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Google Sheets 101-The Beginner's Guide To Online Spreadsheets

Google Sheets is an online spreadsheet program that allows users to create and edit spreadsheets and share them with others online. Some key benefits of Google Sheets include being able to access spreadsheets from any device, sharing and collaborating with others, and using additional features through add-ons. The document provides instructions on how to get started with Google Sheets, including how to create a new spreadsheet, enter data, format cells, use formulas to calculate and filter data, and share or protect the spreadsheet.

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Janna Mangalili
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
888 views23 pages

Google Sheets 101-The Beginner's Guide To Online Spreadsheets

Google Sheets is an online spreadsheet program that allows users to create and edit spreadsheets and share them with others online. Some key benefits of Google Sheets include being able to access spreadsheets from any device, sharing and collaborating with others, and using additional features through add-ons. The document provides instructions on how to get started with Google Sheets, including how to create a new spreadsheet, enter data, format cells, use formulas to calculate and filter data, and share or protect the spreadsheet.

Uploaded by

Janna Mangalili
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 23

Google Sheets 101—The Beginner’s Guide to

Online Spreadsheets

Humans are great at processing images, making connections between words and concepts, and
remembering obscure trivia. But we’re bad—really bad—at mentally processing and storing accurate, easy-
to-use data sets.
Data Tables—more commonly known today as spreadsheets—were invented to organize arrays of information
that our brains can’t recall. Spreadsheets help us sort and label in a way that makes sense, so we can reference
it and perform calculations later.
The practice actually dates back thousands of years, to the papyrus spreadsheets in the diary of Merrer, an
Egyptian Old Kingdom official involved in the construction of the Great Pyramid of Kufu.

1
Chapter 1: Google Sheets 101—The Beginner’s Guide to Online 2
Spreadsheets
Back then, paper was one of your only options for cataloguing huge amounts of data. Now, we’ve
got computers to do the work for us.
When VisiCalc, the first digital spreadsheet, was released in 1979, it eliminated the need to physically
write data, calculate values, and store paper spreadsheets. As our tools evolved, programs like Excel (the
most popular spreadsheet software of the last 30 years) made digital spreadsheets one of the most popular
uses of computers.
There was only one problem: these spreadsheets were tied to a single machine, which made it difficult to
share data. Plus, if your sheet was accidentally erased or lost due to computer failure, it was gone for
good.

And so, as the next evolution of the papyrus scratchpad, Google brought spreadsheets online in 2006 with
their Google Docs suite. Now in Google Sheets, you can create spreadsheets together with others online,
and crunch numbers from any internet-connected device.
Google Sheets is a spreadsheet app on steroids. It looks and functions much like any other spreadsheet
tool, but because it’s an online app, it offers much more than most spreadsheet tools. Here are some of
the things that make it so much better:

• It’s a web-based spreadsheet that you can use anywhere—no more forgetting your spreadsheet files
at home.
• It works from any device, with mobile apps for iOS and Android along with its web-based core
app.
• Google Sheets is free, and it’s bundled with Google Drive, Docs, and Slides to share files,
documents, and presentations online.
• It includes almost all of the same spreadsheet functions—if you know how to use Excel, you’ll feel
at home in Google Sheets.
• You can download add-ons, create your own, and write custom code.
• It’s online, so you can gather data with your spreadsheet automatically and do almost anything you
want, even when your spreadsheet isn’t open.

Whether you’re a spreadsheet novice or an Excel veteran looking for a better way to collaborate, this book
will help you get the most out of Google Sheets. We’ll start out with the basics in this chapter—then keep
reading to learn Google Sheets’ advanced features, find its best add-ons, and learn how to build your own.

Interested in writing your own scripts for Google Sheets? We’ll dig into those in chapter 8 with
tutorials on writing Google Apps Script.
Getting Started with Google Sheets

The best way to learn a tool like Sheets is to dive straight in. In this chapter, you’ll learn how to:

1. Create a Spreadsheet and Fill It With Data


2. Format Data for Easy Viewing
3. Add, Average, and Filter Data with Formulas
4. Share, Protect, and Move Your Data

Common Spreadsheet Terms

To kick things off, let’s cover some spreadsheet terminology to help you understand this the terms in this
book:

• Cell: A single data point or element in a spreadsheet.


• Column: A vertical set of cells.
• Row: A horizontal set of cells.
• Range: A selection of cells extending across a row, column, or both.
• Function: A built-in operation from the spreadsheet app, which can be used to calculate cell,
row, column, or range values, manipulate data, and more.
• Formula: The combination of functions, cells, rows, columns, and ranges used to obtain a
specific result.
• Worksheet (Sheet): The named sets of rows and columns making up your spreadsheet; one
spreadsheet can have multiple sheets
• Spreadsheet: The entire document containing your worksheets

Tip: If you’ve never used Google Sheets—or, especially if you’ve never used a spreadsheet
before— be sure to check out Google’s Getting Started Guide for Sheets. You may also want to
bookmark Google’s spreadsheet function list as a quick reference.

With that knowledge in hand, let’s dive in and start building our own spreadsheets.

1. Create a Spreadsheet and Fill It With Data

The best part about Google Sheets is that it’s free and it works on any device—which makes it easy to follow
along with the tutorials in this book. All you’ll need is a web browser (or the Google Sheets app on your
iOS or Android device), and a free Google account. On your Mac or PC, head over to sheets.google.com, and
you’re ready to get started.
There are 3 ways to create a new spreadsheet in Google Sheets:
1. Click the red “NEW” button on your your Google Drive dashboard and select “Google Sheets”
2. Open the menu from within a spreadsheet and select “File > New Spreadsheet”
3. Click “Blank” or select a template on the Google Sheets homepage

This will create a new blank spreadsheet (or a pre-populated template if you choose one of those). For this
tutorial, though, you should start with a blank spreadsheet.
The Google Sheets interface should remind you of at least one other spreadsheet app you’ve seen before,
with familiar text editing icons and tabs for extra sheets.
The only difference is that Google has reduced the clutter and number of displayed interface elements. So
your first task should be obvious: Add some data!

Note: Many of the images in this chapter are actually animations—be sure to check out the online
copy of this chapter to see the original GIFs.

Adding Data to Your Spreadsheet

Look around the white-and-grey grid that occupies most of your screen, and the first thing you’ll notice is a
blue outline around the selected cell or cells.
As soon as you open a new spreadsheet, if you just start typing you’ll see that your data starts populating the
selected cell immediately—usually the top left cell. There’s no need to double click cells when you add
information, and not much need to use your mouse.

Tip: An individual square in a spreadsheet is called a cell; they’re organized into rows and
columns with number and letter IDs, respectively. Each cell should contain one value, word,
or piece of data.

Feel free to select any cell you’d like, then go ahead and type something in. When you’re done entering data
into a cell, you can do one of 4 things:

1. Press ENTER to save the data and move to the beginning of the next row
2. Press TAB to save the data and move to the right in the same row
3. Use the ARROW KEYS on your keyboard (up, down, left, and right) to move 1 cell in that direction
4. Click any cell to jump directly to that cell

If you don’t want to type in everything manually, you can also add data to your Sheet en masse via a few
different methods:

1. Copy and paste a list of text or numbers into your spreadsheet


2. Copy and paste an HTML table from a website
3. Import an existing spreadsheet in csv, xls, xlsx and other formats
4. Copy any value in a cell across a range of cells via a click and drag

Copy & Paste is pretty self-explanatory, but there are times when you’ll try to copy a “spreadsheet-y” set
of data from a website or PDF, and it will just paste into one cell or format everything with the original styling.
Try looking for data that’s actually in an HTML table (like movie data from IMDB, for example) to avoid
getting funky pasted data in your spreadsheet.

Note: Make sure you only click once on a cell before pasting data, so Google Sheets will turn
it into a list with each item in its own cell. If you double-click on a cell, Google Sheets will
paste all the data into one cell which is likely not what you want.
If you do end up with oddly formatted data, don’t worry: we’ll fix that in the next section!
Importing a file is simple as well. You can either import directly into the current spreadsheet, create a
new spreadsheet, or replace a sheet (i.e. an individual tab) with the imported data.
The most common files you’ll import are CSV (comma separated values) or XLS and XLSX (files from
Microsoft Excel). To import a file from outside of your Google Drive, go to the FILE > IMPORT >
UPLOAD menu.
I prefer to import the data into a new sheet every time to keep my old data and new imported data
separate. Alternatively, if you have a Google Sheet (or a CSV, XLS, or other spreadsheet file) saved in
your Google Drive account, you can import that directly into your spreadsheet using the same process—
just search your Drive from the import window.
Dragging to copy a cell value needs a bit of explanation, because you’ll use this one a lot once you’ve set
up formulas in your spreadsheets.
By dragging the small blue dot (pictured below) in the bottom-right corner of a highlighted cell across or
down a range of cells, you can perform a number of different functions.

There are a number of ways you could use this feature:

1. Copying a cell’s data to a number of neighboring cells (including formatting)


2. Copying a cell’s “Formula” to neighboring cells (this is an advanced feature, and we’ll cover it in
detail later)
3. Creating an ordered list of text data

Here’s an example of how to creating an ordered list might work: Try adding the text Contestant 1 to Cell
A1, then clicking and dragging the little blue dot in the bottom-right corner of the highlighted cell either
down or across any number of neighboring cells.

If there was no number after Contestant, this dragging action would simply copy “Contestant” to any cells
you drag over. But because the number is there, Sheets knows to increment the next cell +1.
Let’s assume that you have either copied, pasted, imported, or typed-in a good chunk of data, and that your
spreadsheet is looking pretty healthy.
Now, How can we use this data?

2. Format Data for Easy Viewing

Whether you’re tracking expenses, recording students’ grades, or keeping track of customers in a homebrew
CRM (as we’ll build in chapter 3), you’ll want to manipulate and format your data.
The basic formatting options in Google Sheets are available above your first cell. They’re labeled in the
image below, but for quick reference while you’re working on a sheet, just hover over an icon to see its
description and shortcut key.
Print, Undo / Redo, and the Font Settings / Styling function similarly to what you’d expect from your favorite
word processor. The shortcut keys are the same as well, so just treat it like you’re editing any other
document!
As for everything else, the best way to show you how everything works is to dive right into an example.
I’m going to create a quick list of potential breakfast options for tomorrow morning, along with their
ingredients, counts, prices, and links to YouTube videos for how to make them (who knew you could
make a 3-minute video about scrambled eggs?).

It’s functional, enough that you could use this very easily to keep track of information. In fact, a vast
majority of my own spreadsheets look like this—Google Sheets makes it so simple to capture
information, share it, and return to it later for reference that it acts as my highly-structured note-taking
tool.
But let’s assume that you have to deal with dozens of spreadsheets per day (or worse, that you have to
share spreadsheets back-and-forth) and this is what someone sends you. It’s really boring, and if it was a
large data set it would be painful to skim through.
For the simple example above a lack of significant formatting is “okay.” It does the basics, storing
my information and allowing me to save it. But it’s not something I would want to come back to each day.
Since I eat breakfast every morning, let’s take some time to make this spreadsheet more user-friendly
with some formatting!
First we’ll “Freeze” the first row in place. That means if we scroll down the spreadsheet, the first row will
still be visible, no matter how much data lies below it. This allows you to have a long list and helps to keep
tabs on what you’re actually looking at.
There are two ways to freeze rows:

1. Click VIEW > FREEZE > 1 ROW in the navigation bar to lock the first row in place
2. Hover the dark grey bar in the top left of the spreadsheet (until it becomes a hand) and drag between
rows 1 and 2

Freezing my header row is the first thing I do in every sheet I make.


Now, let’s make the header text pop with some simple text formatting (remember, the text formatting
tools are in the toolbar, just above your first row):

1. Drag to select the cells you want to format


2. Bold the text
3. Increase font size to 12pt
4. Center-align the whole row
5. Give give your cells a grey fill
The next thing I’ll do to clean this up a bit is format my “Average Price / Serving” to be a dollar value.
Here’s how things look at first:

Now, let’s clean that up with the “Format as $” button for the specific values (or entire row) highlighted.

You’ll see that your selected cells are now displayed as a dollar amount, rather than a regular number.

Note: if you perform this operation with the whole row / column highlighted, future values
will take the formatting as well!

Now that you’ve got the hang of inserting and formatting your data, it’s about time we start actually
calculating some sums, averages, and more from your data!

3. Add, Average, and Filter Data with Formulas

Google Sheets, like most spreadsheet apps, has a bunch of built-in formulas for accomplishing a number
of statistical and data manipulation tasks. You can also combine formulas to create more powerful
calculations and string tasks together. And if you’re already accustomed to crunching numbers in Excel,
the exact same formulas work in Google Sheets most of the time.
For this tutorial, we’ll focus on the five most common formulas, which are shown in the formula drop down
menu from the top navigation.

You can click a formula to add it to a cell, or you can start typing any formula with a = sign in a cell followed
by the formula’s name. Sheets will auto-fill or suggest formulas based on what you type, so you don’t need
to remember every formula.
The most basic formulas in Sheets include:

• SUM: adds up a range cells (e.g. 1+2+3+4+5 = sum of 15)


• AVERAGE: finds the average of a range of cells (e.g. 1,2,3,4,5 = average of 3)
• COUNT: counts the values in a range of cells (ex: 1,blank,3,4,5 = 4 total cells with values)
• MAX: finds the highest value in a range of cells (ex: 1,2,3,4,5 = 5 is the highest)
• MIN: finds the lowest value in a range of cells (ex: 1,2,3,4,5 = 1 is the lowest)
• Basic Arithmetic: You can also perform functions like addition, subtraction, and multiplication
directly in a cell without calling a formula

We’ll explore these formulas by improving our breakfast spreadsheet.

Using the SUM Formula

Let’s start with adding up the total number of ingredients required for each recipe. I’ll use the SUM
formula to add each value in the recipes and get a total amount.
There are three ways to use the basic formulas accessible via the top navigation:
1. Select a range then click the formula (this will put the result either below or to the side of the
range).
2. Select the result cell (i.e. the cell where you want the result to appear), then click on the
formula you want to use from the toolbar. Finally, select the range of cells to perform your
operation on.
3. Type the formula into the result cell (don’t forget the = sign) then either manually type a range or
select the range

I’ll demonstrate all three methods in the gif below. First, I’ll sum my ingredients by selecting a range, and
clicking SUM from the formula menu. Second, I’ll select a result cell and highlight the range of cells to be
summed together. Finally, I will demonstrate typing a formula and range manually.

Note: In order to select a range of cells, click the first cell and hold SHIFT then click the last cell
in the range. So if you want A1 through A10, click A1 then hold SHIFT and click A10.

When you’ve finished selecting the cells that you want to add together, press ENTER.
In my example, you see a grey help section pop up when I start typing the formula. When you create a formula
for the first time, you’ll instead notice a blue highlight and a question mark next to the cell.
You can click the question mark to toggle help context for formulas on or off. These tips will tell you
what type of information can be used in each formula, and will make your formula creation (especially
when you start combining formulas) much easier.
Now that we have a formula set up to SUM all of the ingredients together, let’s make sure that it applies to
all of the cells in that row. I’ll select my formula cell and drag the blue dot across the other cells to copy the
formula to those cells.
You’ll notice that when you copy the formula to a neighboring cell, it shifts the range that the new formula
is referencing. For instance, in the “Scrambled Eggs” column it was SUM(B2:B8) but in “French Toast”
it’s SUM(C2:C8).

Using the COUNT formula

Now that we know how many parts are needed for each recipe, I’d like to know how complicated it is to
make. I’ve simplified this by assuming that fewer ingredients means that the recipe is less complicated.
In order to count the number of ingredients in each recipe, I’ll use the COUNT formula.
The count formula essentially checks to see if the cells in a range are empty or not, and returns the total
that are filled.
This formula will be set up in my spreadsheet the same way as my SUM row.
Here’s a trick we didn’t cover in the previous section, though: highlight the cell range that you’re trying to
count and checking in the bottom right corner of your spreadsheet. If you’ve highlighted a pure list of
numbers, Sheets will automatically SUM them for you and display the result. If you’ve highlighted a mixed
range of numbers and text, it will COUNT the values.
You also have the option to perform any of the five number-based operations on a range of numbers by
clicking the SUM button in the bottom right and selecting the new default formula from the pop-out menu.
From then on, anytime you highlight a range it will perform the last-selected formula.

So according to my spreadsheet, “Cereal” is the least complicated breakfast, but I’m still not convinced that
an easy breakfast is worth it.
What if it costs too much? What if the extra effort of cooking another meal saves me money?
Let’s refine our decision by figuring out the average cost per serving of the breakfast choices by using the
AVERAGE formula.

Using the AVERAGE formula

I’ve added some faux minimum and maximum prices per unit on my ingredients list to the right of my
breakfast options. We’ll want to get an average price for each ingredient using the low and high rates, then
multiply the resulting average price of the ingredient by its respective unit count in each recipe.
I’ll start by highlighting the range of values (in this case it’s two side-by-side rather than a vertical range)
and selecting the AVERAGE formula from the toolbar.
This will drop the result into the column to the right of the maximum price column. Next, I drag the
formula down to apply it to the other min and max price combinations.
I’ll label my column “Average Unit Cost” so we know what we’re looking at. Then, let’s move on to
calculating the cost of the breakfast using simple arithmetic.

Using Simple Arithmetic Formulas

We need to calculate the total cost of the breakfast by multiplying the average price of each ingredient by
its unit count in the recipe. To accomplish this, manually type a formula into the “Avg Price” row.
Our basic arithmetic formula would look like this for the “Scrambled Eggs” column:

1 =$I2*B2+$I3*B3+$I4*B4+$I5*B5+$I6*B6+$I7*B7+$I8*B8

The $ symbol before column I (the average prices) tells Sheets that no matter where we put the formula in our
spreadsheet, we always want to reference the I column.That way, if we copy the formula to the other recipes,
it will always use the average unit cost column rather than shifting the reference to the next column over
when you drag to copy (like it did in the SUM and COUNT examples).
If you don’t want to type those values in manually, there are cleaner ways to perform this type of formula:
You could accomplish the same price calculation by using this advanced formula:

1 =SUM(ARRAYFORMULA(B2:B8*$I2:$I8))

There are many formulas in Sheets that take care of complex tasks for you, many of which we’ll dig into in
the next chapters.
Now that we have some working data and calculations, perhaps my coworkers (who are likely planning to
eat breakfast tomorrow) might benefit from this sheet.
Let’s prepare to share our spreadsheet, and invite some collaborators to view, edit, and use our data.

4. Share, Protect, and Move Your Data

What makes Sheets so powerful is how “in sync” you’ll feel with your coworkers. Jointly editing a
spreadsheet is one of the critical functions of Sheets, and Google has made it a seamless experience.
Here’s how it works:

1. Click either FILE > SHARE or use the blue “Share” button in the top right
2. Click “advanced”, then enter emails of who can view or edit your spreadsheet
3. Select any other privacy options and hit done
When you open the “advanced” sharing panel, you’ll see a number of options.

The default functionality when you click the “Share” Button is to copy a link to the spreadsheet to your
clipboard.
When you share this link with someone via a messenger or email, if they click the link it will bring them to
the spreadsheet. However, unless you’ve invited them via email (in the email field) and selected “Can
Edit”, they will still need to request permission to make changes.
If you’d like to give anyone within your organization or company editor-level access, click the “change…”
button in the “Who has Access” section and select “On - (Your Organization Name)**”. (Note: this option
will only appear if you’re using Google Apps for Work.)
Someone is “In your organization” when they have an email address and Google account for your
company. In this case, I’ve named by “company” MichaelGrubbs, so everyone in my organization has an
@michael- grubbs.com email address and anyone signed in to one of those accounts can access the
spreadsheet.

You can learn more about sharing and permissions here—you’ll want to make sure you are
using the right permissions for the audience you’re sharing with.

Sharing Spreadsheets with Your Devices and Apps

Even though Google Sheets and Drive are built for sharing between users, you’ll notice that many times your
spreadsheets are created as internal documents, and sharing is secondary to actually getting work done.
You can streamline your spreadsheet workflows and real-time data-sharing by taking advantage of these
helpful add-ons:

1. The Google Docs mobile apps. You can use the Google Sheets mobile app to view and edit your
spreadsheets, share links on the go, and add users. It’s a solid companion to—but not a
replacement for—the web app.
2. Google Drive sync to your desktop. Google Drive allows you to easily upload files from your
local desktop environment to your online Drive. This makes them accessible to your collaborators
and also allows you to quickly import them into spreadsheets and other documents.
3. A Third-Party tool like Zapier. You can use Zapier to automatically add data to your
spreadsheets, send files to your Google Drive account, alert you of change to your Sheets… you
name it

Let’s continue working on our spreadsheet example to demonstrate using Zapier, an app integration tool, to
make Google Sheets even more powerful.
Rather than hitting the “Share” button on my spreadsheet to send it to my colleagues, I’d like to send a
Slack message alerting them that I’ve created this new spreadsheet.
You can automatically send a message to a Slack channel with Zapier’s Google Sheets Trigger and Slack
Action.
Zapier Integration:

• Share new Google Sheets spreadsheets to Slack

I’ve set my Zap up to look for new Spreadsheets in my Google Drive then post the file name and a link
to the spreadsheet in a Slack Channel.

This is great for updating your team when you create new documents that you’d like to quickly loop everyone
in on.
You can set up filters and conditions to decide when to post, and you have complete control over what
information you’d like to include in your message. You can also trigger messages based on different actions
in Google Sheets—like when someone a new row or changes the data in a cell. Check out the Zapier’s
Google Sheets page for more information on supported data and triggers.
Now let’s switch the direction of the data-flow and consider how our colleagues would interact with our
Spreadsheet.
I’d like to allow myself and my team to interact with my spreadsheet and keep track of what they had for
breakfast in a breakfast log. Without an automation tool like Zapier, tasks like this quickly become the
reason that people fail to collaborate successfully using spreadsheets.
Think about it, if this were a normal spreadsheet without any automation, you’d be asking someone to:

1. Break out of their current activity


2. Track down the spreadsheet
3. Fill in a few pieces of potentially inconsequential data
4. Save and re-share this file (if it’s not already an online and synced document)
5. Repeat for any number of tasks / documents

This is where automating tasks becomes so vital.


Let’s set up our spreadsheet so that it has a clean sheet to receive some automated data. I’ll create a new
worksheet using the + button in the bottom left.

Now, I’ll use Zapier again and make Slack the triggering action with Google Sheets on the receiving end of
the automation (the “Action” side of the Zap).
Zapier Integration:

• Add Slack messages to a Google Sheets spreadsheet

I’ve set up my Zap to instantly take a Slack message posted into a dedicated channel and create a new
row in the breakfast log along with the time and user who posted it.
And this can work for hundreds of other applications that you can use as Triggers or Actions with Zapier.
You can send information to your spreadsheet via email, monitor your social channels, set it on a
schedule; there are dozens of different ways to accomplish any given task with the apps you’re already
using.
Zapier Integrations:

• Save new Typeform entries to a Google Sheets spreadsheet


• Save Gmail emails matching certain traits to a Google Spreadsheet
• Save Twitter mentions to a Google Sheets spreadsheet
• Add new FullContact business cards to a Google Sheets spreadsheet

Downloading Your Data

If you need to send your files to external collaborators, upload a file into another system, or just like having
backups for posterity, then turn towards one of Google Sheets’ many data export options.

The most common exports will be either .xls (Excel document) or .csv (comma-separated values). If
you’re not sure which format to use, a .csv is usually the best bet.

Use Your Spreadsheet in Offline Mode

If you love what you’ve seen so far but were worried that you wouldn’t be able to use Sheets without a
connection, then fear not. Google Sheets has an “Offline Mode” that will automatically sync your changes
to the document when you reconnect to the internet.
This is useful for any situation where you’d need to treat Google Sheets like a desktop application—on a
flight or a road trip, for example.
Here’s what you’ll need:
1. Google Chrome
2. Google Drive Chrome Web App
3. Google Drive Sync

Instructions for setting up your offline sync are really straight-forward, but the bulk of the process
is just downloading and using the three core components above.
Actually turning it on looks like this (get ready to be amazed):

And just like that, you can use Google Sheets even when you’re offline—no WiFi necessary.

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