to know or just keep scrolling to get the whole thing.

  1. Books on Dashboards
  2. Websites for Learning about Dashboards
  3. Dashboard Training Programs
  4. Add-ins & Software to Make Dashboards
  5. Dashboard Tutorials & Downloads on Chandoo.org

 

Books on Dashboards

Excel Dashboards and Reports by Mike Alexander

Excel Dashboards and Reports by Mike Alexandar

Authored by Mike “Dick” Alexander, a specialist on Bacon, Access, Excel – this book is an excellent guide to you if you need to learn how to make excel dashboards. Mind you the book teaches you various techniques required to construct the dashboards, but the onus of putting together these ideas to come-up with jaw-dropping dashboards is on you.

Information Dashboard Design by Stephen Few

Now, what can I say about this. Stephen Few’s classic book on dashboards is an eye opener for anyone making charts or dashboard reports. Few starts the book by showing what a bad dashboard is and then moves on to tell you how visual cognition works. He later shows a couple of excellent dashboard designs. This book is a must read and refer to if you design dashboards.

Visual Display of Quantitative Information by Edward Tufte

Edward Tufte’s master piece – Visual Display of Quantitative Information is an authoritative guide on how to design charts to communicate information. He shows various examples from history and gives theoretical concepts that you can apply to any chart (or slide) you design.

Business Dashboards – Visual Catalog by Nils Rasmussen

This book, as the name suggests is a catalog of successful dashboards. Nils’ work also includes a handy guide on KPI design and 1000s of KPI examples. A good read if you design dashboards not just based on Excel but many other tools.

Balance Scorecards & Operational Dashboards using Excel by Ron Person

Ron’s book on Balance Scorecards and operational metrics & visualization is a handy guide on how to use Excel’s features to monitor your company’s performance holistically.

Excel Pivot Tables & Pivot Charts by Peter G Aitken

Anyone making dashboards using excel will have to learn how to use Pivot Tables & Pivot charts to their full potential. This book can guide you in that direction.

Excel 2007 – Power Programming by John Walkenbach

Once you set out to make a dashboard using Excel, naturally you might feel powerless but certain feature limitations in Excel. You wish you can tell Excel to do something so that you can save time and do things that are more awesome (like actually improving your business). This is when you can use John’s Excel Power Programming book. The book teaches you how to extend Excel’s capabilities using Macros & VBA.

Non-Designer’s Design Book by Robin Williams

Do not be mis-guided by the small size of this book. This book can transform your ordinary dashboards (or designs / slides etc.) in to truly world class designs. The book teaches you fundamental design concepts and a must read if your job involves visual communication – ie making presentations, excel workbooks or reports.

 

Websites for Learning about Dashboards

Excel Dashboards Section of our site

This section of chandoo.org site provides you valuable tips, ideas, templates, examples and other useful information on Excel dashboards.

Stephen Few’s Blog

Insightful commentary on the state of business intelligence, dashboards and charting practices.

Robert’s Site on Excel, Tableau, VBA and more

Very good examples of excel & tableau dashboards, techniques, macro code snippets and more.

Dashboard Examples & Commentary

Dashboard Examples & Commentary

Dashboard screen-shots, commentary and interesting links

Jorge’s Charts blog

Charting principles, commentary from Jorge

Jon Peltier’s Charting Pages

This is your bible if you want to arm twist Excel charts

 

Dashboard Training Programs

Excel School Dashboard Training Program

Excel School Dashboard Training Program

Well, I have bored you enough with Excel School already, so I will keep this short. If you wish to learn how I make my dashboards, join Excel School.

Live Training from Chandoo

I am conducting 2 day long, intense, hands-on & practical training on Excel dashboards & data analysis in Chicago, Columbus, Washington DC in May, June 2013. If you live nearby, consider enrolling in this program to become awesome in Excel.

 

Add-ins & Software to Make Dashboards

Excel Sparklines Adding [highly recommended]

Excel Sparklines Adding [highly recommended]

Adds the capability of Micro-charts to Excel. Very powerful, extremely awesome add-in by Fabrice.

Jon Peltier’s Excel Chart Add-ins for frequently used Dashboard charts

Jon’s charting addins are a must have if you make charts like waterfall charts, panel charts, dot plots etc.

Power Pivot for Excel 2010

Power Pivot helps you analyze massive data and present results in instant dashboards. A free addin from Microsoft and works with Excel 2010.

Tableau Public – for visualizing data & sharing your dashboards with public

Tableau public helps you create visualizations, charts & dashboards and share them with public thru web. A very powerful data analysis and visualization platform.

Charley Kyd’s IncSight DB for making Excel Dashboards

Charley’s Dashboard maker helps you create quick dynamic dashboards using Excel.

 

Dashboard Tutorials & Downloads on Chandoo.org

  1. KPI Dashboard using Excel – 6 part tutorial
  2. Project Management Dashboard in Excel
  3. Dynamic Dashboard using Excel – 4 part tutorial
  4. Website Dashboard in Excel
  5. Sales Dashboards Examples
  6. Travel Website Dashboard
  7. Customer Service Dashboard
  8. Executive Review Dashboard
  9. Healthcare Dashboard
  10. Dynamic Dashboard using Excel 2010 – Pivot Tables & Slicers
  11. Personal Expenses & Finance Dashboards – 7 Examples

What do you recommend for someone learning about Dashboards?

The above links are what I usually rely on when it comes to dashboard education. What about you?

What books, websites, software & training programs do you recommend? Please share using comments.

PS: Links to Jon Pelteir’s Addins, Charley’s Dashboard Kit and Dashboard Books are affiliate links. It means, when you click on the links and purchase these awesome products, I get a small commission. I recommend these products because I genuinely think they are awesome. So go ahead and get your dashboards to awesome level.

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70 Responses to “10 Tips to Make Better and Boss-proof Excel Spreadsheets”

  1. Yogesh Gupta says:

    Proper print settings on each sheet helps your boss to print the reports quickly without hastling you after printing irrelevant stuff.

    It is highly relevant that you print your reports once before circulating it to your boss or other people.

    Knowing that what your boss actully look at in the entire report can be very usefull. You can build a good summary of what your boss wants and put that as separate tab in the form of dashbord report, so that your boss does not peep into rest of your work and start pocking you with irrelevant stuff.

    You can also put that Dashboard into the email summary and not trouble your boss to open your workbook. This is ultimate boss proof tip and I have been using this for long time now.

  2. Shuchi says:

    Thank you Chandoo. Great checklist to follow before delivering an excel spreadsheet to someone else. Some points you mention are seemingly so simple that we might overlook them - like selecting cell#A1, but they make a difference to the impression the spreadsheet creates at the recipient's end.

  3. Tom says:

    Dear Chandoo,
    Great tricks.

    One trick I use (more and more) is to hide the sheet tabs and to hide the formulabar via the 'tools' 'options' and the 'view'-tab.

    Another trick is to limiting the scrolling area to hide all columms (or rows) until the end of the sheet. Select the column, press CTRL+SHIFT+RIGHT, right-click on the column and hide (also possible via VBA).

    I was wondering though if 'boss-proof' is related to 'excel-stupid-proof'?
    Cheerio
    Tom

  4. Martin says:

    Absolutely agree with this post !!!

    on the past months, after reading this blog, PTS's and Debra's Contextures, one of the things I've beggining to do as a best practice is to create all my spreadsheets with 3 tabs: data, summary and control, and this last one generally xlveryhidden, and sometimes the data one hidden as well.

    And this restrictions are also being applied as best practice, and with a lot of benefits as you well mentioned. Furthermore, if combined with dynamic named ranges, formulae is more readable to users, and the WOW effect is often achieved when the question "How did you do that?" arises.....

    Keep on the good posts !!!

    Rgds,

    Martin

  5. Nilesh says:

    Is there a way to keep the data in a seperate file rather than the same excel. This way you could keep presentation and data separate. But not sure how you would link up the two excel files

    • Pieter says:

      Yes, there is a way but it is not prefered.
      I used this a coulple of times, (You need to code).

      mail me if you need assistance with some sort

    • T says:

      It entirely is possible. The problem comes though, when you share the spreadsheet.

      If the recipient doesn't have both files, or access to both, things break when the values try to refresh.

  6. bazlina says:

    ey, why is the boss a she??

  7. Karthik says:

    Chandoo, one more trick that we could use with the help of VBA, RT click on the View code of the particular sheet, in the properties table set the Visible status to 2-xlveryhidden, this ensures the sheet name does not show up even when the BOSS tries to unhide the sheet from the sheet >> unhide option. Dont forget to password protect the VBA (available under tools >> VBAProject properties.

  8. Eric Lind says:

    Very good tips, although I have to say Chandoo, that your cats probably need to be spayed or neutered if they behave like that. =)

  9. Good to see all these tips on a single "sheet", and giving the name *boss proof*, and Dilbert was a great welcome 😀

  10. Peter H says:

    The best way to "Boss Proof" (and "Self Proof"!!) a spreadsheet is to keep back ups. I use a macro that saves the last 3 significant versions of the spreadsheet all with a date stamp included in the file name.

  11. To quickly select cell A1 on all sheet, use CTRL-Page UP or CTRL-Page down to navigate between sheets and CTRL-Home to select cell A1 (if you have frozen pane, it will select the top left cell of the section below).

  12. Jorge Camoes says:

    Great list. And I follow every single item... I also use a consistent background color for input cells in every report/dashboard. And I use a little VBA to identify the user and change the report accordingly (selecting the right market, for example).

  13. Tim Buckingham says:

    Chandoo, Nice post. I like to use the hidden Paste Picture Link option. Keep the original report you want displayed on a hidden sheet and only show the boss the report picture. Also great to watch the confusion when boss trying to select cells is worth the effort!

  14. m-b says:

    I usually save as PDF if there's no interactivity in the report. That way nothing can go wrong 🙂

    • Janet says:

      PDFs work a dream for me too and saves the boss's EA from telling me all the time that she can't print my work!!

  15. Chandoo says:

    @All.. thanks a ton for sharing your ideas. I am thinking of writing a part 2 of this post explaining some of your ideas in detail.

    @Bazlina ... I will make sure the boss is a HE in the next post 🙂

  16. Hui... says:

    "10 Tips to Make Better and Boss-proof Excel Spreadsheets"...
    Unless of course your Boss reads PHD !

  17. Debra McLaren says:

    Great article with one glaring error.

    If (like me) the majority of your spreadsheet errors are *caused* by cats, adding more cats is just going to increase the problem.

  18. Chandoo says:

    @Hui you always have a boss, even if you are boss. If you dont have a boss, then may be a cat or even a dog.

    @Debra: hmm... Are you sure the cats are not after the mouse? Go learn some keyboard shortcuts.. now 😛

  19. Paul Grenier says:

    Great Web Site. I've done almost all the above in trying to build my application and it's taken me hours and hours reading my "dummies " book. Thank you for all this information.
    Is there a formula I can use that will automatically return to "A1" cell should an associate use the 10 page spreadsheet I have?
    Is there a way to set an expiration date on my workbook so that beynd that date no one will get beyond the cover page?

    • Russell Cooney says:

      Paul, in all my "user facing" workbooks (those that I distribute) I create a named range called "Home" on the worksheet(s) that are most likely to be used. Then I write a little VBA that selects the Home range whenever that worksheet is activated or on other triggers depending on the context of the sheet. This is more appropriate for the dashboard tabs or summary tabs my job requires.

      But I usually set this functionality up early on in the design process so I can take advantage of it as well. I will sometimes assign a keystroke to the GoHome macro.

  20. JimmyG says:

    I'm in the marketing department (aka the picture department) and have to say that the macros/Excel sheets from our controlling department are the worst! They come to me to sort out the mess!!

  21. Chandoo says:

    @Peter: You can try creating a table of contents and then place it on each and every sheet so that user can jump to anywhere from anywhere. Here is a tutorial to help you get started.

    Also, You can prevent users from accessing the workbook after a certain date using macros. But users can certainly by pass it by disallowing macros on that workbook.

    @Jimmy: Wow... (just kidding) Welcome 🙂

  22. Ryan says:

    I was recently given a spreadsheet to improve upon.
    One of the "boss-proof" actions that the previous author had used was to use data validation instead of protecting the sheet to ward off people changing formulas.
    After entering a formula or value into a cell, use data validation to only allow, in this spreadsheet, whole numbers between 9999999 to 99999999.
    It's a bit of a pain to actually correct stuff instead of just unprotecting a sheet, but for those that know how to unprotect a sheet, it's a definite way to keep them from fooling with formulas.

  23. Raja Srinivas says:

    Puchu,
    We would love to see "Print" in your links section.
    It helps us taking prints as neat as your posts 🙂

  24. Paul Grenier says:

    Chandoo,
    I've emailed you a couple of times looking for avenues I need to try to put my workbook on the Internet.
    I notice you use PremiumThemes for your Web Site...You must feel good about their service. Do you think PremiumThemes might be an option for me?
    Paul

  25. Anurag G says:

    Instead of :
    Now Right click and select “Hide” option.

    Shortcut can be used : Ctrl+0 (to hide)..

  26. danial says:

    sir i wanted to know,how to hide cells or tab without hiding rows and columns? PLZ TELL ME

  27. JunDR says:

    Hi Chandoo!

    Great tips! Im researching on an excel project now that you can create to "lighten" the size without sacrificing the data inside..
    We usually encounter problems with the data, excel file is shared, in a network folder.. and there are 11 people that enters their own productivity in each tab.. however, there comes a time (uncertain) where some of the data they enter either gets deleted or changes value.. could this be a file size problem? are there other ways to create this file that will decrease data inconsistencies?

    thanks!

  28. [...] Hide un-necessary rows to create clean looking workbooks (and 9 more tips) [...]

  29. [...] Presentation format: all spreadsheets, should be designed so that it is easy to follow the process flow and result. Almost every spreadsheet should be presentable and understandable to senior management without additional formatting or explanation. (tips: how to design boss-proof excel sheets) [...]

  30. [...] on Excel formatting here: How to make better excel sheets, Formatting [...]

  31. [...] on Excel formatting here: How to make better excel sheets, Formatting [...]

  32. [...] tips: Learn how to make better Excel sheets Spread some love,It makes you awesome! [...]

  33. Janet says:

    Save what you want the boss to see as a PDF.  Absolutely foolproof and no cats hurt in the process.

  34. malen says:

    I really enjoyed allot of the tips on here, especially the one on comments on cells. That will come in handy on allot of our projects. I would also like to share on on my little tricks. I am constantly working on several different reports with several different systems and in doing so I am constantly running in problems and my way out of them is simply calling <a href"http://www.reportingguru.com/"> Reporting Guru </a> and telling exactly what I'm going through and they can tell me exactly how to get out.

  35. The_Doctor says:

    One of the things I've found to boss proof my worksheets are a few simple VBA scripts to automatically protect the workbook/worksheets, and direct them to the "Quick Look" dashboard page, I hide all of the raw data sheets before saving.  The script looks like this:
    Private Sub Workbook_Open()

        Sheets("Summary").Protect Password:="password"
        Sheets("Labor Cost by Site").Protect Password:="password", AllowUsingPivotTables: =true
        Sheets("Labor Cost by month").Protect Password:="password"
        Sheets("Quick Look").Protect Password:="password"
        Sheets("Quick look").Activate
        ActiveWorkbook.Protect Password:="password", Structure:=True, Windows:=False
    End Sub

    I also have a pivot that contains labor cost data which cannot be refreshed while the worksheet is locked.

    Private Sub Worksheet_Activate()
        Sheets("labor cost by site").Unprotect Password = "password"
            Set pvttable = Worksheets("labor cost by site").Range("a1").PivotTable
                pvttable.RefreshTable
        Sheets("labor cost by site").Protect Password = "password", AllowUsingPivotTables:=True
    End Sub

  36. lol says:

    OPPAN GANGAM STYLE!
     

  37. Rahul thial says:

    Your post are always with something creative , thanks for sharing this information , your post are worth reading and implementing 🙂 great job

  38. apt says:

    Hi,

    I will try to learn every point slowly !

    Shokran Chandoo.

  39. SpreadSheetNinja says:

    Best boss Proofing of sheets is useing indirect(address 😛 this prevents most smartass bossess from doing any actual changes cus the formula will be long and hard to understand for any bystanders..

    Also putting the actual calculations on a different sheet can make a sheet bulletproof from bosses.. especialy if you put them in the Very hidden so when the boss learns how to unhide sheets he wont simply find them.

    One thing iv also learned is that most bosses is scared of macros that gives "virus" warnings before beeing run 😛 That include the default warning from Excel...

    Long formulas or work arounds is best way to go.

  40. Novice says:

    What's the best way to amalgamate two existing excel spreadsheets into one?

    Two teams use the same format spreadsheets with individual data split into calendar months and I want to make them one without manually entering the data.

  41. Isaac says:

    Changing the properties of the file to read-only . (While the file is closed, right click on the file and check the read-only box.)

    This allows my boss(es) to access the file -- even change it -- without being able to save their changes. If a boss likes his 'new' version, he can save it with a different file name.

    But now -- how to prevent the boss from deleting the file altogether? Or deleting the whole network?

    • pieter says:

      Hey man.
      Think you can go as easy as to make a shortcut that links to your read only document. Then the boss wont know of the root document. He can figure it out but lets face it. He is a boss and 70% if them wont know squat

  42. Matt says:

    Instead of "Hiding" rows & columns, I find "Grouping" works best as its very easy to quickly see if a worksheet has hidden rows/columns. Sometimes hiding a random row/column is not easily noticed and can create issues.

  43. samantha says:

    I have one xl sheet with different dates in many columns and one raw's. I want to send this data to another xl sheets for each date. if somebody can help me will be great.

  44. Mariateresa says:

    Hello, I have just found out that I made a mistake in my spreadsheet: I had a column of negative numbers, but one of them was positive (while it should have been negative). Is there a formula/system to avoid this?

    Thanks.

    Mariateresa

  45. Hi,

    Hiding any worksheet can be unhidden and messed around easily. I change the visibility in visual basic from -xlSheetVisible to -xlSheetVeryHidden. By this, even if you right click on sheets, you will be unable to find the hidden sheets.

    Cool? I think so...

  46. sandeep says:

    Very informative, Thanks

  47. Cedric says:

    Is there a way to lock cells in an already protected worksheet.
    (Thus the entire worksheet is protected, then the entire office can open it as read only but only a few users have the password to edit the file)
    I would like an additional password or prompt box so these few users don't accidentally change formulas.

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  50. GraH says:

    I laughed out loud reading the 2nd solution about moving to marketing department and making ppts.
    I've been using "technical" sheets for a long time already and depending on the audience it is hidden or not. I'm currently in my NO VBA mindset, so the very hidden option is no longer. Using sheets names like: TechnicalCodes; ExplicitVariables;SetUp; HeavyCalc seem to work to my experience as they send along a message "Don' t you mess-up here, you fool!". A "Read This" section or sheet however does not work!
    Reading stuff on this site has helped me develop a good habit of using colors and themes to assist the end user in being well-behaved. In my book the best advise here, because it is about the user experience and not only about protection your own work.
    For dashboards I get rid of tabs and scroll bars. Besides 2 exceptions, I need to come across a manager who can turn them on again without my help.
    Seems that I forgot about protecting cells, sheets and workbooks altogether. Damn!

  51. Mark H says:

    Thanks for the informative article Chandoo, I've been struggling with Excel lately. It's a powerful tool, but hard to learn for me.

  52. Neeraj Singh says:

    Thanks Chandoo for sharing these excel sheet tips it helps me a lot to understand excel more.

  53. Bryan says:

    Nice roundup, Chandoo! Here's one more I thought would be relevant:

    For Excel 2013+, you can hide the ribbon, as shown in this animated gif: https://gridmaster.io/tips/hide-ribbon-excel-space

    This will simplify the interface, making it less likely for people to accidentally make changes. 🙂

  54. KUMAR says:

    THANK YOU SIR

  55. constantine la says:

    I'm better at Power BI thanks to you!

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