Salesforce.com for Dummies
Chapter 15, Analyzing Data with Reports
Salesforce.com offers daily reports managers can use right out of the box, but those reports may lack some custom details that are pertinent for your particular organization. That's where Salesforce.com's Report Wizard comes in. This chapter explains in detail how to build and create custom reports from scratch using the Report Wizard.

Salesforce.com for Dummies, Ch. 15
Table of contents:
Web reporting tools
Creating daily reports
Report features and functionality
Organizing reports
Creating daily reports
Developing Reports with the Wizard
Salesforce.com comes with a huge menu of useful reports, and yet they might
not be exactly what you're looking for. For example, if your company has
added custom fields on the account record that are unique to your customer,
a standard New Accounts report doesn't show you all the information you
want to see on recent accounts.
The next time you need a custom report, don't pester the IT geeks. Instead,
use the report wizard to build a new report or customize an existing one.
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| Reprinted with premission from Wiley Publishing Inc. |
| This excerpt from Salesforce.com for Dummies is written by Thomas Wong and published by Wiley Publishing Inc. |
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Building a report from scratch
You don't have to be a technical guru to create a report in salesforce.com.
Just make sure you can articulate a question that you're trying to answer, and
then salesforce.com's Report Wizard will guide you through the steps for creating
a custom report that will help you answer the question. Anyone who
can view the Reports tab can create a custom report. Whether you can make
it public or just private depends on permissions.
To create a report from scratch, click the Reports tab and follow these steps:
1. Click the Create New Custom Report button.
The Report Wizard page appears.
2. Select the data type you want to report on, and then click Next.
You do this by first selecting the basic type of data from the drop-down
list and then being more specific in the dependent list box, as shown in
Figure 15-3. When you click Next, Step 1 of the wizard appears.
3. Select the radio button for the type of report that you want. You have
three options:
Tabular Reports provide the most basic way to look at your data
in a tabular format.
Summary Reports allow you to view your data with subtotals and
other summary information.
Matrix Reports enable you to create reports in grids against both
horizontal and vertical categories. This type of report is particularly
helpful for comparing related totals, especially if you're trying to
summarize large amounts of data. For example, the standard report
called Sales to Date versus Last Month (located in the Opportunity
and Forecast Reports folder) is a matrix report that summarizes
new sales by month vertically and also by close date horizontally.
4. When you're done, select the Select Columns option from the Jump to
Step drop-down list in the top-right corner, and then click Next.
The Select the Report Columns page appears.
The report type that you select dictates how many of the seven possible
Report Wizard steps you see and the order that they're presented in the
wizard. For example, if you selected the Matrix Report radio button in
Step 3 of this list, the next step out of seven is Select Groupings. But if you
select the Tabular Reports radio button, the next step is Select Columns,
and you have only five steps. And at any time, you can use the Jump to
Step drop-down list to skip around the wizard.
5. Select the check boxes for the columns that you want in your report.
Depending on the data type you chose, the Select the Report Columns
page displays standard and then custom fields divided into sections, as
shown in the example in Figure 15-4.
6. When you're done, select the Select Columns to Total option from the
Jump to Step drop-down list.
A wizard page appears with the columns that can be totaled (such as
currencies, amounts, and percentages) based on the columns you
selected in Step 5 of this list.
7. Select check boxes for columns that you want summarized and how
you want them summarized.
Salesforce.com provides you options for summing, averaging, and
choosing highest or lowest values. For example, on an activity report,
you could use averaging to measure the average duration of an activity,
as shown in the example in Figure 15-5.
8. When you're done, select the Order Columns option from the Jump to
Step drop-down list and click Next.
The wizard page appears.
9. Click the directional arrows to order the columns.
This is how columns will appear on the report from left to right if you
are showing all details.
10. When you're done, select the Select Criteria option from the Jump to
Step drop-down list and click Next.
The wizard page appears.
11. Use the criteria filters to limit results on your report.
The standard filters will vary based on the data type you chose. For
advanced filters, select fields and operators by using the drop-down
lists, and then enter values, similar to creating custom views. (For help
with advanced filters, see Chapter 2.)
With advanced And/Or filters you can now create precise reports that
might include complex conditions. For example, if you define strategic
accounts as companies that did either over $1 billion in annual revenue
or had over 500 employees plus $500 million in annual revenue, you can
now generate this report. To do this, enter your advanced filters as before,
and then click the Advanced Options link at the bottom of the Advanced
Filters section. When the page reappears, click the Tips link located next
to the Advanced Filter Conditions field. Modify your Conditions as recommended
before clicking the Run Report button. (You must have Professional
or Enterprise Edition.)
12. When you're done, select the Select Groupings option from the Jump
to Step drop-down list and click Next.
The wizard page appears.
13. Select the columns by which your report will be grouped.
For example, if you want to measure the number of accounts owned by
rep and subtotaled by account type, use an account matrix report. For the
row headings, first sort by Account Owner, and then by Account Name.
Then for the column headings, sort by Type, as shown in Figure 15-6.
14. When you're done, select the Select Chart Type option from the Jump
to Step drop-down list and click Next.
The wizard page appears.
15. Complete the fields to build a chart, and then click the Run Report
button.
Many users include this step only if they need to generate a specific chart
or graph to support the report. See Chapter 16 for specific details on
building charts in dashboards or reports. When you click the Run Report
button, the custom report appears with Report Options at the top and
the actual report data displayed under the Generated Report heading.
16. If you want to save the report, click the Save As button.
A New Custom Report page appears.
17. Complete the fields and click the Save As button.
Here are pointers for completing the fields:
Enter a title for the report in the Report Name field.
Type a question or sentence in the Report Question field that will
help you remember the purpose of the report. For example, if you
created an Opportunity by Competitor report, you might type Who
are our biggest competitors measured by opportunities?
If you have permissions to manage public folders, select a folder
for the report.
After clicking the Save As button, the Reports home page appears with a
link to the report under the selected folder.
Continue to the next section: Report features and functionality
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