Family Tree Builder: Tips for Organizing Generations and Records
1. Start with a clear structure
- Root person: Choose one person as the central root (typically yourself or the family elder).
- Generations: Limit display to 4–6 generations per view to avoid clutter.
- Branches: Create separate branches for maternal and paternal lines and label them clearly.
2. Use consistent naming and date formats
- Names: Use full legal names first, then nicknames in parentheses.
- Dates: Use ISO-style dates (YYYY-MM-DD) for consistency and easier sorting.
- Places: Standardize place names (City, County/State, Country).
3. Cite sources for every fact
- Source every event: Attach a source (census, birth certificate, obituary) to each birth, marriage, death, and residence.
- Brief note: Add a one-line citation summary (source type, year, repository) for quick reference.
- Link scanned docs: Store or link scanned documents where possible.
4. Use media and notes strategically
- Photos: Tag photos with names, date, and event; prefer one file per person where possible.
- Documents: Attach key documents (certificates, military records) to the relevant event.
- Research notes: Keep a dedicated note field for unresolved leads and next steps.
5. Resolve duplicates and conflicting data
- Duplicate check: Regularly run duplicate detection and merge carefully—preserve conflicting facts in notes.
- Conflicts: When sources disagree, record both with source notes and mark preferred value with rationale.
6. Apply versioning and backups
- Regular exports: Export GEDCOM or native backups monthly and before major edits.
- Change log: Keep a simple change log noting major merges, bulk edits, or new record imports.
7. Tagging and custom fields
- Tags: Use tags for migration events, military service, adoption, or surname variants.
- Custom fields: Create fields for unique family details (census IDs, family plot location).
8. Plan your research workflow
- One-task sessions: Separate sessions for data entry, source searching, and media processing.
- Prioritize: Tackle closest generations first where records are easier, then move outward.
9. Collaborate safely
- Contributor notes: Track who added or changed entries and why.
- Permissions: Give read-only access to casual contributors; full edit rights to trusted researchers.
10. Keep presentations clean
- Reports: Generate simplified reports for family sharing—omit disputed facts and raw source lists if needed.
- Charts: Use pedigree for lineage, fan charts for overview, and family group sheets for household details.
If you want, I can produce a printable checklist, a GEDCOM export guide, or a step-by-step workflow tailored to your software version.
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