 Hi, my name is Kevin Mahal and I'm a senior technical customer success manager here at TechSoup. In this demonstration, powered by the AI capabilities of machine translation and optical character recognition, I will show you how to use the data from a picture function of Microsoft Excel to transpose text and numerical content into a spreadsheet. By quickly taking data from your non-profits documents, such as annual reports, past financials, or a list of past owners, your organization can significantly cut down on the task of data entry, giving you more time to serve your constituents in other ways. Let's say I just received an email from our organization's outside accountant. Attached to the message is an image that captured of our latest financial statement. While we could manually input it into a new Excel file, that's inefficient and, quite frankly, not very fun. Let's see what this looks like using the data in a picture feature. At our mail, I'm using Outlook for Desktop here. We'll first locate the file. Now let's save it to our downloads folder. Next, I'm going to launch Excel. We're going to create a blank document. Let's call it company financial statement. Next, we're going to click on the data tab. We're going to select the from picture option and select picture from file. Let's click on the downloads tab, find the file we saved, and click insert. We'll see the data from picture menu pop up on the right hand side of the screen. Next, we're going to click on review. Let's expand the menu size. Now if they look good, we'll accept the review. If not, we'll want to modify what's in the field line, then accept. We've gone through all the potential errors that were flagged. Time to insert the data by clicking the insert button. Now the data is ready to be shared. I'm going to use the share button, which will first store the file in our OneDrive for Business account, but you could of course just save it in your local drive and either email it to the user or even send it in a Microsoft Teams message.