The present invention relates generally to organizational charts and in particular to a system for improving collaboration within an organization.
For corporations which offer a wide variety of products and services, cross-organizational collaboration and employee skill set searches are essential for corporations to compete in a global marketplace. Typically, the task of cross organizational collaboration includes utilizing employees' interpersonal relationships and dotted line connections from a mass employee base and engaging them to work on a joint project. The task of identifying these connections may become more challenging when organizations span across national boundaries and into international geographies.
The methods used today to address the aforementioned challenges are purely text oriented and difficult to use. More importantly, these methods are typically limited to conventional organizational charts.
Thus, what is needed is a system and method that addresses the above-identified issues. The present invention addresses such a need.
A system and method in accordance with the present invention provides a composite chart of the conventional organizational chart superimposed with additional layers of relationships of members of that organization, with others within or outside the organization. A user can utilize the composite chart to identify employees that have inherent relationships relevant to the context of the search, internally and externally to the organization.
The present invention relates generally to organization charts and in particular to a system for improving collaboration within an organization. The following description is presented to enable one having ordinary skill in the art to make and use the embodiment and is provided in the context of a patent application and the generic principles and features described herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Thus, the present embodiment is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features described herein.
A system and method in accordance with the present invention includes a composite chart of members within an organization and one or more superimposed layers containing another set of relationships, which originate from or point to, members of the base layer. The relationships in those layers could be based on whatever is contextually relevant to the layer. A user can utilize the composite chart to identify employees of interest internally and externally to the organization.
For example, a person within the U.S. may need to identify an individual with sales, development, and marketing experience in a particular foreign country. The employee may utilize a system and method in accordance with the present invention to utilize business contacts within a corporation to extend the search. Particularly, the person may superimpose a layer, which plots the business contacts of the employees within the corporation on a base organizational layer.
The superimposition of the two layers provides a new organizational chart, which helps identify a set of employees that have inherent relationships relevant to the context of the search. Moreover, this method helps uncover hidden relationships amongst employees that extend beyond conventional organizational charts (“org charts”). A user that utilizes a composite chart of the present invention can visualize the effective network of an organization and will be able to collaborate across the organization without a restricted view based upon functional groups or geographies within. As such, utilizing the composite chart enables strong collaboration.
Next, a paradigm layer is superimposed on the base layer to provide a new organizational chart, via step 104. The paradigm layer includes contacts to employees within the base layer and couples to the base layer by a variety of modes, as provided in detail below.
Once the new organizational chart is provided, a user can search through the chart to identify a person or persons of interest, via step 106. As such, the user can identify key personnel within the organization, which has as few as one degree of separation from employees within the base layer. To describe the features of the present invention in more detail, refer now to the following description in conjunction with the accompanying figures.
For an alternative embodiment, base layer 200 only includes members within a division or department within an organization. Thus, the base layer 202 may represent members within a group, team, department, division, entire organization, and the like would be within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
For an embodiment, at least one of the employee contacts (blocks 304, 306, 308, 310, 312, and 314) within the paradigm layer 300 are co-employees of employees (blocks 204, 206, and 212) within the same corporation. This may occur when the base layer 200 includes an organizational chart of a single group or division within a corporation.
For example, if the base layer includes an organizational chart of an engineering department within an organization, a paradigm layer may represent a group of marketing contacts to the employees within the base layer. The marketing contacts to the employees may include members of a marketing department within the corporation and accordingly, these employees may be identified within the paradigm layer.
The paradigm layer 300 may include a professional guild or society, email distribution list, college contacts, members of a fraternity and sorority, country club members, and the like would all be within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Additionally, generating the paradigm layer 300 may include any of a group of techniques including professional network analysis, social network analysis, common interests, a social bookmark technique, and the like would all be within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Now referring to
The paradigm layer 300 may be superimposed on the base layer 200 by a variety of methods. For example, the paradigm layer 300 and the base layer 200 may be superimposed upon each other by manually placing a first transparent plastic sheet, on which the base layer 200 is disposed, over a second transparent plastic sheet, on which the paradigm layer 300 is disposed.
Another example includes utilizing computer software to virtually superimpose the paradigm layer 300 on the base layer 200. The computer software may include any graphing tool, which can be utilized to show connections between employees and employee contacts within the new organizational chart 402. The graphing tool may continue to display individual images of the base layer 200 and the paradigm layer(s) 300 as a user alterable state change of the graph from the composite view layer (402).
When the paradigm layer 300 is superimposed on the base layer 200, the paradigm layer 300 is coupled to the base layer 200 via an anchor 320 from at least one employee (blocks 204, 206, 208, 210, 212, or 214) on the base layer 200 to at least one employee contact (blocks 304, 306, 308, 310, 312, and 314) on the paradigm layer 300.
There may be a plurality of paradigm layers within the new organizational chart 402. For example, new organizational chart 402 may include a base layer and two paradigm layers (first and second paradigm layers). The first paradigm layer may be superimposed upon the base layer and the second paradigm layer may be superimposed over the first paradigm layer. Thus, a plurality of paradigm layers may be incorporated within the new organizational chart 402 by superimposing each additional paradigm layer successively over each other.
For an embodiment, each additional paradigm layer within the new organizational chart 402 is coupled to the base layer via an anchor from at least one employee contact on the additional paradigm layers to at least one employee on the base layer. Thus, the new organizational chart 402 may have multiple paradigm layers therein, all coupled to the base layer. Hence, according to the embodiment, there is a one degree of separation between at least one employee on the base layer and at least one employee contact on each paradigm layer. For example, if there are one hundred paradigm layers within the new organizational chart 402, there is at least one connection from each paradigm layer to the base layer, such that there are at least one hundred connections to the base layer within the new organizational chart 402.
For an alternative embodiment, each additional paradigm layer is incorporated within the new organizational chart 402 by superimposing each additional paradigm layer successively upon each other. Furthermore, each successive paradigm layer is coupled to an adjoining paradigm layer via an anchor that couples at least one employee contact from each additional paradigm layer. Thus, this model of the new organizational chart 402 provides a degree of separation greater than one and may be utilized within a new organizational chart 402.
Within the new organizational chart 402, there may be multiple employees within the base layer that has direct connections to the same employee contacts on the paradigm layers. Thus, the employees on the base layer may have identical employee contacts. For example,
Accordingly, a system and method in accordance with the present invention includes a composite chart of interpersonal relationships of members within an organization. A user can utilize the composite chart to identify key personnel and identify business and social contacts of employees within an organization or simply identify the effective organization based on the context of the additional layers.
Although the present embodiment has been described in accordance with the embodiments shown, one having ordinary skill in the art will readily recognize that there could be variations to the embodiments and those variations would be within the spirit and scope of the present embodiment. Accordingly, many modifications may be made by one having ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims.