Prompt Details
Model
Chat - (gpt-5)
Token size
1,014 ($0.03169 / call)
Example input
[SOFTWARE/SKILL]: Microsoft Excel
[SPECIFIC_TASK]: Create a dynamic chart that automatically updates when new data is added to a table.
[TARGET_AUDIENCE]: Small business owners who use Excel for sales tracking but are not data experts.
Example output
### Interactive Tutorial Simulator β Microsoft Excel
**Task**: Create a dynamic chart that automatically updates when new data is added to a table
**Audience**: Small business owners who track sales in Excel (not data experts)
---
**Step 1: Likely Mistakes (to weave into Act 1)**
1. Building the chart from a static cell range (e.g., `A2:C13`) instead of an Excel Table, so new rows aren't included.
2. Adding new rows below the data or leaving a blank row, so Excel doesn't recognize them as part of the chart's source.
3. Manually dragging the chart range or repeatedly using Chart Design β Select Data after every update.
4. Typing currency symbols directly into cells (e.g., "$3400") so the Revenue column becomes text and the chart misbehaves.
5. Using mixed date formats or text dates, causing the Date axis to look wrong or not sort properly.
---
**Step 2: Simulated User Persona**
Meet Jordan, who runs a local bakery and updates a weekly "Sales" spreadsheet. Jordan wants a simple chart on a dashboard that grows as new weeks are addedβwithout redoing anything.
---
### **Act 1 β The Struggle (The "Why You're Here")**
**0:00 β Cold Open (screen recording of Excel)**
* **On-screen:** A worksheet named Sales_Data with columns: Date | Product | Revenue (about 12 rows).
* **Action:** Jordan drags to select `A1:C13`, then clicks Insert β Column β Clustered Column.
* **Jordan (VO, slightly rushed):** "Okay, quick sales chart for the weekly report. Select the range... insert chart... done!"
**0:12 β First Update Attempt**
* **Action:** Jordan scrolls down, types a new week's row in `A14:C14`.
* **On-screen:** The chart doesn't include the new bar.
* **Jordan (VO, confused):** "Huh? Why isn't the new week showing up?"
**0:18 β Manual Fix Cycle**
* **Action:** Jordan clicks the chart β Chart Design β Select Data β edits the range to `A1:C14`.
* **On-screen text (subtle caption):** "Manual range updates = time sink"
* **Jordan (VO, resigned):** "Guess I'll just extend the range... again."
**0:28 β The "Tidy" Blank Row**
* **Action:** Jordan adds a blank row after the data "to separate this week from next week."
* **On-screen:** Next week's data is typed below the blank row. The chart still won't auto-include it.
* **Jordan (VO, frustrated):** "Why is Excel so picky? I just want it to update by itself!"
**0:38 β Formatting Trap**
* **Action:** Jordan types "$3400" into Revenue for the new week.
* **On-screen:** That value aligns left (text), chart ignores/skips or behaves oddly.
* **Jordan (VO, sighs):** "Now the numbers look weird. Do I have to rebuild the whole thing every time?"
**0:48 β Cliffhanger**
* **On-screen:** Jordan stares at the messy chart.
* **On-screen text (big, friendly):** "There's a faster, smarter way."
---
### **Act 2 β The Solution (The "How to Fix It")**
**Tone:** Calm, clear, encouraging.
**Goal:** A chart that auto-updates whenever Jordan adds new rowsβno manual range edits.
**Step 1 β Clean the Data (10 seconds)**
* **Instructor (VO):** "First, let's make the data easy for Excel to understand."
* **On-screen actions:**
1. Remove any blank rows inside the data block.
2. Select the Date column β Home β Number β Short Date.
3. Select the Revenue column β Home β Number β Currency. If you typed "$3400" as text, re-type 3400 and let formatting add the symbol.
* **On-screen text (lower-third):** "TIP: Don't type the $βuse Currency formatting."
* **Why this fixes Act 1 mistakes:** Ensures dates and amounts are real numbers, so the chart reads them correctly.
**Step 2 β Convert to an Excel Table (20 seconds)**
* **Instructor (VO):** "The simplest way to get auto-expanding charts is to use an Excel Table."
* **On-screen actions:**
1. Click any cell in the data.
2. Press Ctrl+T (Windows) or β+T (Mac) β check 'My table has headers' β OK.
3. Go to Table Design (or Table Tools) β Table Name β type: SalesTbl.
* **On-screen text:** "Create a Table β Name it clearly (e.g., SalesTbl)."
* **Why this fixes Act 1 mistakes:** Charts built from Tables automatically expand to include new rowsβno more manual range edits.
**Step 3 β Build the Chart from the Table (25 seconds)**
* **Instructor (VO):** "Now, we'll create the chart using the table so it auto-updates."
* **On-screen actions:**
1. Click any cell in SalesTbl.
2. Insert β Column β Clustered Column (or choose Line if you prefer trends).
3. The chart appears. Click it β Chart Design β Select Data to confirm it's using table columns (you'll see references like `SalesTbl[Date]` and `SalesTbl[Revenue]`).
* **On-screen text:** "Look for structured references: SalesTbl[Date], SalesTbl[Revenue]"
* **Callout box:** "Tempted to use Chart Design β Select Data every week like Jordan did? With a Table, you won't need to."
**Step 4 β Test the Auto-Update (15 seconds)**
* **Instructor (VO):** "Let's prove it works."
* **On-screen actions:**
1. Click the last cell in the table and press Tab to add a new row inside the table.
2. Type a new Date, Product, and Revenue.
3. Watch the chart extend automatically.
* **On-screen text (animated):** "Auto-update β
β No manual range edits"
* **Why this fixes Act 1 mistakes:** Adding rows inside the table (not below a blank row) keeps the chart in sync.
**Step 5 β Optional: Make It Interactive with a Slicer (20 seconds)**
* **Instructor (VO):** "If you track multiple products, make the chart interactive with a Slicer."
* **On-screen actions:**
1. Click inside SalesTbl β Table Design β Insert Slicer β check Product β OK.
2. Click items in the Slicer to filter the tableβthe chart updates instantly.
* **On-screen text:** "Slicer = Click-to-filter dashboard"
* **Note:** Slicers work directly with Tables (and PivotTables), giving you a quick mini-dashboard without formulas.
**Step 6 β Polishing Touches (15 seconds)**
* **Instructor (VO):** "Finally, let's tidy the chart so it's presentation-ready."
* **On-screen actions:**
1. Chart Elements (+) β add Axis Titles and Data Labels (optional).
2. Chart Design β Quick Layout (pick a clean layout).
3. Chart Design β Change Colors (choose a brand-friendly palette).
4. Right-click Date Axis β Format Axis β ensure the Units and Number format look right.
* **On-screen text:** "Keep it clean, readable, on-brand."
**Recap (on-screen checklist)**
* Don't build charts from static ranges.
* Do convert your data to a Table (`Ctrl+T` / `β+T`) and name it.
* Add new rows inside the table (no blank separators).
* Use proper formats for dates and currency.
* Optional: Add a Slicer for instant product filtering.
* **Instructor (VO, closing):** "With a named Table and a chart built from it, your weekly updates take secondsβnot hours. Add new sales, and the chart keeps up automatically."
**On-Screen Text & Graphics (quick list for editor)**
* **Lower-third tips:** "TIP: Use Ctrl+T / β+T to create a Table", "Add new rows inside the Table", "Use Currency and Short Date formats"
* **Callouts:** "Structured references = auto-expanding chart", "No more Select Data every week"
* **End card:** "Make it a Table β Name it β Chart it β Done."
**Audio/Visual Notes**
* **SFX:** Soft "click" sounds for key actions; subtle "whoosh" when the chart auto-updates.
* **B-Roll:** Quick cutaways of bakery counter / sales receipts to ground the context.
* **Cursor highlights:** Brief yellow halo when clicking key buttons.
* **Zooms:** 120% zoom on Ctrl+T dialog, Table Name box, and Select Data window.
**Keyboard Shortcuts (show briefly on screen)**
* **Create Table:** Ctrl+T (Windows) / β+T (Mac)
* **Add new row in Table:** Press Tab in the last row
* **Format Cells:** Ctrl+1 (Windows) / β+1 (Mac)
You're set! This script gives you the empathy-building struggle, the exact fixes, and crisp on-screen directions to record a polished, highly useful tutorial.
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