Hi, I have the AAT level 3 spreadsheet software exam tomorrow and am doing a bit of last minute revision and I have put in a formula to work out the net and gross profit margin but it is adding on number so instead of 34.78% it is coming up as 3478.34%. The forumals I have been using are gross profit/sales x 100 and net profit/sales x 100.
Please can anyone see where I am going wrong? I have attached both the numbers and the formulas I have in below
Have you formatted those cells to show %? If so it seems to add in the extra numbers. If you format as % but don't multiply by 100 you will get the right answer.
Good luck - its a pretty straightforward exam just take your time
-- Edited by Shamus on Sunday 24th of April 2016 07:40:10 PM
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
sounds like everyone wants to play with this one! :D
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
Don't think I explained it very well - if you format as a % you don't need to divide by 100. So to show as a percent do net profit/sales but don't times by 100 and format cells to show %
Thanks everyone, wow really quick response. You were right Alison, I took out the *100 and it corrected it.
I have attached the original spreadsheet anyway.
I'm not sure how well I'm going to do, I've only been going through the textbook the last couple of days as I thought I wouldn't have to do much as I use excel most days. How wrong I was!! pivot tables, conditional formatting......I don't do most of this stuff,oh dear! it's going to be a long night!!
Any tips on the most important things to learn....would be most grateful for
Thanks again
-- Edited by rachel_mclean on Sunday 24th of April 2016 08:12:11 PM
You have defined the field as a percentage but you are still multiplying by 100.
Change the fields to number format and it will work fine
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
As Shaun has indicated your formula is correct, but it looks like you have also formatted the cells to % so Excel is doubling-up? Re-format as a number and it should work?
at the moment you are basically saying (d4/b4)*100*100
HTH,
Shaun.
p.s. sorry crossed in the post mike.
-- Edited by Shamus on Sunday 24th of April 2016 08:18:36 PM
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
The exam wasn't to bad. There were Hlookup, pivot tables etc but lots of it was pretty straightforward formula and formatting. Just read everything through carefully and follow the instructions and I am sure you will be fine.
Looks like I'm going to have to learn a lot more on excel when I get to level 3 lol. To my shame although I've heard of pivot tables, I haven't a scooby what they do.
Good luck with the exam Rachel
__________________
John
Any advice given is for general guidance and professional advice should be sought applicable to your circumstances.
it was an Excel query, almost the moment that Rachel posted we were beating each other off with sticks in order to answer it.
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
Data validation.....ahhh. Sorry for the last minute questions as there are some people who studied long and hard for this, I've been a bit of a cheater
So I have to use data validation to circle retailer margins that are below 17.50% on this worksheet. So I've gone DATA - DATA VALIDATION - ALLOW: Decimal, DATA: less than, MIN: 17.5, which to me looks right and I go cirlce invalid data and nothing is circled!! I did try is greater than or equal to to see if anything would circle and they all did! does anybody know what I am doing wrong here please?
Looks like I'm going to have to learn a lot more on excel when I get to level 3 lol. To my shame although I've heard of pivot tables, I haven't a scooby what they do.
Hi John,
any help that you need with Excel just ask.
There are some video's on YouTube called ExcelIsFun... Sounds like the name that you would give to a primary school video I know but they are some of the very best video's that I've ever found and explain absolutely everything. Unfortunately there are actually thousands of videos in the collection so its near impossible to work through all of them.
Personally I've done a couple of hundred of them and even the simple one's I've come away learning something (and I thought that I was good at Excel before I did them!).
Its definitely a YouTube channel thats worth subscribing to.
Pivot tables very much like conditional formatting are nothing to worry about once you understand them especially after they changed to make them sooo much easier and user freindly in Excel 2007 (if you last tried them in 2003 or before they are really not like that at all anymore).
Once you start using pivots properly you will find yourself summing things much less and you also start to design your spreadsheets better as feeders for the pivot tables.
p.s. Pivot tables summarise the data that you identify in your feeder table. You can then drill down into any field.I find them quite good for building dashboards where you can have several pivots on the same page taking different views of the same data. Perhaps comparing months or years side by side helping with easy trend diagnosis and being able to quickly drill down into the summarised anomalies to identify underlying issues.
As you can tell, I'm a big fan of pivoit tables!
__________________
Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
If I can just chip in with my four pennyworth here - like Rachel I sat Level 3 AAT a couple of years ago, and like her, I thought I
was reasonably proficient at it until the exam came up with things I'd barely even heard of, and was convinced I would never use.
However, once I had learned what pivot tables were, I find I now use them to summarise expenses and credit card statements, so
it wasn't all a complete waste of time ! (now VLookups and HLookups is another matter in my world!)
I got 3 things wrong
I couldn't remember how to do HLOOKUP twice and then I couldn't work out how to use 'IF' but all the rest had no errors, so very pleased! even managed to do a pivot table, a very basic one. The pivot table asked for was nowhere near as complicated as the textbook!
2 more exams to go for level 3 then on to level 4. Ethics and costs and revenues.