Getting started with setting up your Organisation in Simployer One

Modified on Thu, 5 Jun at 2:26 PM

Phase 1: Information about departments, teams, offices etc


This article helps you with the steps and tasks during the first phase of your implementation. If you at any point have any questions, remember we are available in the chat down to the right! 

NOTE: Some of the articles linked below may require you to log in to Simployer One before seeing them.


Excel template is attached to this article. 


How to use Cost centers in Simployer One

Cost centers are not used by everyone. So if you don't need it, you can skip to the next section here.

Cost centers in Simployer One are used to keep track of who belongs to what cost center. An employee can only be part of one cost center so the reason for using these may differ. Some people have this to remind employees of what cost center they should submit their receipts to, others use it to be able to match exported reports from Simployer One to external BI/Payroll systems.

 

How to use Departments in Simployer One

Departments in Simployer One is one of the main ways to keep your employees organized. For some companies this is obvious, for others it may be a challenge to adapt your structure in this manner. In any case it is good to know the features connected to departments and to see some examples of how this can be used.


What departments are used for

In Simployer One departments are used for mainly 2 things: having people organized in an easy to understand system and for automation. Departments in Simployer One doesn't have to follow the exact system used by the organization to structure work, but rather to logically explain belonging. When you create reports, filter out lists of employees or want to see graphs departments can be used to quickly get the information you want.

When it comes to automation you can set up so called Scopes to automatically assign time off policies, profile templates or cost centers etcetera.

Our general recommendation is to not overthink departments and instead iterate on the setup to quickly see and test features connected to it.

An employee can only belong to one department.

 

The structure of departments

Departments are linked via a top-down structure. When creating a new department you can put it in a tree via the "Parent department"-dropdown. By doing so a department is set as a subdepartment. There is no limits to this, so you can build as long or as short trees as you see fit.

Example:



  1. Management - Is the parent department to IT and Finance. 

  2. IT - Is one of two subdepartments to Management and is one the same level as Finance (visually on the same level, in reality Simployer One doesn't have levels).

  3. Devops - Is one of two subdepartments to IT and is on the same level as Frontend.

  4. Finance - Is one of two subdepartments to Management and is one the same level as IT.

    If your company consists of multiple companies You could visualize it as a Parent Department. As an example, here is a setup with two companies:

     

     
    You can read more about setting up Departments here
    How to use Offices in Simployer One
    Much like Departments Offices are used for having people organized in an easy to understand system and for automation. But Offices are more often a direct representation of where a person is located physically.

    Even if a person doesn't belong to an actual office space, offices can be set up so Simployer One knows where in the world the people attached to it belongs. Via the office you can automatically assign both the correct holidays and timezone.

    More than that it gives the possibility to do more precise filtering.

    As an example 2 employees can share the same department but have different offices to enable granularity in a report. Filtering on both department and office would make it possible to, as an example, look at everyone in IT that works in Sweden.
     
    You can read more about setting up Offices here
     
    Sometimes departments and offices aren't enough to represent your organizational structure. Enter Teams (short for Cross-functional teams)!

    Teams can be used to further assign people into more granular belongings. Teams are used differently by all our users but the most common scenarios is to let it represent project groups, client belonging (for consultants), missions or other things.

    The main difference between Teams and Departments is that you can belong to many teams, but only one department.



 

You can read more about setting up Teams her

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