Drawing a flowchart in PowerPoint is best done either through the Quick SmartArt Process tool or by manually placing and connecting shapes, with SmartArt being the faster option for standard workflows.
A flowchart doesn’t belong in every presentation—but when a process needs to be clear at a glance, nothing else works. PowerPoint gives you two distinct ways to build one. The SmartArt route takes seconds and handles layout and connectors for you. The manual route gives you total control over every shape and line. The right choice depends on how much customization your process needs. Here is how to use both, plus the mistakes that sink most attempts.
Method 1: SmartArt — The Fastest Route to a Standard Flowchart
SmartArt is the recommended method when your process flows in a straight or simple path. It generates the shapes, the connecting arrows, and the text boxes in one step.
Open your slide and go to the Insert tab. Click SmartArt in the Illustrations group. In the dialog box that opens, select Process from the left column. Browse the middle pane for a layout that fits your process — “Basic Flowchart” or “Vertical Process” are solid starting points. Click OK.
The graphic lands on your slide with [Text] placeholders. Click each one and type your step. To add or remove steps, open the text pane (click the arrow on the left edge of the SmartArt border) and press Enter to add a shape or Delete to remove one.
To change colors or apply a style, select the graphic and use the SmartArt Design tab. Change Colors opens palette options. SmartArt Styles changes the 3D effect, shading, and outline. The diagram keeps its connector alignment as you edit — that is the real speed advantage.
Method 2: Manual Drawing — Full Control for Complex or Unusual Layouts
Manual drawing takes longer but is the only way when your process branches, loops back, or follows a non-standard arrangement. You place every shape and connect every line yourself.
Set Up the Grid First
Enable alignment aids before drawing a single shape. Go to View > Show and check Gridlines. Right-click the slide, select Grid and Guides, and check Snap objects to the grid. This step alone prevents the most common flowchart complaint — shapes that drift out of alignment.
Place the Shapes
Go to Insert > Shapes. Scroll to the Flowchart section near the bottom. Each shape has a standard meaning in flowchart conventions:
- Terminator (oval) — Start and End points.
- Process (rectangle) — An action or step.
- Decision (diamond) — A yes/no or branching question.
Click the shape you need, then click and drag on the slide to draw it. Double-click any shape to type text inside it.
Connect With Connectors, Not Lines
This is the step that separates a clean flowchart from a tangled one. Go to Insert > Shapes > Lines. Use Line Arrow for straight paths or Elbow Connector for paths that need a right-angle turn. Hover over the first shape until you see small gray anchor points around its border. Click one anchor, drag the line to an anchor on the second shape, and release.
Connectors stay attached when you move shapes. Regular lines do not. If your flowchart falls apart every time you adjust a shape, you used regular lines instead of connectors.
Format and Group
Use the Shape Format tab to change fills, outlines, and effects. When the layout is final, select all shapes (Ctrl+A or drag-select), right-click, and choose Group > Group. This locks the relative positions so the whole flowchart moves as one object.
Flowchart Shape Rules and When They Matter
Using the wrong shape is the second most common mistake. The standard set is small, and following it keeps your diagram readable by anyone who has seen a flowchart before.
| Symbol | Shape Name | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Oval | Terminator | Start or End of the process |
| Rectangle | Process | A step or action |
| Diamond | Decision | A branch point (yes/no) |
| Parallelogram | Data | Input or output of data |
| Document | Document | A printed document or report |
| Arrow | Flowline (Connector) | Direction of the process |
| Small Circle | Connector | Jump to another part of the chart |
If your audience is internal and informal, the exact symbol matters less than consistent labeling. If the flowchart is for a client, a proposal, or process documentation, stick to the standard shapes listed above.
Common Flowchart Mistakes That Ruin the Slide
Three errors appear so often in PowerPoint flowcharts that they are worth naming before you start.
Searching the template gallery for “Flow Chart.” PowerPoint uses “Flowchart” as one word. Typing “Flow Chart” (two words) in the template search bar returns zero relevant results. Use the single-word version if you want the built-in options.
Forgetting the grid. Shapes drawn without grid-snap produce uneven spacing that is visible as soon as the slide is projected. Enable gridlines and snap-to-grid before your first shape, not after.
Moving shapes after connecting them. If you used proper connectors, moving a shape pulls the connector along. If you used regular lines, the connector breaks. Test by dragging a shape after placing its first connector — broken lines mean you need to delete and redo that connection with a connector from the Lines menu.
SmartArt vs. Manual: Which One for Your Situation?
| Factor | SmartArt | Manual Shapes |
|---|---|---|
| Setup time | Under 30 seconds | 5–15 minutes |
| Connectors | Auto-generated | Placed manually |
| Custom layout | Limited to built-in templates | Unlimited |
| Formatting | Quick via SmartArt styles | Manual, shape by shape |
| Best for | Linear processes, quick drafts | Branched or complex workflows |
SmartArt also has a ceiling: if the process involves loops back to earlier steps or crossing flowlines, the SmartArt layouts cannot handle it. Ungrouping a SmartArt graphic (right-click Group > Ungroup) breaks it into individual shapes but also disconnects the automatic formatting — color themes and connector snap stop working after ungrouping.
Flowchart Checklist: What to Confirm Before the Slide Goes Live
Run through these points once your flowchart is placed and formatted.
- Every shape is the correct symbol for its role — terminator at both ends, diamond at every decision point.
- Connectors use anchor points, not freehand lines — each line stays attached when shapes move.
- Text inside each shape is large enough to read when projected — 14 point minimum for body text, 18 point for one- or two-word labels.
- The grid is enabled with snap-to-grid active so shape spacing is uniform.
- The whole flowchart is grouped as one object after alignment is final.
- Saving the file in
.pptxformat preserves all SmartArt and connector behaviors. Exporting to.jpgor.pngflattens the diagram and removes editability.
References & Sources
- Microsoft Support. “Create a flow chart in PowerPoint.” Official documentation for SmartArt and manual shape instructions.
