60% of large companies feel 'Spreadsheet Hell' describes their reliance on spreadsheets either completely or fairly well.
See our bibliography of spreadsheet best practice, risk management, errors and testing, and methods for improving spreadsheets.
Once information is loaded into a spreadsheet, it acquires properties that it may not deserve – a process called reification.
The cascading structure of typical spreadsheet formulae means that just about every spreadsheet is almost certainly wrong.
Our spreadsheet methodology has criteria for designing, building, and validating spreadsheets to ensure that they work correctly.
Creating a slow spreadsheet is easy. Creating an efficient spreadsheet requires more thought and application of specific techniques.
Only a quarter of survey participants were satisfied with their spreadsheet testing. Their techniques are largely manual and lack formalism.
Overconfidence is one of the main causes of spreadsheet errors. Being informed about overconfidence leads to more accurate spreadsheets.
We can help you make better spreadsheets:
Contact us