 Welcome to our webinar for the very beginner. Excel for the very beginner. Thank you so much for joining us. I am Alicia Kidd an online learning specialist with TechSoup. Now let's make sure everyone is comfortable using the webinar platform. Now the chat box which is located on the bottom left hand corner of your screen, at any time if you have problems viewing or hearing the audio, just make sure the chat is and our chat person Susan Hope Bar will assist you with chatting the number as well as the passcode. Also if you are hearing an echo through your computer speakers or having any issues with the audio, again you can dial the toll free number that was listed in your registration email, but we are also going to be chatting it out if you are having those issues. The chat box is also for your questions. We will be flagging your questions and queuing your answers and questions during the Q&A session so we encourage high engagement and dialogue throughout this amazing presentation. You will be able to find this recording at TechSoup webinar page by the end of the day. This is where we share our webinar recordings and also announce upcoming webinars and we encourage everyone to check our future webinars and our recorded webinars. Also following this presentation it will be recorded as well as with the PowerPoint we will send an email to all registered attendees no matter if you attended or not. You will receive that by the end of the day as well as it will be uploaded on our YouTube page and slide share in all of our social media. And if you are on Twitter we highly encourage you to follow us on Twitter, become a follower, and we hopefully will follow you back. And then you can also tweet us at TechSoup. Also hashtag us at TechSoup webinars with the hashtag sign. Again my name is Alicia Kidd and I am the Online Learning Specialist with TechSoup. And our presenter here is LaChica Phillips. She is an Associate Program Manager with TechSoup. Now let's talk a little bit more about our amazing organization TechSoup. It's headquartered here in San Francisco. And what I want to know is since I'm in San Francisco where is everyone from? So chat out, spin it the next few seconds to let us know where you are coming from. I'm in San Francisco, Florida, Toronto, Texas, New York, Huntsville, Alabama, Waco. Oh my God, this isn't a, oh, it's everyone here, great. Atlanta, Maryland, Phoenix, great. So as I stated before, TechSoup basically is, we have a global mission. And what we do is we offer so many great services. We help so many of our organizations get billions of dollars in technology projects and grants to our partner in NGOs. And those products and grants come from all of our corporate sponsors and partners. So now what I'm getting ready to do is I'm getting ready to turn this over to our presenter LaChica Phillips. She's going to go through this amazing demo. And just remember this is Excel for the very beginner. So this is going to be a fast ride. It's going to be engaging. Please, if you have questions, we are going to queue it up. And look forward to answering your questions. And now I'm going to turn it over to LaChica Phillips. Hi, good morning everyone. Thank you again, Alicia. And thank you, Susan. I know that you are managing the chat right now. And I just saw that we also have people listening in and watching from India and Canada. So thank you for joining us today. I'm so excited for the opportunity to share the basics of Excel with you. And as Alicia mentioned, this webinar is designed for the very beginner in mind. Yes, we welcome first-time users all the way to Excel experts. So to get a better idea of our audience, I know we know your location now, but now I want to find out what is your level of skill and experience with Excel. So are you a new Excel user? Are you a fairly skilled Excel user? Are you an advanced Excel user? So if you've not already done so, if you look at your screen, you can select your level of experience. Thank you. Okay, wow, look at this. So we have, majority of our listeners today are new Excel users. So that is fabulous. Well, you are definitely at the right place at the right time. So now I would like to find out what is your primary goal in joining this webinar? Well, now I've just found out that the majority of you are on here for the first time. So I'm guessing it's to learn how to use Excel, but we're more than happy if you have ideas on how you need to train your staff, or you need quick refreshers. We welcome you to answer that as well. Thank you so much. Really appreciate you taking the opportunity to do that. So we're going to jump right in, and I'm going to start sharing my screen. So in just a minute here, you are going to see an Excel spreadsheet, and we are going to start from the very, very beginning, and we're going to go over some of the most commonly used tools and features. So get ready, here we go. Okay, and so if you're not aware, just let me share this with you very briefly. Excel is a great spreadsheet application used to create forms. You can use it to create reports, graph data, and even directories. Some nonprofits use Excel to track donations, to record volunteer hours, and to manage contacts. With a wide range of financial functions and formulas and add-ons, nonprofits can really manage data in a more effective way using Excel. I want to point out that the reason why you would want to use Excel as opposed to using a table in Microsoft Word is that the table in Microsoft Word does not give you those added features as far as calculations, as far as filtering. So if you just need a simple table without the calculations and without the other features, and you don't have a lot of data, then a table in Microsoft Word would be effective. It would be enough. However, if you do have a large amount of data, and you do need those calculations, then yes, Excel is definitely perfect for you, for your team. So let's just dive in and look at these most commonly used tools. So if you notice when I went to the spreadsheet, we have these options at the top. But I'm going to show you, if you select this drop-down arrow here, so if you select Home, you get an expanded toolbar section. Now to keep this toolbar to stay visible, you want to click this option, Pin the Ribbon. And so what this will do, I'll give you an example. So you see how the expanded toolbar disappeared? But if I click Home again and have it expanded, and I select Pin the Ribbon, watch what happens. It stays. So now I've just pinned the ribbon. So now I don't have to keep selecting Home to get these extra icons and features. So you want to pin the ribbon. Now let's jump right in to Clipboard. And as you can see, I know that a lot of you are first-time users, but perhaps you've used Microsoft Word. And if you have, that's very good because a lot of the features in Excel are similar to the features in Microsoft Word. For instance, this first section here, Clipboard, you've got the Copy, Paste, and the Cut icon. And this is the Copy information that you want to duplicate it. This is the Cut information, and to place it somewhere else. And this is to Paste. So I'm going to just show you very briefly. We can Copy here. Here's the icon, Copy. And we want to paste it. Let's say we want to paste it here in this sale. These little boxes, these are called sales. And if you notice, each time I move into a different sale, I want you to look here, right under the Toolbar. This box is the Name box. I like to call it the address of the sale, but that's exactly what it is. So if I'm here, and as you can see, I'm in K2. Okay? So we're going to Copy the date, and then we're going to Paste it there. And so that's the Copy, Paste feature. I want to show you something else here that I really, really love with the Clipboard icon features here. It's this Format Painter. So let's make this date bold. And let's make it red. And let's make it bigger. And we're going to go over some of these fonts here. Okay? And let's make it bigger. So what I want to do is I want to copy the format of this sale. I don't want to copy the contents of this. I want to copy the format. Okay? So basically what I want to do is I want another sale to be red, to be larger, and to be bold. But I don't want to have to go to each sale and do that manually for each one. So that's where the Format Painter comes in hand, and I'm going to show you. So what we want to do is we want to select the sale that we want to duplicate the format, not the content. Okay? So we have that sale selected, and now we want to select Format Painter. And let's select the sale where we want to duplicate that formatting. Let's try an email address. And voila, that's what the Format Painter does. And so moving on to Font. And as you saw, as I played around a little bit changing the font here to red and to bold, this is where you can change your font. I showed you here how to change the color, how to make it bold, italics underlined just like in Microsoft Word. Here is where you can add borders. And what you would want to do is select the sales that you want to have a border. So let's say these are the sales. And you can select all borders. And now you have borders around all of those sales. Okay? And you can remove that here. No border. Okay? Now alignment. Alignment is where we want to change the direction and the alignment of our content. So using this, looking at this sale here, we can have it left aligned. We can have it right aligned. You can center it. And you can also have it where it's at the bottom of the sale. It's at the top of the sale. And depending on how you need your data displayed, you may want it any of these ways. Okay? And so now I want to show you the Wrap Text. As you can see here, this sale has the feature it's Wrap Text. If we remove that, you can see that some of that, the data is cut off. You can't see everything. You can either expand the column this way by double clicking on that column. That's all I did. I just double clicked and then expanded to the longest set of content in this column. But if it happens to be a column like this, perhaps you have a lot of data. And you have to see all of the content of the sale in the sale and maybe multiple lines. And that's where the Wrap Text makes those visible. Now of course, you can select the whole column and now you have multiple lines. And you can see all of your data or again stretch it out this way. You can expand it. Okay? Now with the alignment with the orientation, this is the orientation of the actual content of the sale and not the actual page. To change the page orientation it would be here under Page Layout for the orientation. But this is for the direction of the content of the text. So if you select the drop down, we can change the direction this way. Now this is just demo. We wouldn't want to do, we wouldn't want the email address to be that way. So I'm going to show you. And remember all is not lost because we have Undo, Undo. And the shortcut to the Undo is Control-Z. Okay? So let me take a different sale and show you. Let's change the orientation of the date. Okay? And so now moving on to numbers. This is where we can change the format or select the format that we want to use for the numbers in our spreadsheet. So if you look here, the drop down, you have several options for formats for your numbers. So we have general where there is, there is no number format. This right here is general as you can see. And what I mean by that is there is not a dollar sign. It's not currency. It's not a date. It's the general format. So the number format would have decimals. Currency would have the currency symbol associated with it. You have accounting, short date, the long date, time, and percentage. There are other formats, however, Excel for beginner. We are going to stick with these here. And I believe that most beginners will feel comfortable using all of these formats. One of the questions that I get asked the most is what's the difference between using the format for currency and the format for accounting. And currency is mainly used for general monetary value. And accounting is used to actually align the decimals and the currency symbols. So I'm going to select this column here. And I want, I can do this drop down here and select currency. But I can also just select the dollar sign icon. And so now it's currency. So if I were to calculate a sum, which we will in a little bit, then we will see that everything will line up. The dollar sign will line up. The decimals will line up because it is under the accounting format. So now let's look at styles. And since we are talking to the very beginner, we won't go into a lot of these. But there is something that I want to show you. If you are a nonprofit and you are managing a lot of data, there is a tool that can really help you analyze your data very, very quickly. And that tool that I love to share is found right under here in the Styles tab. And so it's under conditional formatting. So if we drop down the arrow here, we have all of these options. And the one that I want to point out today is to highlight sales rules option and greater than. Now I'm going to explain why this would be in handy. If you have a spreadsheet from a fundraiser and you need to reach out or send a separate letter to all of the donors who gave over $100, let's say, you can go to your spreadsheet and you can create a rule to highlight everything over whatever amount or everything over $100. And so then your data would tabulate and you would have all of your data. So let's try that. Highlight sales rules greater than. And so for this spreadsheet, let's say greater than, let's say greater than $200. I'm going to find myself, do I have a $250? No, I have a $250. So we want greater than $250. So I'm going to select that value that's here. And I'm going to say, okay, so what's going to happen? Nothing happened. Do you know why? I did not select the column. So let's select the column, conditional formatting, highlight sales rules, greater than. I said $250, let's say $250. Okay. So everything that's highlighted is greater than $250. So now I've identified all of those donors who've made that contribution and now I can easily reach out as opposed to searching the spreadsheet and trying to find that information. I can use this tool to help me locate that very easily. I can also use the duplicate values tool to find out where duplicates are. Okay, again the column has to be selected. Let's remove this rule. I'm going to show you how to do that. So to remove a rule, select the column, clear rules. Okay. So now let's look at the sales section. And this is where we can insert and delete columns and rows. We can also format our different rows, row height, column width. You can also hide and unhide rows and columns. I'm going to show you a shortcut to that. You can rename a sheet, copy your sheets, and you can change those colors. But I'm going to show you a very easier way to do that. But I wanted you to be aware what is under this Format Sales tab. These are just a little bit more options for you to choose from. Okay. So to insert, you can go here. You can also, if we wanted to insert a column, you can select where you would like to include your column. If you right click, you can insert. Okay. You can also do the same thing for if you wanted to insert a row. Just highlight the row. If you right click, you can now insert a row. Now I want to bring this here attention because the question I was just asked was why would you need to change row height or why is this important? If you have a spreadsheet and it has to be on a specific size of paper, if there has to be certain information, it has to be on one page, you can go and make your column width. You can customize it. You can make it bigger. You can make it smaller. But these are just like I said, additional options for you. Now with organizing your sheets, these are sheets. This entire application is a workbook. And inside each workbook are these different sheets. What I recommend is when you start with your raw data, it's to let that be maybe your first sheet. But you can also rename it. And I like to do that. And we can call this raw data. Okay. Because what's going to happen, because in a minute we're going to go over sorting and filtering. And so once we have sorted and filtered our data for however we need to use it, then what we would want to do is to have that information maybe on a different sheet. So if we were going to filter with the same example I just used, the organization needs to reach out to all of the donors that gave over $250. Then what we would want to do is to take that data, the list of those $250, and maybe move that here. Okay. We can move that information onto this sheet. And so then we would name this maybe Donors 250. Okay. So we can delete this here. And if we wanted to come back again to our conditional formatting, highlight the rules, and then put all of that information here on this separate sheet. Because now you have your own separate sheet that's dedicated to these donors only. And then you have your original raw data always in place. Okay. Okay. Let's move to the fun stuff. This is the editing tab. Because this is where, this is definitely where the magic happens I feel when it comes to analyzing your data. Because here this icon is where you sort and filter. So this allows you to sort your information in alphabetical order, largest to smallest, or smallest to largest. And filtering though is another way for you to remove some information and not delete the information. You're just simply taking it out of the data like I just showed you. We have the donors that gave over $250. So if we wanted to filter those, we would actually be removing that information from the main data. So let me show you how we want to filter. If I select donation and if I select the filter option, I don't know if you can see. Let's expand. And the way we zoom in is here. Do you see that? I'm at the bottom left-hand corner. So I'm going to do this again so you can see that. So I've highlighted the cell, the top of the row, the column I need to filter. And I'm going to select filter. And so you see now I have this option. So now I'm going to select this arrow. Okay. And let's see. Am I not getting what I want here? I think I may have just done. There we go. Yay! Just a little patience. I don't know sometimes Excel can do that. But just be patient. It happens to the best of us. But this is what I was looking for because what happens is when you select the filter option, what happens is it will generate all of the variables here. And so now it gives you the option to actually filter. So again, let's filter 250. Okay? And so let's see. So now all I have here is the donations, the $250 donations. Do you see that? So now what I can do is I could copy this. Copy. A shortcut to copying is Ctrl-C. I'm not sure if you know that. I could go now to my Donors tab and I can paste. And so now here is my $250 Donors tab. So we know how to fix these dates. Remember we are going to double click to expand. We can make this just a little prettier maybe. Expand. Okay? So now let's move right into some and a couple of formula features if we have time. But I think I do have time definitely to show you how to come up with a some because that is definitely the most commonly used feature in our formula in Excel. So let's show you that. I'm going to zoom out just a bit. And to get the some, this is the icon for autosum. Okay? And so to get the some, what you want to do is select the cell where you want your some to be displayed. And so for just purposes of this example, we want the some to be displayed here. And here is I2. Okay? So now that I've selected that, now I want to select the autosum icon. Now I want to select the cells that I need calculated for this some. And so here I want to select this one. This was G2. And I also want to select, I want to select G3. So we have G2 selected. And we also have G3 selected. And so I'm going to hit Enter. And so now I have the total. I'm going to do that again. You want to select the cell where you want your total to be displayed. Select the autosum icon. And you can either drag like this to select the total and hit Enter. Okay? And I'm going to do it again. Or you can select. And maybe I need a different cell. If you hold down the Ctrl key, you can move throughout your spreadsheet. And now let's select Enter. So did you see that? I do believe there's going to be a part 2 of this webinar. I'm excited about that. So we'll definitely go over some more formulas in the future. But I also want to show you something else with the sum. So this is just a quick way. There is a manual way. I don't know anyone who has ever said, can you tell me how to do the manual way for it to get some? But really, really quick, I can definitely show you that. So again, if you want to be in the cell where you want your total to be displayed, you want to enter the equal sign. You have to type the word sum. Now you have to use a parentheses. And then you select the cells that you want the sum. And hit Enter. So that's the manual way. Okay? But you can also equal sign the cell that you want. And I'm going to just do plus sign, and then another cell, and Enter. Okay? So that's how you can get your sum. And of course, if you need to, you need the difference, it would be the same thing. Of course, you wouldn't use the plus sign, you would use the minus sign. Okay? Alright, so what else can we show you? What else do we have time for? Oh, I know what I wanted to show you. What is, this may be a life changer for you. I'm not sure. I know that it was for me when I first started using Excel. And that is, sometimes you have a lot of data. I'm just going to remove this. Okay? But sometimes you have a lot of data. And let's say we needed to look at row 40. Okay, so we're at row 40. Well, if I'm just looking at this, maybe I don't know if this is his first or his last name, because my header, I can't see my header. And if you have a lot of data, and I know that a lot of you nonprofits do, and it's so hard. And sometimes you don't remember, what was the title of that header? So what you can do is, you can come up here, you can select your first row. If you select view, you have an option, excuse me, freeze panes, freeze top row. And so now what happens is, no matter how far down you go in your spreadsheet, the header will always be visible. Okay? The other thing that for me as Newby with Excel that really, really helped me was to be able to hide data. Sometimes you have so much data. Now I don't want to delete it, and I don't want to filter it. I just want to hide it so that I don't see it. And so we can do that. And the way you do that is, you can select the column, you could right click, and you can hide. Okay? So it's not filtered out. It's not deleted. And as you can see, it's just hidden. Column D is the column that we just did. And to unhide it, you would select the column before and in the column after, right click, unhide. Okay? Excellent. So now I want to go over the best ways when it comes to printing your information. I don't know about you when I first started Excel and I started printing reports. It didn't look like what I thought was on my computer screen. And that was very, very frustrating. You know, sometimes we need the headers on every single column, but you know what? You have to tell Excel to do that for that to happen. And the way that we do that is we can go to Page Layout. Sorry. We can go to Print Titles. And you see here Print Area, Print Titles, Roles to Repeat at Top, Columns to Repeat at the Left. We want to do Roles to Repeat at the Top. And this is the role that we want to repeat it on every single page. Okay? Okay. Did you see that? And so now when it's printed, if there are several pages, let's see if we can do a print preview here. Is it on the second page? Let's see. It looks like it is. But do you see how the donation? It's just on that one page. Let's fix that. So the way we can fix that, a couple of ways actually. Let's go to View. And let's do Page Break Preview. When you do Page Break Preview, do you see this little dotted line here? This lets me know this is the beginning of a new page. Do you see that? So that's why donation was on a page of its own. The Page Break is right here. But you have the power in Excel. You can move this Page Break. Let's move it over here. And now let's just delete this column. I don't know why it's here, but let's delete it. And so now we should have one page. It looks like there's going to be a second page, but it's going to be blank. Do you see that? We can get rid of that too. So now we have a clean spreadsheet. It looks like it's all on one page. Let's go back and let's take a look. And there it is. Okay? Now I also want to let you know that you can print to PDF as well. So you can convert your Excel spreadsheets to PDFs if need be. Okay? Okay. I also want to show you here. I believe there was something I also wanted to go over here. Okay? Does anyone have any questions? So yes, thank you so much, LaQuisha. We do have a lot of questions. A lot of questions. So let's start this question and answer. And since this is a live demo, the question and answer, if LaChica can demo some of your answers to the questions are verbally just say it, it's going to be engaging. So the first question that we have is can we convert a Word table into an Excel spreadsheet? That is a great question. And yes, you can. So that's taking a Microsoft Word table and making that into an Excel table. Do I have time to show? Okay. So I may move, I'm going to try to do this slowly, but I have to move out of Excel and I'm going to Word and I'm going to do the exact, all of the steps that you would do, okay? And I'm going to use the same data if that's okay. So what I'm going to do is I just want to select this information. Just one moment, I'm just going to copy this and I'm going to put this in Microsoft Word just for the purposes of demonstrating this to answer this question. It's a great question, by the way. Thank you. So we are saying that this is our information. We have a table in Excel. I'm sorry, we have a table in Word and we want this to be in Excel. So what you would do, here's our table, okay? And so we want this in Excel. Again, as you notice, a lot of the icons here, all of these icons here are exactly the same as they are in Excel. So what we can do is select all, we can copy. Oh, I've been told that you can't see my table. Okay, okay. So this is what, when I go to Word you can't see my table. I'm so sorry. Okay, let's see, how can we, okay, okay, okay, okay. I'm sorry about that. Thank you for your patience. So I'm going to try something here and I hope that you can, okay, here's my table. Can you see that? Can I get a thumbs up? No one can see the table? Okay. Everyone can see it. Oh, okay, great, great. So I have a table in Word. Do you see this here? And what I want to do is we need to convert this to Excel. We can just really copy and paste. You copy the content from your Word table, okay. And then we're going to go to Excel. Can you see my Excel sheet? I'm going to click on sheet 3 and I'm going to go to my first sale here and I'm going to paste, okay. I believe that that is the easiest and the best way if you want to convert, per se, Word table into Excel because sometimes what would happen is if you try to use some software to convert what tends to happen is you lose a lot of formatting. So what would happen is a lot of times what I've seen is that instead of this being two sales as it was on the original Microsoft Word file, what I have seen is that these two then they merge as one. Okay, when you try to use some different program, you don't have to use a program to convert Word to Excel. So hopefully that was easy for you. I'm happy to show that again if need me. If not, I'm happy to take any more questions or any more demos. I'm happy to do that. So yes, thank you for that. So see we have a lot of tips, tricks, and hacks. So remember if we don't get to all of your questions, I am chatting out a link that has some help, some answers to your questions to give you some run, just give you examples of how to use tips and tricks. So the next question that we have here is, is there any shortcut to paste the self format painter inside of control V? Okay, we can move on. Let me give you another question. Can you quickly review locking a roll of sales? I tend to get the wrong one that's fixed while the other one's others are moved. So locking sales, I think a good example would be to freeze. We've gotten a couple of those questions where there's a lot of columns or rolls with a lot of data. If you can show them how to do a freeze pane. Yes, I think that's something that a lot of people have questions about. That was actually something that helped me when I first started using Excel because again, depending on the amount of data that you're working with, it is very important to be able to hide columns and information so that you can focus on what you need to focus on, or analyze what you need to analyze very quickly. So right now I'm in page break preview. That's why you have the blue box. So I want to go back to normal view. And so that's what I did there. And so again, to freeze your pane. And I believe, yeah, this one is already, so let's do, so I'm going to select the roll that I need to freeze. And it's this one I have that selected, freeze pane, freeze top row. Okay. You can also select the row or the, I'm sorry, select the columns or the rows that you want to hide. You can right click and hide. You can select, right click, and hide. Okay. And so if I want to unhide that, I would select the column before and after it, unhide, and then it's visible. Okay. I hope that answers your question. Great. Thank you for that. Another question is, can you organize your data in numerical order? Say you want your raw data donations in greatest relief. Oh, absolutely, absolutely. Okay. So yes, so you have here in column F, these are donations. Actually, let's go to our raw data because if you remember, we filtered our raw data to get this because we were looking at $250 donations. So let's go to our raw data. And I'm going to remove the filter because right now, again, we just filtered for $250. So I want to click that and I want to clear filters. So now this is my raw data. So what I can do here is I can select the column, go back to my home so I can have all of my options here. And so again, remember this is the sort, sort. And so now they are in order from smallest to largest. Great. So we also have another great demo question that you can do. It's can you protect a sheet? So if you can show us how to protect because you know, working with private and sensitive information, you know, you want to probably show how to show the users how they can protect the data. Absolutely. So what you want to do, we can, you can actually, you can protect sheets and you can also protect your, the entire workbook. Okay. So I'm going to go to, did I lose it? Oh, I'm sorry. Oh, I have an error message. I'm sorry. Okay. Okay. Okay. So we're going to show you how to, how to protect your workbook. Okay. So what you want to do is I think I've just selected the, can you see my screen? Can you see my screen? Okay. Sorry about that. I seem to be having some technical difficulties. I'm sorry. I want to see if I can fix this on my end. So while, while we're working on dealing with the technical difficulty, I will be chatting out additional links for everyone to, if they have any questions in reference to utilizing Excel, I just chatted out a link to everyone and this will give you the tips and tricks. Again, this is a helpful for more Excel help because we have a lot of in-depth questions and answers and to help you. Again, we've already looked at the freeze pane. We also have showed you guys how to manipulate data and everything. So since we don't have any, let's see if I can find some other questions. If you guys can chat about any other questions, that would be great. And also chat your feedback. Is there anything that you would like to know in detail? Okay. So now we're back. We're ready now to answer more questions. I just wanted to get everyone engaged, everyone. This is a lot of great information. So again, we are going to show you how to protect the data. We're going to show you how to protect data because in your nonprofits you have highly sensitive data and you want to protect it. So Sheika, hand it over to you. Thank you. I'm actually having technical difficulties on this end. So what I'm going to do is I am going to make sure that when we send out the follow-up after the webinar, we will definitely include those steps in that email, in that follow-up. It looks like we do have time though for another question, maybe perhaps another demo. Does anyone have any questions? Anything else I can demo? I do. So another great question I have is, what is the best way to use Excel for accounting within nonprofits? Well, I definitely would not recommend using Excel for accounting meaning to actually manage the books per se for an organization. I believe that using a software like QuickBooks and other different programs and software that we offer through our TechSoup product donation program would be best suited for a nonprofit. There are just some things and some settings that are a part of the accounting software that you just cannot get with Excel. You can do a lot with Excel however, as far as calculating taxes and just the way that Excel is organized. I think that it would be difficult to use only Excel to be your accounting management tool. I believe that Excel can be used as far as accounting purposes. I believe that that's the best tool to use to develop profit and loss statements. I believe that it's the best tool to use to generate expense report forms. Those types of things, I believe that's good for accounting. But again, I would not recommend a nonprofit or any organization of that matter to use Excel as their solely software for accounting. I wouldn't recommend that. Thank you, Lashika. Now everyone, we are done with our questions. We are running out of time. But before we close, I just want to say a few things. Now again, I chatted out several times some links for everyone to utilize. We will hopefully have a part 2. This will be a recorded webinar along with the PowerPoint presentations and additional tips, tricks, and hacks that we didn't cover. We are going to look through the historical chat to look for some common questions and try to find some tips to direct you. So now before we close, I would love for everyone to take a look here at the screen. We have our website, techsoup.course.tc4 slash catalog. That's our learning management system. We encourage everyone to sign up. You can sign up and take a host of classes when it comes to our software, when it comes to just all types of cool data technology related information for your nonprofit. Now before we go, what I want you to do because you guys have been so amazing and engaged, just chat one thing that you learned today in the webinar. So just chat a couple of three characters, 10 characters, a paragraph. We love all the feedback. What did you learn? What would you like to learn in the future? Will you share this also? Will you share this information with your colleagues and your network? So yeah, just type that in. And while you are doing that, once this webinar concludes, we will have a survey that we would really love for you guys to fill out. It will only take you a few minutes and it will pop up once the webinar concludes. We take that data and it is for TechSoup so we can bring our customer base, the latest and greatest information, and make improvements for our audience. Also, we have some amazing upcoming webinars. Not only did we just do Excel, but we also have three upcoming webinars. One that is going to be in the month of August on the 24th which is in a couple of days. It is creating accessible online resources with people that have disabilities. And then you probably heard about our Storymakers campaign and we have our first campaign coming up. And it is a 10-step process with our partner Greenpeace. And then finally, all of you guys love or want to hear about funding. That is what keeps our nonprofits running is learning about funding. So GrantStation, which I am sure everyone is familiar with. They are one of our partners. You will hear if you sign up on the 20th an amazing presentation that is the first of a three-part series of how GrantStation works and how you can utilize it to increase fundraising with your organization. And finally, I do want to say thank you to our sponsor ReadyTalk. This is a webinar platform that we give our great presentations. I want to thank everyone that participated, all 600 of you. And remember, this is a recorded webinar. You are going to get your PowerPoints for all of those that registered and also will be up on our YouTube, all of our social media by the end of the day. And we will include the PowerPoint slides. I want to thank LaChica Phillips, Susan Hope Bard, and again, my name is Alicia Kidd. And we want to thank you. And please don't forget to fill out the survey once the meeting concludes. Thank you everyone. Have an awesome day. And I hope this was a helpful webinar. And we look forward to seeing you again.