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Resources

Here’s what’s happening in the world of business and IT skills training.

Check out our blog and news page for the latest news from the Future Savvy team!
  • How to Perform a Capabilities-based Assessment
    How to Peform a Capabilities-based Assessment

    A Capabilities-based Assessment (CBA) is a structured process that compares an organisation’s current skills, processes, and technologies with the capabilities it needs to achieve its strategy, highlighting critical gaps. The method involves mapping existing capabilities, rating their maturity against strategic targets, conducting gap analysis, and turning findings into an actionable road map. Widely applied in sectors from healthcare to education, CBAs enable data-driven decisions and targeted upskilling that translate directly into greater value.

  • Microsfot Copilot
    Deploying Copilot Effectively: A Guide for IT Managers on Integration, Training, and Change Management

    Microsoft 365 Copilot can super-charge Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Teams, but IT managers must align licensing, data governance, and clear business goals before launch. In this article, we discuss how engaging stakeholders early, piloting with a small cross-functional group, and phasing the rollout lets teams refine guidance and measure real productivity gains. Role-specific, hands-on training - prompt-engineering tips, quick-start resources, and “Copilot champions” - converts into confident daily use while resolving emerging user challenges.

  • White Paper: The Impact of Skills Underinvestment on UK SMBs
  • Calculate Variance Using Excel
    Can you Calculate Variance Using Excel?

    In this guide, we explain variance as a measure of how widely data points deviate from the mean and shows why understanding this spread is useful for deeper insight and risk assessment. It walks readers through calculating variance in Excel, distinguishing between the VAR.S function for a sample and VAR.P for an entire population, then demonstrates each with a car-sales case study.

  • excel-lookup-multiple-criteria-team
    How to Use Excel Lookup with Multiple Criteria

    This blog explains how Excel’s LOOKUP functions—particularly XLOOKUP and VLOOKUP—can retrieve data based on multiple criteria. It walks through a step-by-step example of finding an employee’s sales in a specific region, showing both an XLOOKUP formula and a VLOOKUP alternative that uses a helper column.

  • how to separate first and last name in excel​
    How to Separate by First & Last Name in Excel

    Mаnу businesses need first and last names in separate Excel columns for easier sorting, searching, and personalised communications. Excel’s Text to Columns feature lets you split names fast by selecting a space delimiter, while LEFT/RIGHT formulas achieve the same result with flexible cell references. Dragging these formulas down fills the entire list automatically, saving hours over manual copying.

  • Stacked Bar Chart in Excel
    How to Create a Stacked Bar Chart in Excel

    A stacked bar chart lets you see both totals and the category-level breakdown within each bar, making comparisons richer than a standard bar chart. The article walks you through creating one in Excel: organise data by categories, select the range, choose Insert › Stacked Column, and fine-tune titles, legends, colours, and data labels. Best practices include limiting each bar to roughly four stacks, adding concise labels, and using clearly distinguishable colours to keep the visualisation readable. W

  • How to Remove Table Format in Excel
    How to Remove Table Format in Excel

    Excel’s table formatting makes data easier to read and analyse, but you may need to remove it for a cleaner look, better compatibility, or a smaller file size. The guide also covers fixes for common hiccups, such as lingering visual styles and the Table Design tab appearing greyed out when no table cell is selected.

  • Microsoft Copilot Excel
    From Zero to Hero: Practical Ways to Boost Productivity with Copilot in Excel

    Microsoft Copilot for Excel, a generative-AI assistant built into Microsoft 365, turns natural-language prompts into instant formulas, pivots, charts, and summaries - eliminating much of Excel’s manual grunt work. After enabling Copilot in a cloud-saved workbook, users simply describe tasks like highlighting duplicates, cleaning data, generating complex formulas, or visualising trends, and Copilot does the heavy lifting while explaining its logic. The article also offers step-by-step setup guidance and a list of ready-made prompts to help users go from “zero to hero” in productivity.

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