Create Flexible Organization Charts with Microsoft Visio 2000

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Make your Organization Chart Easy to Revise

There are two keys to creating an organization chart that is easy to revise later.

  • Use the Organization Chart solution, a set of specially designed shapes, wizards, and other tools, to create your organization chart.

  • Let the Organization Chart solution automatically establish the reporting relationships in your organization chart.

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To automatically establish a reporting relationship, drag a subordinate position from the Organization Chart Shapes stencil and drop it directly onto the position it reports to.

To open the Organization Chart solution

  • On the File menu, point to New, then to Organization Chart, and then click Organization Chart.

To create an organization chart

  1. From the Organization Chart Shapes stencil, drag the Executive shape onto the drawing page.

    You see a demo of how to quickly add subordinate positions. Select the Don't Show This Message Again check box if you don't want to see the demonstration next time you create an organization chart.

  2. With the Executive shape selected, type the executive's name. Press the ENTER key, type the executive's title, and then click anywhere outside the shape.

  3. Drag a Manager shape directly onto the Executive shape to establish a reporting relationship. Type a name and title for the new manager. Repeat until you've added all the managers you want.

  4. Drag a Position shape directly onto a Manager shape to establish a reporting relationship. Add a name and title for the new position. Repeat until you've added all the positions you want.

  5. Optional If you need more reporting levels, drag Staff shapes directly onto Position shapes to establish reporting relationships. With a Staff shape selected, type the name of the staff member.

  6. Optional To change the layout of any supervisor's subordinates, right-click the supervisor, click the layout style you want, and then click OK.

Work Efficiently

  • To quickly create reporting relationships between one supervisor and several subordinates, drop the Multiple Shapes or MultiStaff shape onto the supervisor.

  • To convert one position to another position type, right-click the position, and then click Convert Shape.

  • If you are creating an organization chart for a large corporation, see Make Microsoft Visio 2000 Organization Charts from Personnel Files.

Revise Reporting Structure, Position Location, and More

To

Do This

Assign a position (and its subordinates) to a new supervisor

Drag the position onto the shape you want it to report to.

Move a position while keeping the reporting structure

Right-click the shape, and then click Move Shape Up, Move Shape Down, Move Shape Left, or Move Shape Right.

Change the name or title of the person holding a position

Double-click the shape that represents the position. Click the text you want to change, and then type the new text.

Change the layout of positions in a reporting structure

Right-click the shape representing the top level of the reporting structure. Click Lay Out Subordinates. Click the layout style you want, and then click OK.

Update an Older Chart by Comparing It to a Newer Version

Compare two versions of the same organization chart to

  • Automatically update the older version to reflect changes in the newer version.

  • Generate a report of the changes that you can use to update the older version.

Why would I compare two versions of an organization chart?

  • You have two versions of a departmental organization chart, one for distribution and one for your private use in which you have stored confidential data, such as employee date of hire, salaries, and grade levels. When the organization changes, you can update only the public version. By comparing it with the private version, you can automatically update the structural changes without affecting the confidential data.

  • You have updated a departmental organization chart to reflect recent staffing changes, making your departmental chart out of sync with the chart for the entire organization. By comparing the departmental chart with the overall chart, you can generate a report of the differences and submit it to Human Resources so the overall chart can be updated.

  • You spent a lot of time and effort formatting and laying out a special version of an organization chart for a presentation. Then, just before the presentation, you learn that the organization has changed. By comparing the formatted chart with a chart representing the new organization, you can automatically update the formatted chart without losing any formatting.

To update an organization chart from a newer version

  1. Open the organization chart you want to update.

  2. On the Organization Chart menu, click Compare Organization Data.

  3. For My Drawing To Compare, locate the open organization chart.

  4. For Drawing To Compare It With, locate the newer version.

  5. If you have stored data, such as phone numbers, with the organization chart shapes and you only want to update some of the data, click Advanced. For Data Values To Compare, select the data fields you want to update, and then click OK.

  6. Click My Drawing Is Older, and then click OK.

To generate a report of the differences between two versions of a chart

  1. Open the newer version of the organization chart.

  2. On the Organization Chart menu, click Compare Organization Data.

  3. For My Drawing To Compare, locate the open organization chart.

  4. For Drawing To Compare It With, locate the older version.

  5. Click My Drawing Is Newer, and then click OK.

  6. In the Comparison Report dialog box, click a tab to view the report organized in a different way.

  7. Click Save As Text to save the report in text (.txt) format.

Store Phone Numbers and Other Data, and Generate Reports

Store data with organization chart positions when

  • You want the chart to serve as a public data source as well as to represent organizational structure. For example, by storing employees' phone numbers and email aliases with their position shapes, you can turn your organization chart into a communication directory.

  • You want your organization chart to serve as the central repository for either public or private employee data, such as phone numbers, dates of hire, salaries, and grade levels, from which you can generate reports in Microsoft Excel Workbook (.xls), Text tab-delimited (.txt), or CSV comma-delimited (.csv) formats.

How do I store data in an organization chart?

In Microsoft Visio, you store data in property fields associated with shapes.

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All the shapes that you drag from the Organization Chart Shapes stencil onto the drawing page have pre-defined Department and Telephone property fields into which you can enter data.

You can add data to existing property fields and you can create your own custom fields.

To add data to existing property fields

  1. Select the shape you want to add data to.

  2. On the View menu, point to Windows, and then click Custom Properties.

  3. Click the fields you want to add data to, and then type.

  4. With the Custom Properties window open, select the next shape you want to add data to.

  5. When you're finished adding data to shapes you can close the Custom Properties window by clicking the Close button.

To create custom property fields for shapes in an existing organization chart

  1. With your organization chart open, on the Window menu, click Show Document Stencil.

    The Document Stencil, a stencil that contains master versions of the shapes in your organization chart, opens. By adding property fields to masters, you simultaneously add the fields to all the corresponding shapes in your diagram.

  2. Right-click a shape on the Document Stencil to which you want to add custom properties, and then click Edit Master.

    The Edit Master window displays a large version of the shape in it. If you can't see the whole shape, click a smaller magnification on the Zoom list on the Standard toolbar.

  3. Click the shape. On the Shape menu, click Custom Properties. In the Custom Properties dialog box, click Define.

  4. Click New. Type or click information about your new property field for Label, Type, and the other options. If you don't understand an option, click the question mark at the lower left corner of the dialog box.

  5. If you want to add another new property field, click New again.

  6. When you're finished adding property fields, click OK. Your new property fields appear in the Custom Property dialog box. Click OK again.

  7. Click the Close button for the Master window to return to the organization chart. When asked if you want to update the master and all of its instances, click Yes.

    Repeat steps 2-7 for each master to which you want to add new property fields.

  8. When you're finished adding property fields, right-click the title bar of the Document Stencil and click Close. Save your organization chart.

    Tip If you want to use the new property fields in every organization chart you create, follow the steps above, right-click the Document Stencil's title bar, and then click Save or Save As. When you begin a new organization chart, open this saved stencil (on the File menu, point to Stencils, and then click Open Stencil) and use the customized shapes it contains to create the positions in the chart.

To generate a report of data in your organization chart's property fields

  1. After you add data to the property fields in your organization chart, on the Organization Chart menu, click Export Organization Data.

  2. For Save In, choose the location where you want to save the file.

  3. For Save As Type, choose the type of file you want.

  4. Type a name for the file, and then click Save.

  5. The file contains a column for each property field, as well as columns for Name and Title.

Tips: Handling Large Organization Charts

Even organization charts for relatively small departments can quickly grow beyond the boundaries of a letter-sized printed page. The following tips can help you set up a large organization chart so it's easy to work with and distribute.

Tip

How To

Experiment with layouts

Right-click any shape with subordinates whose layout you want to experiment with, and then click Lay Out Subordinates. Click the layout you want, and then click OK. To return to the original layout, on the Edit menu, click Undo Automatic Layout.

Temporarily hide subordinates

Right-click the shape with subordinates you want to hide, and then click Hide Subordinates. To show the subordinates again, right-click the shape, and then click Show Subordinates.

Create copies of departments or groups on separate pages and hide the subordinates on the original page

1. Right-click the shape representing the manager of the department you want to place on a separate page, and then click Create Synchronized Copy.
2. Click New Page, select the Hide Subordinates On Original Page check box, and then click OK. A new page on which the manager and subordinates appear is created.
3. Make any changes you want to the department on the new page. Because the two copies of the department are synchronized, changes you make on either page appear on both pages.
4. Click a page tab at the bottom-left corner of the window to display the original page.
Tip To show the subordinates on the original page, right-click the manager, and then click Show Subordinates.

Find a particular person or position in a large chart

On the Organization Chart menu, click Find Person. Type the name of the person or position you want to find, click the other options you want, and then click OK.

Print a large organization chart for display

1. Show the entire organization chart on one drawing page.
2. If some subordinates are hidden, right-click the superior shapes, and then click Show Subordinates.
3. If the drawing page is too small to contain the entire chart, on the File menu, click Page Setup. Click the Page Size tab, click Size To Fit Drawing Contents, and then click OK.
4. On the File menu, click Print Preview to see how the chart will tile across several printed pages.
5. You can change the amount of overlap between pages by changing the size of the margins on the printed page. Larger margins mean more overlap. To change margins, in the Print Preview window, click Setup. On the Print Setup tab, under Printer, click Setup. Type the margins you want, and then click OK twice.
6. When you're satisfied with the way the chart will print, in the Print Preview window, click Print.