Crosstab Examples

Open a realistic sample dataset, inspect the expected signal, and see how the workspace turns raw survey rows into export-ready crosstabs.

Why start with an example

New visitors often need to see the full path before trusting a spreadsheet tool: upload, variable selection, percentages, significance checks, charts, reports, and exports. These examples make that path visible without requiring a private file first.

Available samples

Customer satisfaction

Retail satisfaction survey with region and product-category patterns.

Best for:
Customer experience and retail teams
Starter table:
Satisfaction x Region
Expected signal:
Regional satisfaction differences with significant over- and under-performing cells.
  1. Start with Satisfaction by Region.
  2. Turn on row percentages and significance flags.
  3. Filter to Product Category = Electronics to inspect category-specific dissatisfaction.

Employee engagement

Internal engagement survey with department, manager support, tenure, and work mode.

Best for:
People analytics and HR teams
Starter table:
Engagement x Manager Support
Weight:
Weight
Expected signal:
Engagement rises sharply when manager support is strong, with weighted and unweighted checks.
  1. Compare Engagement by Manager Support.
  2. Apply Weight to see weighted descriptive counts.
  3. Batch Department, Tenure, and Work Mode against Engagement for a report pack.

Brand tracking

Brand survey with NPS group, customer segment, awareness, plan, and renewal intent.

Best for:
Market research and growth teams
Starter table:
NPS Group x Segment
Weight:
Weight
Expected signal:
NPS and renewal intent vary by customer segment, useful for banner tables and report packs.
  1. Start with NPS Group by Segment.
  2. Inspect Cramer's V before focusing on significant cells.
  3. Use Renewal Intent as the banner variable for batch crosstabs.

What to look for

  • Significant cells

    Red and green highlights show cells that are below or above expectation.

  • Effect size

    Cramer's V keeps the table honest when a p-value is significant.

  • Report exports

    Try PDF, XLSX, batch crosstabs, and local project templates.