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When to use Statistics

Choose Statistics when you need summary measures that explain a dataset.

Statistics is most useful when the central question is about counts, totals, averages, ranges, distributions, or comparisons.

Strong signs that Statistics is the right Tool

Statistics is a strong fit when:

  • you need to summarize numeric Fields
  • you want counts or totals by group
  • you need to compare values across categories or periods
  • you want to inspect unusual highs, lows, or blanks
  • the result should support review, reporting, reconciliation, or quality checks

Typical business situations

Statistics is commonly used in situations like these:

Summarize activity

Examples:

  • total sales by region
  • count of cases by status
  • average processing time by team
  • minimum and maximum transaction amounts

Review file reasonableness

Examples:

  • confirm that total dollars are close to expectation
  • check whether Record counts changed unexpectedly
  • identify unusually high or low values
  • compare a new output to a prior run

Support reconciliation or operational review

Examples:

  • count exceptions by category
  • summarize balances by account type
  • compare totals by vendor
  • review distribution of scores or ratings

Good fit vs poor fit

Good fit

Use Statistics when the goal can be described as:

  • "Calculate summary metrics for these fields."
  • "Show totals or counts by these groups."
  • "Help me understand whether these values look reasonable."

Poor fit

Statistics is probably not the first Tool to use when:

  • values need cleaning or standardization first
  • duplicate records could distort the summary
  • files need to be joined before the needed fields are together
  • Records need to be split or filtered before the summary scope is correct

Ask this before you start

Finish this sentence:

"I need to summarize ..."

If you can name the fields, measures, and groups clearly, Statistics is often a good fit.

If the summary scope is unclear, define the business question before building the configuration.

Start with the question

Before choosing measures, decide what the summary should help answer.

Ask:

  • Which numeric fields matter?
  • Do results need to be grouped?
  • Are blanks or zeros meaningful?
  • Are outliers expected or suspicious?
  • What result would be surprising enough to investigate?

Rule-of-thumb decision guide

Use Statistics when the central task is summarizing values.

Use another Tool first when the central task is cleaning, deduplicating, joining, filtering, or splitting the underlying Records.