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Intro to Excel Services Data Sources

Introduction

The Excel Services Data Source in PerformancePoint 2010 allows you to create data using familiar Excel tools and methods that you can then surface in PerformancePoint scorecards. 

To demonstrate the use of the Excel Services Data Source, I'll walk you through creating a scorecard that shows information about U.S. state government finance. The data for the this scorecard will be in an Excel workbook in a SharePoint document library.

My Example Workbook

For this example, I've created a sample workbook containing data about U.S. state government finances and population. The data in my workbook came from the site https://www.census.gov. I downloaded three workbooks from this site containing information about US state revenue, expense, and population in 2008. I consolidated this information into one workbook and then created a summary table called "StateFinances2008" containing simple metrics for each state like Revenue per Person and the Debt to Cash and Securities ratio. This workbook is attached to this blog post.

Saving the Workbook to SharePoint

To use a workbook like the one I've created as a PerformancePoint data source, first save it to a SharePoint site with Excel Services enabled. To do this, use Save to SharePoint in  Excel,  setting the publishing options as described below.

Publishing options control which parts of the workbook are exposed though Excel Services. Publishing options are set using Publish Options as shown:

Excel publish options

Expose only the StateFinances2008 data table by selecting it on the Show tab of the Publish Options dialog:

Expose only the data table

Here's the workbook in my BI Center document library:

The workbook in the SharePoint library

Creating the Excel Services Data Source

With the workbook in place, create a new data source using PerformancePoint Dashboard Designer:

Creating the data source in dashboard designer

When prompted to select the type of data source, choose Excel Services as shown:

Selecting the right data source in dashboard designer

Once the data source is created, configure it to reference the workbook you saved to your SharePoint site. Supply all the information required to retrieve the desired information from the workbook: the site address, the document library name, the name of the workbook, and the name of the data table in the workbook. The following image shows this information for the data source I created:

Setting the data source properties and choosing the workbook

Next, supply the names of the columns in your new data source. The column names aren't automatically copied from the data table in the workbook. To do this click on the View tab and then select each column and enter an appropriate column name in the Details pane on the right. Here's an image illustrating this process:

Supplying column names for the data

Once you've finished this, your data source is complete.

Using the Data Source

After the data source is in-place, creating KPIs and a scorecard that show data in the work book is straight-forward. Using the approach described in the post Creating simple budget KPIs from SharePoint Lists, you can create KPIs and a scorecard based on your new Excel Services data source. For my sample, I created three simple KPI:

KPI Actual (all from the Excel Services data source) Target Scoring Pattern
Revenue/Person Revenue/Person  $5,000 Closer to target is better
Expense/Person Expense/Person $5,000 Closer to target is better
Debt/Cash & Securities Debt/Cash & Securities 0.25 Decreasing is better

I placed these KPIs on columns and put the State dimension from my Excel Services data source on rows with all states selected.

Here's a snapshot of the dashboard containing my scorecard:

Completed scorecard

Conclusion

Although this is a simple example, Excel Service data sources enable more sophisticated PerformancePoint solutions that leverage the power of Excel and Excel Services to retrieve, manipulate, and calculate data.

Dave Sherman | Senior Program Manger | Office BI

2008 State Finances.xlsx

Comments

  • Anonymous
    January 23, 2012
    Cool introduction! Thanks!

  • Anonymous
    October 01, 2012
    Great, great post.  There isn't enough on Excel Services on the web beyond the basics (create a spreadsheet, add a bar graph, and REST services will pull the chart for you).  These items like using Excel as your data source are very helpful, thanks!

  • Anonymous
    January 09, 2013
    Am trying to create the same, but my variance are out from your scorecard snapshot. For Alabama, Revenue/Person variance is -22%, Expense/Person is -6% and Debt/Cash Securities is 16%. May I know how to achieve the same variance as in your scorecard?

  • Anonymous
    May 29, 2013
    Quite helpful thanks!