How To Create Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide

How to Create Pivot Table in Excel

There will be times when you will be required to analyse large amounts of data and produce easy to read and understand reports. Pivot tables allow us to analyse such data and produce reports that meet our business reporting requirements.
In this tutorial, we are going to cover the following topics;
  • What is a Pivot Table?
  • Step by Step tutorial on creating pivot tables
  • 2-Dimensional pivot tables
  • Visualizing pivot table data using charts

What is a Pivot Table?

A Pivot Table is a summary of a large dataset that usually includes the total figures, average, minimum, maximum, etc. let's say you have a sales data for different regions, with a pivot table, you can summarize the data by region and find the average sales per region, the maximum and minimum sale per region, etc. Pivot tables allow us to analyse, summarize and show only relevant data in our reports.

Step by Step tutorial on creating pivot tables

The image below shows the sample sales data collated from North wind access database.
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
You can download the sample Excel data here.
As you can see from the above image, our spreadsheet contains a lot of data. Let's say we want to create a summary of customers, group all of their orders by product, and show the quantities, unit price and subtotals for all the transactions.
  • Open the Excel file that you downloaded
  • Click on INSERT tab on the ribbon
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
  • You will get the following window
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
  • Click on the select table/range button as shown in the image above
  • You will get the following mini window
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
  • Click in cell address A1
  • Press Ctrl + A on the keyboard to select all the data cells
  • Your mini window shown now appear as follows
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
  • Click on Close button to get back to the options window
  • Click on OK button
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
  • Select the following fields
    • CompanyName
    • Product Name
    • UnitPrice
    • Quantity
    • SubTotal
  • Your worksheet should now look as follows
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
  • Note the above data has been grouped by customer company name, product name, unit price, sum of quantities and the sum of the subtotals.
  • Notice the drop down button next to Rows Labels. This button allows us to sort/filter our data. Let's assume we are only interested in Alfreds Futterkiste
  • Click on the Row Labels drop down list as shown below
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
  • Remove the tick from (Select All)
  • Select Alfreds Futterkiste
  • Click on OK button
  • You will get the following data
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide

2-Dimensional pivot tables

A two-dimensional pivot table is a table that has fields on both rows and columns. Let's say we want to list employee names as rows and use columns to represent customer names and fill in the cells with the total sales.
  • Activate the Sales Datasheet
  • Click on INSERT tab
  • Click on Pivot Chart & Table button
  • Select all the data. Excel should now remember the previous range so you just have to click on OK button
  • A new sheet will be created with the pivot table tools
  • Select the fields as shown in the image below
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide
Your pivot table will now look as follows
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide

Visualizing pivot table data using charts


With Excel 2013, you do not need to create the charts manually. Excel will create the charts for you as you create your pivot tables, change aggregate functions, apply filters, etc.
The chart below was automatically created for us from the simple pivot chart exercise that filtered data for Alfreds Futterkiste only.
Pivot Tables in Excel: Beginner’s Guide



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