Clear guidance to help you understand safe, effective aesthetic treatment options.
If someone on your team is typing “In Progress” into a spreadsheet fifty times a week, there’s a real chance at least a few of those entries say “In Progres,” “in progress,” or — the classic — “In Progrss.” Nobody means to do it. It just happens. And then your PivotTable breaks, your filter misses rows, and someone spends an hour wondering why the numbers don’t add up.
Drop-down lists in Excel exist specifically to prevent that. Instead of letting users type freehand into a cell, you give them a pre-set menu of options to choose from. One click, correct entry, every time. It’s one of the simplest things you do in Excel that has an outsized impact on data quality across the board.
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Your cell now has a small drop-down arrow. Users click it, pick their option, and move on. No typing, no typos.
Typing options directly into the Source field works fine for short, stable lists. But if your list is likely to grow — new departments get added, product categories change, status labels get updated — point Excel to a cell range instead.
Set up your list items in a column somewhere (a separate sheet works great for this), then select that range as your Source. From that point on, any time you update the list in that column, every drop-down linked to it updates automatically. No going back into Data Validation and starting over. It’s a small setup choice that saves a lot of future frustration.
My training experience was incredibly smooth and education. I feel so much more capable navigating Excel and Word now.
Typing options directly into the Source field works fine for short, stable lists. But if your list is likely to grow — new departments get added, product categories change, status labels get updated — point Excel to a cell range instead.
Set up your list items in a column somewhere (a separate sheet works great for this), then select that range as your Source. From that point on, any time you update the list in that column, every drop-down linked to it updates automatically. No going back into Data Validation and starting over. It’s a small setup choice that saves a lot of future frustration.
Two features inside the Data Validation dialog that not enough people use:
Under the Input Message tab, you write a short prompt that pops up when someone clicks the cell — something like “Please select a department from the list.” It’s a helpful nudge, especially in workbooks shared with people who didn’t build them.
Under the Error Alert tab, you set a message that appears if someone tries to type something that isn’t on the list. Instead of silently accepting a bad entry or throwing a cryptic error, Excel tells the user exactly what to do. Both features take about thirty seconds to set up and make shared spreadsheets noticeably easier to use.
Here’s the thing about data entry errors — they’re cheap to prevent and expensive to fix. One misspelled status label, one department name entered three different ways, one “yes” where everything else says “Yes” — and suddenly your downstream reports are wrong, your mail merge skips rows, and the data you’re feeding into another system is quietly unreliable.
Drop-down lists solve that problem at the source, before bad data ever gets in. And once you start using them consistently, your team’s spreadsheets become the kind that other people trust instead of double-check.
Drop-down lists are one of the practical Excel skills covered in Custom Training Services’ programs at every level. Whether your team is just getting started or ready to go deeper, we build training around your real workflows — not generic examples.
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Common Queries
Most patients recover within a few days, depending on the procedure and aftercare.
Most patients recover within a few days, depending on the procedure and aftercare.
Most patients recover within a few days, depending on the procedure and aftercare.
Most patients recover within a few days, depending on the procedure and aftercare.
Most patients recover within a few days, depending on the procedure and aftercare.