Blog Post

Excel Blog
3 MIN READ

Simplifying enterprise data discovery and analysis in Microsoft Excel

Brian Jones (OFFICE)'s avatar
May 06, 2020

We know that Excel is one of the most widely used tools in the world for understanding data and making decisions based on that data. It's used by hundreds of millions of users each month in almost every type of company imaginable. To better meet the needs of our users, Excel has evolved and transformed to understand you and your data in a way that has not been available until now. We are excited to share new capabilities that will ease access to trusted datasets and new ways to analyze and manipulate that data.

 

Over the years you have told us that you wanted Excel to have better integration with Power BI, more flexibility to get data in the grid, and better management for sensitive data, and today we are announcing this exciting step towards that goal! By simplifying access to Power BI data, we have streamlined the ability for users to consume, manipulate, and analyze reliable data all within Excel. In short, Excel now better understands you and your data.

 

Connect to Power BI Datasets Without Leaving Excel

 

Today, we are introducing two new ways to access Power BI data from within Excel — Excel data types and through PivotTables connected to Power BI. With the click of a button users can now discover Power BI datasets all without having to leave Excel! By using Power BI certified and promoted dataset capabilities, organizations enable more users to find and use relevant and refreshable data to make better decisions.

 

Using Data Types, you can quickly find details from featured tables in Power BI datasets within Excel’s data types gallery. Data Types give users the flexibility to organize information in any way they want within the Excel grid. This allows you to use formulas, build reports and analyze your data in a familiar and simpler way.

 

 Power BI data type in Excel

 

Analyzing Power BI datasets in Excel using PivotTable

 

We have also added the ability for PivotTables connected to datasets stored in Power BI to be created in Excel, allowing you to continue to use of the tools you know and love. This new capability creates a live connection to the underlying dataset in Power BI, meaning updates within the source are published to the reports connected to it. Excel PivotTables also respect the Microsoft Information Protection sensitivity labels applied to the file when the PivotTable was created. This evolution of Excel promotes the adoption of certified datasets within your organization, helping to ensure authoritative data sources are used when making critical decisions in your business.

 

These new capabilities will start rolling out to Office Insiders later this year. Please refer to the Release Notes for Office Insiders for the latest update.

 

Microsoft Information Protection (MIP)

 

Sensitivity labels from the Microsoft Information Protection framework, available in both Power BI and Office apps, lets you classify and protect your organization's data while making sure that user productivity and their ability to collaborate is not hindered. Sensitivity labels are currently available and will persist when applied from Power BI content and exported to Excel, PowerPoint, and PDF files. However, with this release we are taking Sensitivity labels one step further. When you connect to a Power BI dataset from Excel, that dataset's Sensitivity label will be inherited and applied to the Excel file and all associated outcomes like headers/footers and encryption.

 

Power BI dataset's sensitivity label shown in Excel 

 

With the new, more robust integrations between Excel and Power BI we have given your organization more potential, more visibility and more information protection in Excel’s familiar and easy to use interface, all with fewer clicks. We welcome you to try this out for yourself and sign up to be an insider to get all the hottest tips and promotions!

 

Excel’s new capabilities will start rolling out to Office Insiders later this year. Refer to these Release Notes for Office Insiders for the latest update.

 

To learn more,

 

 

 

Updated Aug 27, 2020
Version 4.0

60 Comments

  • SergeiBaklan's avatar
    SergeiBaklan
    Diamond Contributor

    Brian Jones (OFFICE) , Ed Hansberry  - yes, it appeared in half an hour after I posted the comment, both on Insider Fast and Monthly (Targeted). What is not clear is E5 licensing, doesn't matter how we call this plan. In particular, it's not clear why practically exactly the same functionality of Analyse in Excel requires mainly Power BI Pro license and doesn't care if user on E5 or not. IMHO, differentiation in production on E5 and the rest will kill new functionality or people will find the other way to use it, e.g. with Pro license Analyse in Excel for Pivot Tables and Power BI Desktop for creating new data types. I don't know how it will be, but many chances the story with licensing of Power Pivot will be repeated. 

  • SergeiBaklan , Ed Hansberry is correct... the access to PBI data sets and "insert Pivot table from PBI" are already available to Insiders. PBI data types will be available to Insiders later this month.

    Ed Hansberry another piece of this release that excelpbi was referring to is that you will be able to use Power Query to generate your own data types from any data source you connect to. We didn't cover it in the blog post, but we covered it in the video session yesterday afternoon. That functionality is probably a month or so out, so we didn't talk about it as much and will cover in more depth once it's closer to release. I agree with excelpbi though, it's very powerful.

    Wes Miller , sorry about any confusion there. Are you saying the confusion was that we weren't clear between M365 and O365, or that we just said Microsoft E5 rather than Microsoft 365 E5?

  • Ed Hansberry's avatar
    Ed Hansberry
    Iron Contributor

    excelpbi - what Power Query data types are you referring to?
    SergeiBaklan - the Access Power BI DataSets is already in my Insider build. Showed up yesterday. Seems the same as the Analyze in Excel tools, but integrated and much more stable.

  • Wes Miller's avatar
    Wes Miller
    Brass Contributor

    I'm assuming that "within the Microsoft E5 license" should say "within the Microsoft 365 E5 license"?

     

    It'd be ideal if posts like this that cross technology elaborated a bit more on exactly what the licensing requirements were, particularly since Microsoft 365 E5 (the most expensive variant of Microsoft 365 suites) isn't licensed by all organizations, and it's not necessarily clear which feature requires which license.

  • excelpbi's avatar
    excelpbi
    Brass Contributor

    You forgot to mention Power Query Data Types which is also amazing

     

    Best Regards

    Sam

  • excelpbi's avatar
    excelpbi
    Brass Contributor

    Brian,

     

    Power BI as a DataType is brilliant !!. While live connect to a PBI Dataset has been around for 2 years with Connect to PBI - making it native inside a Pivot Button is fantastic.

     

    All that is remaining is to bring all the distributed components together on a unified Power BI Tab - Remember "We are better together" ....and all those nice sounding conference only taglines   - you also need to Include Custom Visuals instead of prematurely deprecated Power View

     

    Feel free to suggest this to the Office UX team !

     

     

    Best Regards

    Sam

    PS: A intelligently designed Home Tab would not hurt either

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • SergeiBaklan's avatar
    SergeiBaklan
    Diamond Contributor

    That's cool! The only question how late this year will start the rolling out...