The more you use it the better you'll be and finding the shortcuts with hot keys is the best thing to learn first. Minimizing the use of your mouse will save you from hitting ctrl-z while building syntax functions because you will click a random cell on accident.
I don't have much professional experience but for the last year or more used it for all of analytics courses for my undergraduate degree. I even used it for college statistics.
Excel is super powerful and got to use some add-ons in solver that made operational management super easy to calculate supply chain management questions.
Now I use it as a common spreadsheet filled with data I pull from a CMMS and SAP programs to make the information more useable for finding trends, scheduling and parts availability. This is pretty easy stuff as I don't even have to create my own functions to do it because pivot table does it for me.
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I don't have much professional experience but for the last year or more used it for all of analytics courses for my undergraduate degree. I even used it for college statistics.
Excel is super powerful and got to use some add-ons in solver that made operational management super easy to calculate supply chain management questions.
Now I use it as a common spreadsheet filled with data I pull from a CMMS and SAP programs to make the information more useable for finding trends, scheduling and parts availability. This is pretty easy stuff as I don't even have to create my own functions to do it because pivot table does it for me.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk