Using Microsoft Excel with Exploring Marketing Research

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Using Microsoft Excel with Exploring Marketing Research By William G. Zikmund

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Using Microsoft Excel with Exploring Marketing Research. By William G. Zikmund. TITLE BAR. MENU BAR. STANDARD TOOLBAR. FORMATTING TOOLBAR. FORMULA BAR. ACTIVE CELL. PASTE FUNCTION. TOOLS MENU. The Paste Function Provides Numerous Statistical Operations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Using Microsoft Excel with Exploring Marketing Research

Page 1: Using Microsoft Excel with Exploring Marketing Research

Using Microsoft Excel with Exploring Marketing Research

ByWilliam G. Zikmund

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TITLE BARMENU BAR

FORMULA BAR

STANDARD TOOLBAR

FORMATTING TOOLBAR

ACTIVE CELL

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PASTE FUNCTIONTOOLS MENU

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The Paste Function Provides Numerous Statistical Operations

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The Statistical Function Category

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Data Analysis Dialog Box

• Click on “Tools”• Select “Data Analysis”• Select statistical operation

– such as Histogram

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Functions

• Functions are predefined formulas for mathematical operations

• They perform calculations by using specific values, called arguments

• Arguments indicate data or a range of cells• Arguments are performed, in a particular

order, called the syntax.

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Functions

• Functions are predefined formulas for mathematical operations

• They perform calculations by using specific values, called arguments

• Arguments are performed, in a particular order, called the syntax.

• For example, the SUM function adds values or ranges of cells

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Easy to Use Paste Functions

• AVERAGE (MEAN)• MEDIAN• MODE• SUM• STANDARD DEVIATION

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Functions

• The syntax of a function begins with the function name

• followed by an opening parenthesis• the arguments for the function • separated by commas• a closing parenthesis. • If the function starts a formula, an equal sign (=)

is typed before the function name.

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The Equal Sign Then The Function Name And Arguments

• =FUNCTION (Argument1)• =FUNCTION (Argument1,Argument2)

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Arguments

• Typical arguments are numbers, text, arrays, and cell references.

• Arguments can also be constants, formulas, or other functions.

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The AVERAGE Function Located in the Statistical Category

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Data Array

• The data appear in cells A2 through 14• A2:A14• Sometimes written with dollars signs• $A$2:$A$14

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Sum, Average, and Standard Deviation

• =FUNCTION (Argument1)• =SUM(A2:A9)• =AVERAGE(A2:A9)• =STDEVA(A2:A9)

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SUM FunctionSales Call Example

)9:2( AASUMX

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AVERAGE (Mean) FunctionSales Call Example

)9:2( AAAVERAGEnXX i

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Standard Deviation FunctionSales Call Example

)9:2(

1

2AASTDEVA

nxx

xs

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Proportion

• =COUNT• =COUNTIF• DIVIDE COUNTIF BY COUNT• =D3/D2

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Frequency Distributions

• There are alternative ways of constructing frequency distributions

• COUNTIF function• HISTOGRAM function

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=COUNTIF(A6:A134,1)=D4/D9*100

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Histogram Function

• Tools -Data Analysis-Histogram• Bins

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The bins are thefrequency categories

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Insert Input and Bin Ranges

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Text Labels Can Be Included or Excluded From Input Range

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The Chart Wizard

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The Descriptive Statistics Function

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SEVERAL ROWS OF DATA ARE HIDDEN

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SEVERAL ROWS OF DATA ARE HIDDEN

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Correlation

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Correlation Coefficient, r = .75

Correlation: Player Salary and Ticket Price

-20-10

0102030

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001

Change in TicketPriceChange inPlayer Salary

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Regression Analysis

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