 One of these nice little cool things that Microsoft Excel has recently introduced back in Excel 2010 was this idea of something called Sparklines. Now, a Sparkline is basically, we take a single cell, say for example, that guy right there, and that becomes my chart. Instead of worrying about all this extra bells and whistles and colors and hoohah, put a chart inside the cell and that's it. No visualization effects going on there. So let's actually do that. Let's apply one of those. The first thing I want to do is I'm going to just highlight all of my wines, just because we're going to do it for each one of these, as you can kind of guess. Now, we have a sheet called the Estimated Productions sheet. And if I click on that, you can see I get Estimated Productions. So what I want to go ahead and do is I want to create that Sparkline. Now, again, I've got this highlighted. I go over to my Insert tab and instead of going into my Charts section, Sparklines are actually their own kind of little other thing. And as you can see, they are their own little other thing. If I click on, I'm going to go with Column. Basically, what it's going to ask for me is where do you want these to be placed? Notice it's already given me that data. And as we can kind of see, it's doing a little blinking marquee right now. That's actually why we highlighted it, is because it would automatically put it in for us. Now, that data range, that data range that we were talking about earlier is in Estimated Productions. Since my cursor is inside of Data Range right now, since I've clicked on it, I can come into Estimated Productions. And one of the things you'll notice is it automatically kind of points that out as a cell reference. It's like, oh, hey, you're talking about this sheet. And then I want to go ahead and highlight 250, so C6, all the way to L11. Now, I don't want to include total cases, because I don't have anything to effectively use on that. And I don't want to use year 1 through 10, because again, I'm not going to have those as visualizations. And as soon as I hit OK, notice what I get. I get suddenly all of these different charts when they start to ramp up. Now, one of the things I can do is I can actually change the color scheme. Right now, they're all blue, which if I have color coordination going on here, I should probably have color coordination going on here, right? Well, the first thing I have to do is I actually have to ungroup these things. Because if I don't, then they all change depending on their color. But now I can adjust them. Now I can say, oh, well, we're looking at my cavern name. My cavern name was blue. So I want to go ahead and give this that same blue effect. So let's see. That's Sparkline color, the marker color. There we go. So Sparkline color, boom. And then we go to Reasling. Reasling was an orange. So we go here, orange. We got a peanut grigio. Yeah, I'm not a wine guy, as you can tell. Let's see. That is a yellow. Boom. We go to the peanut noir. Yes, I'm going to butcher all of these guys. That's actually the yellow. The peanut grigio was a gray. The cavernet, Franck, we made green. And the ruby cavernet, we made dark red. And so you can see we can actually adjust these. And now I have color coordination going on, not only in my pie chart, but also in my Sparklines.