Copying Charts to Word
Problem
You've created a chart in Excel and would like to include it in a report written in Word.
Solution
Simply copy and paste the chart from Excel to Word. Select your chart and press Ctrl-C, or select Edit
Discussion
This seems simple enough, and it is. But you do have some options to consider when pasting an Excel chart into a Word document. By default, a picture of the chart gets pasted into Word. This picture is static: you can't edit the chart and it isn't linked to the original spreadsheet.
When you paste a chart into Word, you'll notice a little clipboard icon near the lower-right corner of the pasted chart. If you select that icon, you'll see three paste options: Picture of Chart; Excel Chart; Link to Excel Chart. The first option is just a picture of the chart, as explained a moment ago.
The second option is really quite powerful. The entire spreadsheet gets embedded into your Word document. This means that you can transmit the entire spreadsheet along with the Word document to other readers of your document. Within Word you can right-click on the chart and select Chart Object
The third option embeds just the chart (not the entire spreadsheet), but not as a static picture. Instead it's a link to the original Excel spreadsheet. When the spreadsheet gets updated, the embedded chart will be updated too. You can access the linked spreadsheet by right-clicking on the chart in Word and selecting Linked Worksheet Object
When you open a Word document containing a linked chart, Word will ask you if you want to update the linked chart so that recent changes to the Excel chart are reflected in the Word document. If for some reason the link between the Word document and Excel file gets broken (for example, if you move or rename the Excel file), then Word will inform you that it could not update the linked chart.