Creating powerful presentations: A learning path
An eight-course lynda.com learning path tutorial offering inspiration, tools, and confidence boosters to get you creating powerful presentations.
View Articlelynda.com Learning Path: Learning to make sense of data with Microsoft Excel
A lynda.com Excel learning path that discusses sorting Excel data, using pivot tables, double-checking your Excel results for accuracy, and cleaning up raw data.
View ArticleHighlighting row differences in Excel
This lynda.com tutorial shows you how to automatically highlight differences between two rows or columns in Excel using the Go To Special dialog box.
View ArticleExcel’s VLOOKUP and HLOOKUP functions explained
Confused by the VLOOKUP and HLOOKUP functions in Excel 2013? Get the inside scoop on these handy lookup functions—today on the lynda.com blog.
View ArticleMicrosoft Office for iPad hits the App Store
Big news-Microsoft's Office for iPad apps are available in the App Store today, and we've got free training on it. Read more on the lynda.com blog.
View ArticleGetting Started with Excel VBA
Learn how to use the VBA language to script custom processes in Excel—with Curt Frye on the lynda.com Article Center today.
View ArticleMicrosoft Office for iPad: New Features!
Just announced: New features for the Microsoft Office for iPad suite. Find out what's new in Excel, Word, and PowerPoint at the lynda.com Article Center.
View ArticleWork Faster and Easier in Microsoft Office — Weekly!
Learn the top shortcuts in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and more every week with our new Weekly Office Workshop—inspired by real questions from members like you.
View ArticleEnhance Excel Lookup Using INDEX and MATCH
By combining the INDEX and MATCH functions in Excel, it's easy to look up information within a table based on values in any column. Here's how.
View ArticleSet Up Worksheets Faster with Excel Flash Fill — and More
No one ever said entering data into worksheets was fun—but you can get it done faster with the Excel Flash Fill, fill handle, and ROW and COLUMN functions.
View ArticleHe Helps Fight Hunger in Rwanda. And lynda.com Helps Him.
Jules Rugwiro helps the UN fight hunger in Rwanda by keeping tabs on who needs food and how much they need. And who helps Jules? lynda.com does.
View ArticleFitness Resolution for 2015? Learn While You Burn!
If you're making a fitness resolution, then do what these productive lynda.com fans do: Watch our training videos on the treadmill and learn while you burn!
View ArticleHow to Create Pivot Tables in Excel 2010
Pivot Tables save you time and energy when you need to look at your data from multiple perspectives. Here's how to create them in Excel 2010 and more.
View ArticleSummarize Data with Conditional Functions in Excel
Conditional functions in Excel (SUMIF, AVERAGEIF, COUNTIF) make life easier when you need to summarize a subset of data quickly. Take advantage of them!
View ArticleBuy or Rent? Office 365 Subscription vs. Office 2013
Which makes the most "cents"? Shelling out for boxed retail versions of Office, or paying for an Office 365 subscription? We do the math.
View ArticleShare Your Brand in Word, Excel & PowerPoint — with Office Themes
If you have Microsoft Office 2010 or 2013, you can use Office themes to apply your company brand to documents, presentations—even spreadsheets. Here's how!
View ArticleFrom Galloping to Gaga to lynda: A Life Learned Online
Dissatisfied with her formal education, Paulette Perhach took to the Internet to learn what she REALLY needed to know to get ahead. And life got better.
View ArticleEscaped from the Call Center—with our Excel Tutorials
She spent 11 years getting yelled at by customers in credit and collections—then used lynda.com Excel tutorials to land a cushier job in another department.
View ArticleFive Excel Tips You'll Actually Use
Here are five little-known Excel tips you can use every day to make the time you spend in Excel more efficient and productive.
View Article3 Alternatives to Using Charts in Excel
Try these in-cell alternatives for using charts in Excel when you just need a quick visual representation of your data—instead of a full-blown chart.
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