Every senior manager has a different style

This is one of the hardest parts of being a consultant who rotates on projects. Have to cater to the preferences (some say whims) of managers. That said, some of it is common sense too. I reviewed a presentation today, and here are some nit-picks (minor things) which I noticed:

Right align for numbers

This is a bit basic, but something to watch for.  If you just center the numbers, it is impossible to see which numbers are actually bigger or smaller. Like your 4th grade teacher said, “line up your ones, tens, and hundred columns”.  Yes, I know the bankers, CPAs, and finance folks are laughing.

Consultants - Right Align

Tables have to total

Once again, to finance folks this might be insulting. If you have a table of the top 10 or top 15 of anything. . . . you still need to make sure it totals. I often put in a “plug”. . . count up the remaining products and put in the total.  = 8,394 – 5,123 – 2,532 – 234 = 505.  Whatever you put in a table, should total.  Basics.

Consultantsmind - Does not Total

Order things

Whether it is alphabetical or in descending order, have a reason for the order of your items. Remember consultants are the kings and queens of structure.

Consultantsmind - Order things

No twerked words

Okay, now we might be getting into preference. For me, I think it’s unnatural to write words sideways. It’s unnecessary, and awkward.

Consultantsmind - No tilted words

These are not deadly sins

These are somewhat cosmetic problems. They are not mathematical errors which would get your fired from a banking internship. Yet, they do show a lack of rigor, attention to detail, and verve. If you want to stand out, take the excel to the final 10% and make it easily understood.

What are some of your excel formatting nit-picks?

From Kirk (see comments):

  • Spell check.  “No excel doesn’t give you a handy little squiggly red line with things are wrong, but it’s not hard to hit F7 before you save something.”
  • Grid lines. “Turn them off, makes your workbooks look unfinished. Alt-W-V-G FTW.”
  • Worksheet Names. “Do not send me a workbook with anything named “Sheet 1”, or a blank “Sheet 2” and “Sheet 3” sitting there. Be intentional.”

From Simone (see comments):

  • Currency $.  “It’s ambiguous whereas  USD / CAD / HKD are not”
  • Date formats.  “With D-M-Y / M-D-YY / Y-D-M vary around the world, why not always specify DD-MMM-YY so your international audience are not confused”

From Paul (see comments): 

  • Restrained colors. Recommends 1 day course by famous Edward Tufte here.

From Lalatendu (see comments)

  • Freeze frames. readability increases (irritation while scrolling decreases!)
  • Repeat row or colum. For print/ page set up, repeat the row or column as required, else it does not appear in next page
  • Use “If error” formula. for any calculation tab to avoid #NA across the cells
  • Send with PDF version. While sending across the excel in email – also send a PDF version as some viewers might access it through their mobile devices.
  • Format consistency. In case of numbers, maintain the same number of decimal points (and right aligned – as mentioned in the post)

From Martin (see comments)

  • Page set up: Take care of page setup, nothing worse than going to print and getting something strewn sideways and vertically across 16 pages

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