Copying and pasting charts or tables directly from Excel into PowerPoint is not a straightforward as it sounds! When you are embedding charts, tables or (heaven forbid) a spreadsheet into a PowerPoint slide, it’s best to paste the image in as a picture or JPEG.
If you do a straight Control-C Control-V copy and paste, the original Excel file is automatically embedded in the PowerPoint document and this is not usually recommended, for a number of reasons;
Instead of using Control-V to paste the image into PowerPoint, right-hand click instead, and select the “Picture” option. Note that the exact same concepts apply if you are copying and pasting from Excel into Word, Outlook or any other Microsoft product.
Remember that PowerPoint is intended to be used as a presentation tool, not for storing and manipulating data. It’s best to make any changes to the chart in Excel, and then copy it into PowerPoint once it’s finished. The concept is exactly the same as using a PDF to send a final report. When you’ve put together a report in Excel, Word or specialised software, it’s much more professional to convert it to PDF before sending it out. This way we can ensure that the final report looks exactly the way that we intended it to without worrying that the end user will make inadvertent changes, or not be able to view it properly due to licensing issues.

Source: Data Pig Technologies
Of course, you may still deliberately choose to embed the Excel image, leaving the data in the PowerPoint slide for documentation purposes, or in case you need to make a change. That’s absolutely fine, as long as you realise it’s there and are able to deal with the problems outlined above.
To learn more about creating charts and presenting data visually, attend our Data Analysis & Dashboard Reporting course which run regularly in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 15/02/2018 - 02:53.
Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 19/02/2018 - 06:07.
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