Once you’ve created this additional segment, you can manipulate its formatting for a creative design that’s still editable.
First, select the 0.01 data label. Then, navigate to the Format tab, under Insert Shapes select Change Shape and select the oval.
Screenshot of the same PowerPoint doughnut chart as before but with three new data labels at the 12 o'clock position. Each data label reads 0.01
Your data label should now be an oval. Under Size, edit the height so it matches the height of the doughnut segments. You can find out the height of the segments by selecting a segment, going to Format and looking under Size. Then, edit the width of the oval so it matches, making the shape a circle.
Screenshot of the PowerPoint user interface. One 0.01 data point is selected and the Format ribbon is open. The 'Size' option is highlighted showing that the height and width of the 0.01 data point oval is 1cm.
Then edit the fill, outline, and font color of the circle to match the next segment so the circle blends in. You may need to reposition the oval, so it lines up with the segment. It should look something like this:
Screenshot of the same doughnut chart, .
You can follow the same process on the next phone code switzerland rings of your chart, creating a natural, modern design and breaking the mold of the default PowerPoint styling.
Once you’ve done this for all of the segments, you can add a fourth category on the third row of your chart (as before with the value ‘0.01’) to each segment and amend your ‘No’ formula to include the extra cell. This will add a new data point you can manipulate at the end of the ‘yes’ sections.
Screenshot of an excel spreadsheet. One of the No cells is highlighted and the formula in the formula bar is =100-(B2+B3+B4)
Let’s add an icon here to represent each food category. First, create the icon you’d like to pop at the end of each segment. I simply inserted a circle with a white fill and outline that matches the relevant segment. I then grabbed a doughnut icon from the PowerPoint icons (if you want something special, check out this blog post on creating custom icons), and popped it in the center of the circle then grouped the two objects. Once done, copy the group, select your new 0.01 data point, then right click and select Format Data Label > Fill & Line > Picture or texture fill > Clipboard. (Depending on your graph sizing you may have to resize the icons, to even the horizontal and vertical sizing and make it a true circle, and possibly reposition the icon into the correct place.)