Reply to the post by @kochavak:
- Count number of members of each group (may use pivot table to count in multiple dimensions (i.e. may be 30 women but only 10 women under age 45)
- Use ranges or other groupings. Age groups, larger geographic notations
- Use quartile or percentiles (QUARTILE, PERCENTILE.INC formulas in Excel ) to define reasonable ranges. At any data set exactly 1/4 of the observations in each quartile, so see what the quartiles values are and refine readable ranges nerby if you want 4 groups or see percentiles to fine-tuning ( define your number of equal groups then the whole is 100).
Looks like what you described is a form of achieving k-anonymity.
Concepts extending that are l-diversity and t-closeness.