Hi most people call me Coleman Archer, and no, I’m not a 19th-century explorer or a guy who sells high-end camping gear and medieval weaponry — though I totally sound like I could.
The name has a story. My parents couldn’t decide between naming me after something rugged and outdoorsy (like Coleman, the camping brand), or something dangerously cool, like a secret agent (enter Archer— yes, like the cartoon). So naturally, they did what any indecisive couple would do: they combined both and birthed the human equivalent of a wilderness survival expert with a license to grill... and kill.
It’s a lot to live up to. People hear my name and expect me to be able to start a fire with two paperclips and take out bad guys with a crossbow. Meanwhile, I’m just over here trying to make it through Monday without spilling coffee on my shirt.
But hey — when your name is
Coleman Archer, expectations are high… and the stories are even higher.
Coleman Archer wasn’t always a spreadsheet guru. He was once a globe-trotting adventurer — scaling mountains, dodging danger, and winning archery contests blindfolded. Life was wild… until Excel nearly ended him.
On a jungle mission gone wrong (thanks to a messed-up formula and way too many merged cells), he realized the real challenge wasn’t survival — it was mastering spreadsheets.
He disappeared for years. Whispers said he trained with Excel monks. Some claim he merged with the cloud.
Now, he’s back — not to fight crime, but to fight confusion. Coleman Archer teaches Excel with the precision of an archer and the cool of a cell ninja.
Because in the world of data, he’s the real formula for success.
If it’s not fun, we’re doing it wrong. That’s the core of my teaching philosophy — especially when it comes to Excel. Too often, Excel is treated like a boring, rigid tool. But the truth? It’s one of the most creative, powerful, and satisfying skills you can learn — if it’s taught with energy, curiosity, and a touch of fun.
I believe that education doesn’t have to feel like a chore. When we’re laughing, experimenting, and making real-life connections, learning sticks — and we enjoy the process. In my world, Excel is not about memorizing formulas or clicking through boring menus. It’s about solving real problems, building something useful, and feeling proud of your progress.
Whether you're a student, a business professional, or just someone who wants to feel more in control of their numbers, we’ll make it make sense — and make it feel good.
Smiles, color-coded cells, inside jokes about VLOOKUP, and real “Aha!” moments? That’s my version of Excel. Because learning should never be intimidating. It should light you up.