Organizational chart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An organizational chart is a chart which represents the structure of an organization in terms of rank. The chart usually shows the managers and sub-workers who make up an organization. The chart also shows relationships between staff in the organization which can be:

  • Line - direct relationship between superior and subordinate.
  • Lateral - relationship between different departments on the same hierarchical level.
  • Staff - relationship between a managerial assistant and other areas. The assistant will be able to offer advice to a line manager. However, they have no authority over the line manager actions.
  • Functional - relationships between specialist positions and other areas. The specialist will normally have authority to insist that a line manager implements any of their instructions.

In many large companies the organization chart can be large and incredibly complicated and is therefore sometimes dissected into smaller charts for each individual department within the organization.

There are three different types of organization charts:

Contents

There are several limitations with organizational charts:

  • It only shows 'formal relationships' and tells nothing of the pattern of human (social) relationships which develop.
  • It very quickly becomes out-of-date, especially in large organizations who change their staff regularly.
  • It does not show who the boss is sleeping with.

The following is an example of a simple hierarchical organizational chart:

Image:Organizational chart.jpg

An example of a line relationship in this chart would be between the division officer and the three departments Training PO, Division LPO and Material PO. These three departments are directly responsible to the division officer.

An example of a lateral relationship in this chart would be between Section Leader 1, Section Leader 2, Section Leader 3 and Section Leader 4 who all work on the same Hierarchical level and all report to the Senior Section Leader.

There are a number of software products that can be used to create organizational charts. Microsoft Visio and PowerPoint are common tools. There are also dedicated organizational charting products created by HumanConcepts, Aquire and Cezanne Software that allow companies to create organizational charts by connecting to SAP, PeopleSoft and Oracle ERP systems.

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