Skip to main content

These Microsoft Excel tricks have been a lifesaver for my workflow

When working with a spreadsheet, shortcuts and tips that help you complete tasks faster or better are invaluable. Similar to ways to improve your workflow in Microsoft Word, Excel has its own set of helpful tricks.

With this list of useful tips, you can eliminate tedious work, quickly perform operations, reduce errors, and insert graphs or tables with a click. Use one or use them all to make your daily Excel duties a breeze.

Recommended Videos

Perform paste special operations

Paste Special Operations in Excel.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Copy and paste are simple actions that most people know how to use. However, Excel offers several paste special options that let you paste data and perform basic equations at the same time.

This means that you can add, subtract, multiply, or divide every value in a cell range by a specific number with paste special.

Step 1: Copy the cell containing the number you want to use in your calculation one of these ways:

  • Right-click and select Copy.
  • Select Copy in the Clipboard section of the ribbon on the Home tab.
  • Use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + C on Windows or Command + C on Mac.

Step 2: Select the cells containing the values where you want to perform the calculation.

Step 3: Open the Paste special menu one of these ways:

  • Right-click and pick Paste special.
  • Select Paste > Paste special in the Clipboard section of the ribbon on the Home tab.

Step 4: When the Paste special box appears, choose the calculation you want to perform in the Operation section.

Step 5: Click OK.

You’ll then see your data update with the calculation performed. You don’t have to worry about manually adding, subtracting, multiplying, or dividing a group of cells, which is a tedious task and increases the risk of errors.

Learn to love functions

Excel AutoSum functions with SUM selected.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Functions and formulas can be intimidating. But once you start using them, you’ll appreciate how much time they can save you. Plus, you’ll lessen the chance of errors from performing calculations manually.

If you’ve never used functions before, you can start with the basics of sum, average, minimum, maximum, and count.

Step 1: Select the cell where you want to use the function. This is the cell where the formula resides and the result of it displays.

Step 2: Select the arrow next to AutoSum in the Editing section of the ribbon on the Home tab. Choose the calculation you want to use.

Step 3: You’ll see the Function appear in the cell awaiting the values you want to use.

Let’s say you want to add the values in the cells A1 through A5. Drag through that cell range or add it after the opening parenthesis in the formula as A1:A5. Be sure to finish the formula with a closing parenthesis as in the screenshot above.

Step 4: Press the Enter or Return key.

You’ll then see your calculation performed per the function you selected.

For the full set of functions available in Excel, head to the Formulas tab. Then, use the Function Library in the ribbon to pick a logical function like IF or reference function like VLOOKUP.

Use quick analysis to add formats, charts, totals, and tables

Quick Analysis actions in Excel.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Excel helps you to automatically format cells with conditional formatting, create charts with recommendations, insert tables and pivot tables, and get totals. But what you might not know is that you can do things like this superfast with the quick analysis tool. Here’s how it works.

Step 1: Select a range of cells where you want to perform one of the above actions.

Step 2: Select the Quick Analysis button that displays in the corner of the cell range. Alternatively, you can right-click and pick Quick Analysis.

You then see a small box with a list of the actions and available options for each. These vary depending on the type of data in your cells, so let’s look at an example.

Here we have student grades and the cell range includes names, letter grades, numerical grades, and pass/fail text. When we open the quick analysis tool, we can then apply conditional formatting, insert a chart, get totals, create a table, or add sparklines.

Step 3: Simply select the tab for the action you want and then choose the option for that action.

Boom! You just saved yourself a ton of time from doing one of these things from scratch.

Autofill patterns and formulas

AutoFill for months in a year in Excel.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Microsoft Excel provides a handy autofill feature for populating cells easily. You can enter a couple of items in a list, such as months of the year, and add the remaining items by dragging. Autofill also helps you copy and paste formulas you create with the functions mentioned earlier.

Pattern Fill: Enter (at least) two list items, select the cell containing the second one, then use the fill handle (plus sign on the cell border) to drag through the remaining cells. As examples, you can enter January and February, Monday and Tuesday, or even A and B. Then, fill the rest of the cells!

Formula Fill: Select the cell containing the formula and use the fill handle to drag the formula to the remaining cells. Note: If you use absolute rather than relative references, you’ll need to adjust the formulas after filling them.

Tip: You can fill the remaining cells to match the number of rows already filled by simply double-clicking the fill handle.

Autofill is an enormous timesaving tool in Microsoft Excel.

Copy from the status bar

Calculated values in the Excel Status Bar.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The status bar at the bottom of the application is helpful for seeing quick calculations like sum, average, and count. But with an update to Excel for Windows in March 2022, you can actually copy these calculations with a click.

While this feature may still be rolling out to users and you might not see it yet, it’s definitely one to keep on your radar.

Step 1: First, make sure that you have the calculations marked so that they appear in the status bar. To do this, right-click the Status Bar and select each to place a checkmark next to it.

Step 2: Select the cells to display the calculation you want in the Status bar.

Step 3: Next, select the calculated value in the Status Bar. This places it on your clipboard.

Step 4: You can then paste the value in your spreadsheet or a completely different application.

The ability to copy values directly from the clipboard keeps you from having to enter a formula or function manually, but still get the result you need — faster than ever!

Want even more? Take a look at these additional Excel tips for mastering your spreadsheet.

Sandy Writtenhouse
Sandy has been writing about technology since 2012. Her work has appeared on How-To Geek, Lifewire, MakeUseOf, iDownloadBlog…
Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Excel now run faster on Apple’s new M1 Macs
apple macbook pro 13 m1 review 06

Many of the apps from the Microsoft 365 suite now run natively on Apple's new M1-powered MacBooks. Outlook, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote are now all able to take full advantage of Apple's custom ARM-based silicon.

These new Microsoft 365 apps for Apple M1 Macs are all universal apps, which means that they will also run on traditional Macs with Intel processors. This also means that the Office apps on Apple's M1 Macs -- like the new MacBook Air, 13-inch MacBook Pro, and Mac mini -- should all feel snappier and faster than when they were previously running under emulation with Rosetta 2.

Read more
Working from home? Don’t miss this outstanding Microsoft Office 365 deal
Students using Microsoft Office software on their laptops outside.

With the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, sweeping the nation and employers now instructing their workforce to work from home, Amazon is looking to soften the blow for contractors (and possibly even employees) who need to provide their own equipment: It's currently offering an annual subscription to Microsoft Office 365 Personal for just $48 -- down from the usual $70.

The discount covers both Mac and PC (the activation code is universal) and includes 1TB of OneDrive Cloud Storage and access to OneDrive Personal Vault, as well as unlimited use of Microsoft Excel, Microsoft PowerPoint, Microsoft Outlook, and Microsoft Word. PC users will also be able to use Microsoft Access and Microsoft Publisher, which aren't available for Mac.

Read more
Microsoft’s new Office app hints at the Surface Duo’s potential
new microsoft office app productivity surface duo splashvideothumbnail

This holiday season, Microsoft will release a dual-screen smartphone known as the Surface Duo. As a dual-screen device, you can stack your favorite apps side by side, span apps across the screen for a better view of your work, and generally do more while on the go.

That demands software and hardware work hand-in-hand, however, so the new Office app for iOS and Android is paving the way forward. It'll make your phone a bit more useful for work -- in Office apps, at least.
One hub for all things Office
You can already use the dedicated Word, Excel, and PowerPoint apps on your phone. With the new Office app, however, Microsoft is creating a one-stop hub for all things related to work. Word, Excel, and PowerPoint are all part of the Office app. Yet it's lightweight, coming in at less than 100MB.

Read more