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PC Magazine
Publish Organizational
Charts
April 23, 2002
By Kathy Yakal
Product: OrgPlus 4.0 Professional
Requires: 16MB RAM, 30MB hard drive space, Microsoft Windows 98
or later
Company Info: Human Concepts LLC, 888-821-1261, www.humanconcepts.com
Editor Rating: 
Organizational charts are not just for seeing
who's above and below you in your company. They are essential for
effective communication and indispensible in times of reorganization.
OrgPlus 4.0 Professional, from Human Concepts,
is designed for companies with 50 or more employees. This robust
tool imports data from a generous number of formats, creates multi-level
organizational charts, and lets you publish them to intranets, the
Web, PowerPoint presentations, and Microsoft Word. (A lite version,
in fact, is included in Microsoft Office versions prior to XP as
its organizational chart tool.) If your company is large enough
to need a specialized tool for this type of charting and needs more
than Office offers, there is no need to consider any other option.
And if you don't need the publishing tools, you can snag the standard
version.
The program's data import wizard makes it easy
to import data you've already created in TXT, XLS, XML, or OPX (OrgPlus)
format. Or you can enter data directly into the chart templates
provided. Best of all, you truly don't have to have design skills
to use OrgPlus Pro: Select a chart background and style, and start
typing names and titles into the chart boxes. You can add links
to e-mail, Web pages, and other charts. Click on a box and you can
easily import a picture. In case your organizational chart is very
complex and contains elements like salary or budgets, OrgPlus Professional
also offers calculation tools that can handle numerical data.
When you're ready to publish your chart, OrgPlus
Pro supplies a wizard to help you through the process. If you're
publishing to an intranet or the Web, for example, you select the
fields that will appear, edit headers and footers, and specify the
destination. The chart is then displayed in your browser. The process
is similar for a PowerPoint presentation or Word document.
The program isn't perfect, however. For
starters, you'll have to become acquainted with some unfamiliar
interface conventions to set up the relationships among managers,
subordinates, and departments. And during our tests on a fairly
powerful computer, the program chugged along a bit slower than it
might have. Still, OrgPlus 4.0 Professional does a fine job of charting
an organization.
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