How To Make A Gantt Chart in Excel
How To Make A Gantt Chart in Excel
1.
2.
3. In the Charts section of the ribbon, drop down the Bar Chart selection menu.
4. Select Stacked Bar which will insert a large blank white chart space onto your Excel worksheet (do not select 100% Stacked
Bar).
3.
2. On the left side of Excel's Data Source window you will see a table named Legend Entries (Series). Click on the Add button
to bring up Excel's Edit Series window and here you will begin adding Task data to your Gantt chart.
Click on it (the one by Series values) and Excel will open a smaller Edit Series window. Now simply click the first start date
in your task table and drag your mouse down to the last start date. This highlights all of the start dates for your tasks and inputs
them into your Gantt chart. Make sure you have not mistakenly highlighted the header or any extra cells.
(the one with the red arrow) which will return you to the previous window called Edit Series. Click OK. Your Gantt should
now look like this:
4.
Add Task durations to your Gantt chart by repeating the steps above
1. Staying in the Select Data Source window, click on the Add button again to bring up Excel's Edit Series window. From here
you will adding your Task durations to the Gantt chart by following the exact process in Step 3 above.
ii. Staying in the Edit Series window move down to Series valueand click on spreadsheet icon with a red arrow on it
again.
When finished, click on the small spreadsheet icon again
iii. Select your Duration data by clicking on the first Duration in your project table and drag your mouse down to the last
duration so all durations are now highlighted. To exit, once again click on the small spreadsheet icon with the red arrow to
which will return you to the previous window. Select OK and you should now be back at the Select Data Source window.
Click OK again to build your Gantt chart which should now look something like this:
5.
2. On the right side of Excel's Data Source window you will see a table named Horizontal (Category) Axis Labels. Select the
Edit button to bring up a smaller Axis Label windows.
3. Again, click on the small spreadsheet icon. Click on the first name of your tasks (my first Task description is "Preparatory
Phase") and select them all. Be careful not to include the name of the column itself. When you are done, exit this window by
clicking on the small spreadsheet icon again.
4. Click on OK and then OK again to exit the Select Data Source window, and now your Gantt chart should have the correct Task
descriptions next to their respective bars. Your chart should now look something like this:
6.
You have really built a stacked bar chart and set it up like an Excel Gantt chart. Now we will add formatting to make it look more like
a proper Gantt chart. To do that, make the blue parts of each task bar transparent so that only the orange parts will be visible. These
will be the tasks of your Gantt chart.
1. To select all of the tasks bars at one, click on the blue part of any bar in your Gantt chart to select, then right-click and select
Format Data Series, which will bring up the Format Data Series window in Excel.
2. In the Format Data Series task pane, click on the Fill & Line icon (it looks like a paint can) to get the Fill & Line options.
Under Fill, choose the No Fill radial button and under Border choose the No Line option.Don't close the Format Data Series
task pane because we're going to use it in the next step.
Take a look at my picture below; your Excel Gantt chart should now look more like this:
3. You probably also see that the tasks on your Gantt chart are listed in reverse order with the oldest on top of the Gantt chart and
the first Task listed at the bottom. This is easy to change in Excel.
i. To do so click on the list of tasks along the vertical axis of your Gantt chart. This will select them all.
ii. Click on the task titles to open Excel's Format Axis options in the task pane.
iii. In the Format Axis task pane under the header Axis Options and the sub-header Axis Positions put a check into the
checkbox called Categories in reverse order.
You will notice that Excel arranged your tasks into proper order, listing them from first to last on your Gantt chart. You will
also notice that Excel moved the date markers from beneath to the top of the Gantt chart. Now it is really starting to look more
like a Gantt chart should.
7.
With a bit of styling, your chart is ready for prime time! See the steps below to learn how to fine tune it.
reset button to return the original settings. This gives you the opportunity to try a number of different settings until you find the
one the makes your Gantt chart look best.
2. Adjust the density of the dates across the top of your Gantt chart
In the same Axis Options window under the header Units, you can adjustment the spacing between each of the dates listed at
the top of the horizontal Axis. If you increase the unit number your Gantt chart will enlarge the space between each date, which
will also lessen the number of dates your Gantt chart shows. Doing the opposite, reduces the space between each date and
therefore crowds more dates onto your Gantt chart. In my case I changed the original number from 20 to 41820.0.
3. Thickening Task bars on your Gantt chart to reduce white space
Right-click on the first Task bar red bar and choose Format Data Series to open the Format Data Series control. Under the
Series Options header you will find the Gap Width control. Sliding it up or down will increase or reduce the size of you the
Task bars on your Gantt chart. Play around with it until you find something that best works for you.
1.
Open PowerPoint and paste your table into the Office Timeline wizard.
1. Inside PowerPoint, click on the Office Timeline tab and click the New button.
2. From the gallery select a style for your Gantt chart. In this demonstration I will be using Metro style. Click Next Arrow twice
to get to the Tasks wizard screen.
3. Copy your project data, including Start Date, End Date and Description, from the Excel table you made earlier. You can copy
them all at once, and be sure not to copy the title.
4. Now simply paste it into PowerPoint by using the Office Timeline Paste button in the upper right hand corner of the Tasks
wizard and click Finish.
2.
2. From here you can easily customize the Gantt chart, adding milestones, formatting fonts and colors, and adding various details
like percent complete or notes. In my example below, I added milestones, changed colors for the timeband, task bands and
dates, added percent complete and changed the image from a flat look to a Gel look. For example, with some tweaks, you can
create a timeline that's sure to impress: