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ModelSheet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ModelSheet Software LLC
Company typePrivate
IndustryBusiness intelligence, business analytics
Founded2007
Headquarters
Arlington, Massachusetts
Key people
Richard Petti, Howard Cannon
Websitehttp://www.modelsheetsoft.com/

ModelSheet Software LLC is a venture-funded software company focused on business analytics and based in Arlington, Massachusetts.

History

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ModelSheet was founded by two MIT graduates, Richard Petti and Howard Cannon, who earlier worked together at Symbolics and later in the division spun out as Macsyma.[1][non-primary source needed] After the Macsyma episode in the 1980s and the 1990s, the pair took separate career paths, with Petti at The MathWorks, and Cannon at Groton NeoChem and SciQuest, and then merged their companies to found ModelSheet in 2007.[2][non-primary source needed]

Strategy, products and services

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ModelSheet Software was founded to put more desktop modeling power in the hands of business experts without requiring them to become programmers. The spreadsheet is the classic example of such an end-user development tool, but its cell-based paradigm has its limitations. ModelSheet technology attempts to addresses these limitations with two types of products: Custom Spreadsheet Solutions, and the ModelSheet Authoring Environment.

By filling in a simple form, a Custom Spreadsheet Solution yields a custom spreadsheet workbook, without users having to edit spreadsheets or cell formulas. Users can set three aspects of spreadsheet models: time series (time range, time grains, and rollup grains), dimensions (e.g. a list of products organized in product families) and turning on or off model features.[3][non-primary source needed][4][non-primary source needed]

ModelSheet offers Custom Spreadsheet Solutions for many common business tasks in corporate finance (financial plans, cash flow analysis, cap tables, activity-based budgets, etc.), marketing and sales analysis (sales plans, marketing program effectiveness, price elasticity, etc.) and other areas.[5] Users can download the Custom Spreadsheet Solutions as Excel workbooks, or upload them to an account on Google Docs.[6][non-primary source needed][7]

The ModelSheet Authoring Environment has all the functionality needed to build spreadsheet models from scratch and edit existing models.[8][non-primary source needed] It retains the graphical representation of spreadsheets, while adding in model structures such as named variables, symbolic formulas with varying scopes, time series, dimensions, and controls for optional features and automated operations. ModelSheet Authoring is the technical backend of Custom Spreadsheets. For intermediate applications (where more flexibility is needed, but the customer doesn't require frequent use of the Authoring Environment itself) ModelSheet offers consulting services in which a ModelSheet engineer uses the Authoring Environment to create a spreadsheet to the customer's specification.

Criticism

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Testing a pre-beta version in 2008,[9] journalist Dennis Howlett of ZDNet concluded that ModelSheet was "good in theory" but "needs more work." Howlett criticised several aspects: Windows-only platform support, bugs, poor usability, choice of fonts, and dull quick start guide. Although "bemused" by the product, Howlett did concede, "ModelSheet is at an early stage of development, and I'm sure [it] will improve over time."

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Maxima: A computer Algebra System". June 8, 2020.
  2. ^ "ModelSheet Launches the Spreadsheet Customizer - Create Professional Spreadsheets that Meet your Needs, Quickly and Easily". PR Web. Archived from the original on October 22, 2010.
  3. ^ Diego Oppenheimer and Richard Petti. "Extending Excel to Build Models for You". Microsoft Corporation.
  4. ^ Richard Petti and Howard Cannon. "Customized Spreadsheet Solutions – The Promise of Templates Fulfilled" (PDF). PRWeb.
  5. ^ "ModelSheet Software - Templates". Microsoft Corporation.
  6. ^ "Getting Started With Spreadsheets on Google Docs Just Got Easier". ModelSheet Software. Archived from the original on April 1, 2011.
  7. ^ George Wong. "ModelSheet Spreadsheet Customizer now works with Google Docs". übergizmo. Archived from the original on 2011-04-03. Retrieved 2011-06-21.
  8. ^ Richard Petti and Howard Cannon. "The ModelSheet Authoring Environment for Spreadsheet Models" (PDF). ModelSheet Software.
  9. ^ Dennis Howlett (2008-08-20). "ModelSheet: good in theory, needs more work". ZD Net. Retrieved 2010-11-20.

References

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