The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Student named world’s second best excel user

Data expert totting up the prize money after competitio­n success

- Craig smiTh csmith@thecourier.co.uk

A St Andrews University student has “excelled” in a contest to find a computer programme expert.

Sam Millar, 23, who originally comes from Belfast, beat hundreds of thousands of data experts to be named runner-up in the Excel category of the Microsoft Office Specialist (MOS) World Championsh­ip final in Anaheim, California.

The keen lepidopter­ist’s deft touch with the spreadshee­ts saw him tally up a total of £3,500 in prize money which he will spend on getting more certificat­ions.

He said: “Coming second felt too good to be true, and my family are delighted.

“I had to turn three pages of unformatte­d data into a workbook in 50 minutes, following a precise set of instructio­ns.

“Luckily it was familiar to me, and I’ve been using Excel to manage my butterfly and moth records since 2009.”

Students aged 13 to 22 entered the MOS championsh­ips, all hoping to make it to the grand final in the United States.

After three days of intensive competitio­n, Sam was pipped to the post in the Excel 2013 category by China’s JiaXi Dai, with Greece’s Kyriakos Chatzief thy mi ad is coming third.

Anneleen Vaandrager, senior director of education industry at Microsoft, congratula­ted all of the medallists on their success.

She said: “We are proud to support the MOS World Championsh­ip and grateful to meet young people from all parts of the world who have discovered the power of Microsoft Office skills for productivi­ty and employabil­ity.

“The competitio­n itself is the experience of a lifetime but every participan­t, all 560,000 of them, earned MOS certificat­ion to bolster their employabil­ity opportunit­ies.”

Sam is currently working at the Centre for Environmen­tal Data and Recording in his native Belfast and is also a volunteer casual recorder at the Butterfly Conservati­on in Northern Ireland.

The competitio­n attracted entrants from 122 countries who initially demonstrat­ed their superior skills in Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint packages. Finalists from 49 countries then made it through regional heats.

 ??  ?? Sam Millar, right, with his prize and Andrew Flood, CEO of Prodigy Learning.
Sam Millar, right, with his prize and Andrew Flood, CEO of Prodigy Learning.

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