Hi.
I suspect that this post may receive a few groans, but I have searched and searched and cannot find an answer that is conclusive.
I have an Excel spreadsheet 'database' of 10,000 end-user records that I have converted to an Access table. Application is a telemarketing/contact management and reporting tool
Of these 10,000 records, virtually all of them are multiple contacts from the same company. (i.e. approx 4,500 company records with multiple contacts).
I am trying to create a database form that will view Contacts in a separate subform, on the same screen, to the company record so that, for example, a change of head office address only needs effecting once. (This approach, I believe, will also help further down the track when I have to run reports.)
So, to the question. Do I have to split the freshly converted, 10k line, table in to two tables - Company and Contact - or is there a way of avoiding all that work of deciding which fields to include in which table, identifying them, sleceting them and cutting/copying them across to a new Contacts table? - only to discover further down the track that I got something wrong.
Thanks in advance for your help. Also, any links to tutorial vids, previous posts, etc., will be greatly appreciated.
Cheers!
Rolfee
I suspect that this post may receive a few groans, but I have searched and searched and cannot find an answer that is conclusive.
I have an Excel spreadsheet 'database' of 10,000 end-user records that I have converted to an Access table. Application is a telemarketing/contact management and reporting tool
Of these 10,000 records, virtually all of them are multiple contacts from the same company. (i.e. approx 4,500 company records with multiple contacts).
I am trying to create a database form that will view Contacts in a separate subform, on the same screen, to the company record so that, for example, a change of head office address only needs effecting once. (This approach, I believe, will also help further down the track when I have to run reports.)
So, to the question. Do I have to split the freshly converted, 10k line, table in to two tables - Company and Contact - or is there a way of avoiding all that work of deciding which fields to include in which table, identifying them, sleceting them and cutting/copying them across to a new Contacts table? - only to discover further down the track that I got something wrong.
Thanks in advance for your help. Also, any links to tutorial vids, previous posts, etc., will be greatly appreciated.
Cheers!
Rolfee