There are really only two that stand out: One is that many of the benefits depend on collaboration with others, and here you will find that the uneven uptake in the organization will place limits on how fast you can take some of the features into use. In addition to listing the advantages, I will also touch on some of the negative aspects I have experienced in this shift. I have worked with many people who, even though they may have switched to Google Sheets, still use it in the old offline Excel mold, meaning that they lose out on a number of productivity-enhancing features. In my experience, there are many finance and business professionals out there who are still working with Excel spreadsheets in the same way that many of us learned over 10 years ago in the pre-cloud era. Instead, I will focus on Google Sheets’ advantages and the new ways of working that the emergence of online productivity tools have enabled. I won’t, however, be giving a feature comparison between Google Sheets and Excel their features change so quickly that such analysis would become redundant within weeks. In a later article, I will go deeper into Google Apps Script and demonstrate a tutorial for getting started. Toward the end, I will also provide an introduction to Google Apps Script, a powerful tool for automating workflows and extending Google Sheets’ functionality. In this article, I will share some of the most useful Google Sheets features that I learned early on, which dramatically improved my productivity. Consequently, since then I’ve been using Sheets (spreadsheets) and Slides (presentations) products almost daily, learning their functionality and experiencing new ways of working. A couple of years ago, the company I work for took the significant step of moving all of its 11,000 employees over to Google’s G Suite.
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