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Teachers use it when they need to need compare a student to their peers. So do entrepreneurs, when they’re considering which offering(s) to keep and which to retire. As do scientists, who want to figure out the homogeneity of a dataset.
What am I talking about? Microsoft Excel of course.
The three professions are among the 80 percent of job openings that require spreadsheet and word-processing software skills, according to a study conducted by Burning Glass. Yet so many people never even give Excel a chance because it has an intimidating stigma around it.
The bad news is “technological illiteracy, much less technophobia, is no longer a sustainable option for the modern worker.
The good news? Well, there’s lots of good news actually. Keep reading, and you’ll learn why you need to add Excel to your resume.
When you were in school, maybe you used Excel to plug in a few number tables or add two cells together. However, Excel is so much more complex than that. For example, did you know that the program can do all of the following:
Organize data in an easy-to-navigate way
Do basic and complex mathematical functions so you don’t have to
Turn piles of data into helpful graphics and charts
Analyze data and make forecasting predictions
Create, build, and edit pixelated images (yes, creatives use it, too!)
“I don’t want to get through my work more efficiently,” said no professional ever.
In addition to organizing data, Excel’s plethora of programs and functions are meant to save you time. Instead of adding up 127 columns of monthly expenses yourself, for example, Excel does the math for you, and you’ll know it’s correct.
By using Excel, you’ll save a ton of time at your job and/or in your personal life, and it’s guaranteed to be more accurate than something you could’ve done by hand. What’s not to love?
Did you know that Excel know-how can instantly increase your job prospects as well as your starting salary? Excel is a transferrable skill that any hiring manager understands is critical. That’s the beauty of knowing such a universal computer program:
It gives you an opportunity to stand out of the crowd & you ge a upper edge over the crowd.
Investment bankers and accountants aren’t the only ones who rely on Excel; scientists, teachers, business owners, graphic designers, and so many other people turn to the program for help. Regardless of what you do in the office, chances are there’s some way for Excel to be helping you do your job better; it’s just a matter of figuring out what that is.
Excel may seem intimidating at first, but by just starting to use the program for basic tasks in your life, you’ll get a better feel for how it works and also how it can make everything you do so much easier.