Create an organization chart automatically from employee data
Applies ToVisio Plan 2 Visio Professional 2024 Visio Standard 2024 Visio Professional 2021 Visio Standard 2021 Visio Professional 2019 Visio Standard 2019 Visio Professional 2016 Visio Standard 2016

An organization chart (org chart) is a diagram that shows relationships among employees, titles, and groups.

If you have all the employee information in a document like an Excel worksheet or in an Exchange Server directory, Visio can generate a diagram that adds the shapes and connectors for you. If you don’t want to generate a chart automatically, you can draw a chart without using an external data source.

To start the Organization Chart Wizard, select File > New and select the Organization Chart category, and then select Create.

In Visio 2016, select File > New > Business > Organization Chart, and then select Create.

Organization chart

Automatically generate a chart from an existing data source

When you select to create a chart from the template, the Organization Chart Wizard starts. On the first page of the wizard, select Information that's already stored in a file or database, then follow the directions in the wizard.

Data sources you can use

  • Microsoft Excel worksheet

  • Text file

  • Microsoft Exchange Server directory

  • ODBC-compliant data source

Required columns in the data source

The data source needs to have columns for employee name, unique identifier, and the person the employee reports to. It doesn’t matter what the column names are in the data source, because in the wizard you manually identify which columns (or field names) contain the employee name and the reports-to name.

  • Employee name    The way that employee names appear in this field is the way that they appear on the organization chart shapes.

  • Unique identifier     This column can be the Employee Name column if all names are unique. Otherwise, include a column with a value that uniquely identifies each employee.

  • Whom the employee reports to    This field must contain each manager's unique identifier, whether that identifier is a name or an ID number. For the employee at the top of the organization chart, leave this field blank.

Example of a text file as a data source

The following text gives an example of a comma-delimited text file that has five columns and four rows, with the first row being a header row. Visio will generate this sample text file for you – start the Organization Chart Wizard, select Information that I enter using the wizard, and select Next. On the next page, select Delimited text, type a file name, and select Next. Visio opens a text editor with this sample data as a guide.

Name,Reports_to,Title,Department,Telephone

Joe Sampleboss, ,CEO,Executive,x5555 Jane Samplemgr,Joe Sampleboss,Development Manager,Product Development,x6666 John Samplepos,Jane Samplemgr,Software Developer,Product Development,x6667

Create an organization chart from a new data file

If you don't already have your data in a different program but you would like to, Visio will open Excel or a text editor with sample data in a good example format. Replace the sample data with your real data and finish the wizard to generate the org chart.

  1. To start the Organization Chart Wizard, select File > New and selectthe Organization Chart category, and then select Create.

    In Visio 2016, select File > New > Business > Organization Chart, and then select Create.

  2. On the first page of the wizard, select Information that I enter using the wizard, and then select Next.

  3. Select Excel or Delimited text, type a name for the new file, and then select Next. If you select Excel, a Microsoft Excel worksheet opens with sample text. If you select Delimited text, a Notepad page opens with sample text.

  4. When either Excel or Notepad opens, use the sample text as an example of what kind of information to include, and type your information over what is there. The employee name and reports-to columns are required, but you can add or delete other columns.

  5. Exit either Excel or Notepad, and then complete the wizard.

Change layout, change shapes, and insert pictures

The Organization Chart templates add an Org Chart tab to the ribbon. Use the tools on this tab to make large changes to the way the diagram looks.

The Layout and Arrange groups have tools for changing the layout and hierarchy of the shapes.

Use the Shapes gallery to choose the style of shapes in the chart. Use the tools in the Picture group to insert a picture into the selected shape, delete the placeholder picture, and change the picture after it has been inserted into a shape. If you didn’t add pictures to all the shapes using the wizard, you can add them now. On the Org Chart tab, select Insert > Multiple Pictures. The pictures all need to be in a single folder, with the file name in the format “Employee Name.FileType” – for example, Jonathan Foster.jpg (the name has to match the name in the data source exactly).

The Organization Data group has tools for importing data from an external source using the wizard, exporting organization data to Excel or a text file, and comparing the data in the diagram with an external data source.

Show teams by using the Team Frame or dotted lines

After you create an org chart, you can rearrange the information to reflect virtual team relationships. Move related shapes near each other, and then add dotted-line connectors to show secondary reporting structures. Or highlight a virtual team with a Team Frame. Drag the Team Frame shape from the Shapes window onto the drawing, then use the sizing handles on the sides to make it include the individuals on the virtual team.

Team frame

Update an org chart that uses an external data source

To reflect changes in the structure of an organization, you can refresh the chart data or update the org chart manually:

  • Select Data > External Data > Refresh All.

If new data doesn’t exactly match the data the chart was built with, you might have to move individuals manually.

If you have a new chart, use Visio to compare it with your older chart and tell you what’s changed.

  1. Open either the new version or the older version of the organization chart.

  2. Select Org Chart > Organization Data > Compare. In the Compare Organization Data box, find the version you want to compare to.

  3. Under Compare type, select the situation, depending on which version you’ve opened.

  4. Under Report type, choose the option that you want.

  5. Select OK.

If you still can’t get the chart updated as you want it, you might have to rebuild the chart.

Want More?

Find sample organizational chart Visio templates and diagrams

See Also

Create an org chart in the Visio web app

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