|
|
-
Going through the Christmas routine of wrapping presents recently brought home the importance of "metadata". As I am wrapping the presents I know who is giving them and I know who they are for, of course, so why do I need to waste time labelling them??.
But come the big day and the fact that I have carelessly used the same wrapping paper, if I haven’t labelled them, with the relevant metadata so to speak, then there will be confusion and probable embarrassment!
Of course we could use the brute force search technique of opening each present and working it out that way – but that’s not exactly ideal!
So metadata – or labelling presents is a great idea – there are even nice labels that prompt for the right information. Obvious really – and a great lesson for the New Year to use when creating documents and files – remember you may not be the one opening them, or wanting to find where they belong!
Sure you can use “Search” techniques but how much easier if the author takes a bit of time and wraps the information with the right labels! So don't make people have to guess what your documents are about and who they are aimed at! SharePoint 2010 even helps you with what terms to use with it's Metadata Management Services
Merry Christmas!
|
-
Well the buzz is building about the next version of SharePoint – part of the Office 14 wave (that’s right – there was no Office 13!) – due out, not too surprisingly, in 2010 – or next year, which is not that far off in planning terms. Microsoft SharePoint 2010 (Note longer called MOSS) offers some tempting features that many companies are now considering.
This is the 4th incarnation, from its raw beginnings nearly 10 years. Although not as radically changed as the last one, it still boasts a host of new facilities and users experiences – (for the history of SharePoint from Tahoe to present take a look at here).
I don’t intend to go in to great technical or feature lists here – there are many places that do that (e.g. see SharePoint 2010 Website). What I am more interested is what it will mean for business ambitions - what will it do that might actually help companies gain value.
SharePoint 2007 was a great success for Microsoft, at least in terms of how many licences were sold. However this does not necessarily equate to adoption and business success for customers. A lot of people have gained great value, using it as a better way to share information for example, but others found that it didn’t quite meet their desires, especially when acting as a development platform. It also went a long way to introducing more people to the concepts of collaboration, document management and other aspects of Enterprise Content Management (ECM).
There are many improvements with 2010 and areas that deserve discussion (especially around UI, scale and as a development platform), but what I want to discuss here is “Collaboration” and what they have done that helps that. – Collaboration is not just a technology issue of course, but there is always great scope for technology to get in the way and make it just too hard to exploit. Indeed the history of collaboration projects is littered with cases where it just been easier for users to go back to old habits and email a document to someone rather than posting to some collaborative tool.
One big challenge facing companies and it’s something that will grow with SharePoint 2010, is that it is not clear to the ordinary user at their desks what tool they should use to achieve a particular task. If two people are working on a simple document should they just email it between each other? – but what if more people need to get involved? What if the document becomes important and valuable enough to need versioning and maybe even agreeing and approving by other people beyond the original authors?
– What if some of them are outside the firewall? How best to arrange meetings to discuss this document and if it gets big can how can different people work on different pieces of it at the same time? All of these questions can technically be answered by SharePoint 2010 especially when used with Office 2010 but that just addresses the technical aspect!
There has to be more thought (and action) given to helping users understand not just how to use these new and wonderful tools – but when to use which tools and what the right collaborative protocol is in their organisation.
One way to start is to think of the different ways people need to collaborate. Firstly what am I defining as “collaboration”? – Let’s say that it is a coordinated process involving people communicating and sharing information from various sources with the aim to produce some valued output.
Sounds heavy, but for people to collaborate they need to be able to communicate with each other – say by email or phone, they need some degree of co-ordination – for example to agree a time to call each other and typically they are going to share some information from some sources – which might be from their own heads or maybe from a document repository – All of this , hopefully, has a purpose that has some value, even if it is only personal – It could be as simple as a few people planning the Christmas party or a larger group setting up a project to put man on Mars. In either case the same requirements exist.
Collaborative activities have various “aspects” or “dimensions” – Let’s consider:
Time – will the information sharing happen at the same or at different times (a telephone call complies both parties are available at the same time, an email does not)?
Place – is the information sharing happening at the same place (maybe in a meeting room) or at different places – (across a video link perhaps).
Duration – Is the information sharing a off event – or will it repeat for a long time?
Sources - We must also consider what form the information that is being shared takes – is it in document form – is it electronic, physical, verbal etc?
All these aspects and their combinations can drive the selection of the type of tools required.
So what about SharePoint 2010 and the Office 14 wave – where does it fit this?
A lot of effort has gone in to the user interface. The Office 2007 "Ribbon Bar" is now to be found across SharePoint - of course not so much of a benefit if you have never used it in Office 2007, but still the effort has been made to improve ease of use and remove barriers to sharing.
Shared team sites – same place – different times
Document Libraries – A source of valuable information – and the improved Search options, including FAST, that help you find information, where ever it may be in SharePoint!
SharePoint Workspace 2010 (son of Groove) – allowing offline workspaces supporting different place/different time collaboration
Collaboratively authored Documents (Word 2010 and SharePoint 2010)
Instant Messaging – via Live Office Communicator – embedded with SharePoint so you can see who is on-line at a given time (for same time/different place collaboration)
Live Meeting – for Video and Application sharing
And there are others – but it is clear that not all the tools are part of the basic SharePoint product – other “Office” tools are required (at a cost of course) – However there is a full set of collaborative tools that are well integrated now and that offer a good user experience – and one that can be extended as required.
However as with any “collaborative” tool set you must not forget the policies, guidelines and training that are needed to help people get the most out of them.
|
-
In the current economic climate, it is important to consider if companies are actually getting the most out of their IT environments. In a topic close to my heart, I have seen portals and intranets, often based on Microsoft technologies, that while they may have met their initial goals, are many times left unloved and little is done to really exploit the platforms that they are built on. Companies still seem to prefer to spend huge effort re-creating documents that already exist somewhere or spend hours creating fancy forms in Excel with little thought about how to distribute and collate them. Far too often email is pressed in to service to fill gaps simply because its there! I often wonder if the designers behind Excel could have foreseen all the strange uses that it has been put to over the years and not always in a good way!
All this ad-hoc made on the fly solutions perhaps were driven from necessity, or ignorance – maybe central IT was too busy or considered this sort of work too small to be of interest. Often departments will resort to hiring their own contractors to build little forms based systems in Word and Excel independent of what is going on elsewhere in their company. Microsoft Access databases spring up doing all manner of things and holding key data that could be important to others if only they knew it was there.
All this may have been fine in boom times when they could afford to hire and to duplicate solutions and indeed create little inefficient IT pockets around the enterprise, but now it’s not so easy to justify.
No manufacturer would allow their tools to be misused and under exploited in this way, but somehow because its software and invisible people get away with it.
So what can be done? Increasingly companies have deployed tools such as SharePoint, - maybe as a basis of their Intranet, or as a collaborative tool for projects. However, they don’t all do a good job of driving adoption and thinking about other uses for it. Although often it too can be abused and used in an inefficient way - usually due to a lack of guidance and training.
Microsoft has also been thinking about this and has come up with an approach to teasing out more real business value from such tools as SharePoint and Office. The initiative is called the “Business Value Planning Services” (BVPS) program.
The idea is that through a series of workshops and interview with the business centred on a set of business pain points that a plan and business case can be drawn up. The outputs consider the “As-Is” situation, the “To-Be” situation and the steps to get there and how to drive adoption. It is basically a catalyst to get people in a company talking about better ways of doing things and properly using the tools that they have available.
So why use a rake to sweep the floor when there is a vacuum cleaner in the cupboard!
|
-
While attending the recent Microsoft SharePoint conference in Seattle I noticed a thread around the growing issues of the changing and expanding information tide and the various and perhaps competing demands on using and controlling that information.
MOSS 2007makes it easier for people to collaborate in a number of ways, from simple collaborative sites for sharing documents, to blogs and Wikis. Allied to this is the ever growing email traffic, which, when you add voice mail and logged instant messenger traffic, leads to even greater volumes of “stuff”. The myth that this is no problem since disk space is cheap was also explored by Debra Logan who pointed out that it is naive to consider just the cost of the hardware, since it has related support, back up and even power costs.
There are other factors to consider relating to the torrents of text. It is one thing to just let information grow and grow, but there is also the need to be able to find the stuff later, if you can’t access it, how can you use it? This of course may just be in the normal course of daily work, someone looking up an HR Policy for example. But it may also be driven by legal requirements, for example e-discovery in the case of a law case. In which case having vast amounts of information with little or no structure can prove extremely costly. In any case having huge volumes of information can make the user experience for the seekers of truth very poor indeed. Of course a good search engine (such as those offered by MOSS and FAST) can help, but at the end of the day the search engine can only retrieve what is there – and if a lot of it is out of date rubbish then that will pollute the results with unnecessary noise.
There is yet another aspect to handing and presenting all this information which is slowly breaking out of its niche and that is “Accessibility”. Earlier I used the word “access” – this is significant and goes beyond just “finding” stuff. Accessibility relates to people with some sort of disability or limit to their ability, to access the information. Dana Simberkoff pointed out the way the need for this is growing, both because of legislation, such as “UK Disability Discrimination Act of 1995!, but also for the more pervasive affect of an aging workforce. It could just be the need to increase the browser font size when your eyes are tired (a condition I certainly recognize) – not something MOSS supports out of the box (but there is the "Accessibility Kit for SharePoint" – AKS that can help here). So the system, through a great search engine and good navigation might be able to “find” the information you need – but if you can’t read the small font, understand the language, or make out the diagram that uses low contrast colours then it is still something you cannot use. The value of information depends on at least four aspects, it’s content, it’s presentation, it’s discoverability and it’s relevance to the user – in other words, is the material correct, can you understand it, can you find it and is it pertinent to what you need.
Microsoft have now recognized that “accessibility” needs to be a theme throughout products like SharePoint and should be treated as a fundamental like security, but it will take time. For example there is the challenge of the tools such as “Silverlight” and SQL Reporting Services that can make information very appealing (gauges, fantastic graphs, etc) – but are they always that useful to every level of user, or are they in some cases making things harder to understand?
So there are a number of pressures on the use of collaborative content storing web based tools, such as SharePoint.
So we need to consider and plan for the need for;
Ease of content creation
Flexibility to allow users to create collaborative workspaces
The need for agility and speed of creation
The need to help make it easy to find the information later (metadata, structure, common terminology, etc)
The need to comply with the many & various legal requirements (some of which are still vague and untested)
The need to create and enforce workable policies
The key to all of this, and the subject of many of the talks, is “Governance”. There is a clear need to set up guidelines and policies to give a good chance of running a successful system (“Governance develops and manages consistent, cohesive policies, processes and decision-rights for a given area of responsibility.” Wikipedia).
There are many ideas around governance but key is the need to include a mix of senior business people, along with IT and potentially legal in the governance team.
Once there are legal compliance needs involved it is important to consider who, as individuals, are at risk and these are typically the CXO level people – this usually sharpens the minds of senior management.
Another important concept (again with thanks to Debra Logan) and one I agree with, is the need for an “Information Manager” role. As I see it this is a business rather than IT role to oversee, refine and enforce governance. The “Information Manager” is a role that can help with setting a balance between the desire for great agility, local autonomy, and control along with tight legal and ethical compliance.
This is a significant challenge given that companies frequently allow users to take the easiest way – the path of least resistance and often follow the herd without any long term thinking. But perhaps we are heading for the perfect storm – the need for more users to access the same information in different ways and for different reasons could be the final push to force companies into supporting a role that can guide them away from the impending information storm. The web wave is becoming a tsunami.
|
-
This month (December) our first public facing Web Site built using Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) 2007 went live. This was for a division of one the leading UK high street banks. This is a very much a first stage of a large initiative that will see the site become much more interactive and personalised in the future – but the initial aim was to replace a rather stale and static site that had been up since 2001. This old site was difficult to update, hard to navigate and did not allow the client to cross sell their products to their potential user base, which lead to calls to them which could have been answered on the web site, if only it had been easy to find things! The old site also lacked any search mechanism. So in essence, for this initial phase, the aim was to build a site that allowed users to find out what they need to know directly from the website without the need to interact with the bank in other ways so reducing telephone and written correspondence – which is otherwise both frustrating for the users and frankly costly for the bank. So why use Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 as the content management tool? Clearly there are many (too many?) dedicated content management tools on the market that could have been used to build this information based site. Why take the risk of using such a new product (indeed a mere beta 2 when we started) instead of one of the tried and tested ones? Well if the entire aim was just the new site as it now stands then maybe something else could have been used. However the long term plans better suite a truly integrated platform approach due to the need to integrate backend systems, along with the built in workflow and web forms capability. So the decision was more strategic than tactical and it was important to take the bigger picture in to account. As a CMS it has proven perfectly adequate and the users and content editors have found it very straight forward to use and it allows them to very quickly add or change content without the intervention of IT. So what was the experience with SharePoint 2007 like? Microsoft Office SharePoint 2007 combines and improves on functions from SharePoint 2003 and Microsoft’s old content management package CMS 2002. Generally speaking the experience was good – the consistency of the use of “Lists” to control everything from site Pages to Images, CSS and custom tables of information was very useful. However matching the exact requirements of the third part y designers was harder and called for some imaginative use of “Content Types”. Of course one of the key issues was that we started with a beta, so documentation and best practices were thin on the ground – not an issue for the future or for other such sites. There was also a need to provide some management information capability to support strategic decision making and to show if the site was working as intended. Although SharePoint 2007 has its own reports around hits and search statistics it was decided to extend this using “WebTrends Analytics 8”. The MOSS 2007 built in search stats will help to drive site content over time by, showing for example that there are frequent failed searches on a particular topic for which there is no good content. This can also be used to drive their FAQ facilities The project was also an example of an Agile one rather than a traditional waterfall approach. This interactive approach saved time (and the odd tree) and allowed greater flexibility. It also facilitated “late decision” allowing the client to see what things looked like and make relatively late changes – with out the need for delays caused by having to changed detailed specification documents. It did mean that the client had to commit to working closely with us – often having one or two of their staff on site sitting along side our team, with them creating content and checking the look & feel as features were refined. This close team also helped shape the site and avoided any “big surprises” as the project progressed. So hopefully this now provides a foundation for future enhancements to this site and should allow them to really start taking advantage of the MOSS platform to deliver real value beyond that of a simple web content management package.
|
-
There is a lot of talk about the next generation Internet – Web 2.0 and how it might impact different types of internet users. My interest lies in its possible application in improving collaboration – both inside a company and also between companies and even between companies and their clients. One of the keys to Web 2.0 is interaction and working together to improve things – and this is also a key to collaboration. Since Web 2.0 emphasises interactive tools like Wikis, and to a lesser extent blogs (not as interactive) its theses sort of facilities that are going to help grow collaboration into the mainstream. This all goes along with discussion groups and shared libraries of documents and images. Of course none of this is really new – newsgroups, for example, were well established on the Internet as a way of interactively sharing information before the “Web” took off. What has changed is the availability of these tools and their ease of use and more recently with the advent of platforms like Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) and the Office 2007 suite, the integration of these tools. Currently people use one tool for blogging, one for Wikis, one for shared areas and so on – the result is messy for people to contribute too and even harder for readers to make much sense of. Integration is the thing that will make this all easier. Of course collaboration is not just a matter of the tools there is a large element of culture and personal factors to take in to consideration, basically around what’s in it for me or my company. But added to that is the effort barrier. Even if I am inclined to collaborate or even if my company is prepared to reward successful collaboration in some ways, if it is just too hard or too much effort to do it then I probably won’t bother. It is therefore important that tools used in the collaborative space make it easy and convenient for me. It should be no harder to save a document to a shared area than to my C: drive – it should be easy for me to write a blog using Word and just post it straight to the blog site. Well this is the direction that Office 2007 and SharePoint are taking. An example is the feature in Word 2007 called Publish – which allows me to publishing to a Document Management server, some shared workspace or just as easily to a Blog –these are all SharePoint 2007 features in the background – but as a user I don’t need to worry about that – I just choose what is appropriate. Wikis (and indeed blogs) are now a standard feature of SharePoint 2007. Wikis are very useful way of evolving and changing content so that it gets better the more people use it, again a Web 2.0 tenet. While it may not be the greatest Wiki tool – it is by no means the worst – but it is the integration that counts – it’s not just some off-shoot loosely coupled tool it is a part of the collaborative interactive framework Email is another great (or terrible) collaborative tool. It is just so easy for me to add a name to an email - just in case they may be interested. Filing it then becomes their problem – not mine. This is all well and good - until months pass and no one remembers where that information went. Certainly there are better desktop search tools around, for example those in Vista, but that should not always be the first resort. If people want to use email wouldn’t it help to give them an email address that would file the information centrally? For example if a team is working on a particular project, that has a SharePoint 2007 site already set up to store relevant documents, it would be great if you could add an address to the project email address list that send emails and their attachments directly to the SharePoint site for filing. Well MOSS 2007 now offers that feature. (Those of us who have been around awhile might be reminded of Lotus Notes email enabled database!!) Again it’s all about reducing the effort and thinking required to ensure that information is stored. Of course there is the risk that too much is captured – but better that than vital information goes missing. The integration of CMS functionality into SharePoint 2007, also opens up the possibility of greater flexibility of your intranet. This begins to blur the lines between intranets and websites, bringing all of the functionality of an intranet with the fluid look and feel, and content management provided to public facing web sites. Of course the integration with Instant Messenger/Live Communications giving me presence information as well adds greatly to my ability to quickly interact with colleagues to get or give quick answers to questions. If I am working on a shared document on a SharePoint server my “Document Management Task Pane” on the right hand side of my current Word document can tell me who is on-line without ever leaving Word. Web 2.0 also implies exploiting more devices such as mobile and handheld ones. Again it’s a convenience thing – being able to see and interact while on the move – given the obvious limitations still associated with these devices. Again SharePoint 2007 now considers Mobile devices as a standard target for “views” of lists and supports variations of content that allows information to be correctly formatted for smaller devices. Intranet 2.0? Is this time for people to re-consider their Intranets? The noise surrounding Web 2.0 is causing companies and particularly retailers to rethink their websites and to make them more interactive. Well the same can be said about many, if not most Intranets out there. “Intranet 1.0 “meant mostly flat non –interactive sites – possibly allowing people to search and download policies and other useful documents. But really intranets could be the platform for more interactive feedback and comment – a place to share tips and best practices. In the past this has been too hard to do – but with the Web 2.0 drive and the arrival of more interactive platforms such as SharePoint 2007 perhaps now is the time for companies to think ahead. Sharing information with partners and customers is great – but perhaps collaboration should start at home!
|
-
Over the many years I have spent in IT I have been pleased to see a growing professionalism in central IT in many medium to large companies. They are now taking a very serious attitude to controlling the environment, have proper standards based IT management, perhaps exploiting the ITIL standards, and embrace good methodologies and implement change management all critical systems. In some case companies are out sourcing and/or of-shoring a lot of more routine systems and management which again means that strict disciplines are required when managing the IT estate. This is of course all good stuff, however I am increasingly seeing an interesting effect deep within business departments. I call the effect Stealth IT – sometimes IT departments call it end user computing – in the sense that there are certain tools like Excel and Access that business users are free to use as they wish. The disciplines that are shaping the central IT departments are at the same time slowing developments down in most cases and causing frustrated end users to make up their own systems using whatever tools come to hand – like Access, Excel or Lotus Notes. Some departments will hire their own developers or technical staff or leave it to enthusiastic amateurs. At first this can look like a really quick and easy solution to a business problem – Central IT is perceived to be too slow and unresponsive for the business and they prefer to use a local resource under their direct control. The problem is that it means large corporates may have key areas of their business or key functions running on ridiculously large spreadsheets or “Access” databases that IT maybe unaware of and that are unsupported – especially when the local resource (often a contractor) moves on. Central IT only hear about these when something goes badly wrong or there is an audit of some sort – by which time the damage is done. I often wonder if the senior management of these companies are aware of the risks that these departments are running – especially with respect to compliance and any aspect of disaster recovery.
So can anything be done?
Well on the organisational front I have seen some progress against these renegades by the introduction of rapid response teams – where IT have a small team of people who can go in to a department and resolve small requirements without the over head of too much documentation and time. The advantage is that central IT can keep some control and are aware of what is going on across a company - which if nothing else avoids the re-invention of wheels and wasting of time and effort. The down side is there are still these pockets of applications sitting on local machines or departmental servers that are effectively unmanaged. There may well still be hundreds of uncontrolled spreadsheets roaming around!
Another encouraging sign on the horizon comes with Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) with both its now much more powerful “list” capabilities (think simple databases) and the concept of server based Excel. Excel Services (part of 2007 Office System), allows the storing sharing and running of Excel workbooks server-side. It has two main interfaces, a DHTML browser interface (does not require Excel on the client), so that you can view/calculate shared sheets through the browser and a Web Services programmatic interface to allow developers access to both the logic and the data in a workbook. If this is used correctly this can remove the need for email circulation of sheets, and the re-invention of the spreadsheet wheel that is far too common in large organisations. This also looks scalable and can allow off loading of complex spreadsheet calculations to a server.
This allows for much more centralising and sharing of good "Excel" or SharePoint “List” based solutions. It still needs backing up by some central IT support squads, who can share best practice and ways of working but it is a step in the right direction and a feature of MOSS that way be over looked. Some may say this is just an extension of big brother computing – but when trying to keep control, cut costs and especially with an eye to compliance maybe big brother knows best sometimes!
|
-
The whole really is greater than the sum of is parts!
So the curtain is well and truly up on the next version of SharePoint – now called Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 or MOSS!. Beta 2 is now out and I will be commenting on this over the next few months
So what’s this MOSS all about? – In a sentence it is now much more of a fully fledged .NET 2.0 platform than a single application, combining and extending features of “SharePoint Portal 2003” and “Content Management Server” along with workflow, Excel Services and much, much more.
Full feature lists are available from many sources (see www.microsoft.com/office/preview/servers/sharepointserver/ for example) so I don’t intend to produce a detailed one here but want to consider what it means to a business considering its strategy for better team working, document management, records management, compliance or simply for managing its public web site!
There are several main facets to the product which sit within a “portal” framework (I am not a fan of the ill-defined term “portal” and it is interesting that the word has now disappeared from the product name). These facets include;
Collaboration/Team working (Team sites, Wikis, Blogs RSS alerting etc)
Enterprise Content Management (Web, Documents and Records management)
BI/Business Data Catalogue (easy creation of KPI dashboards_
Forms (web based & rich client)
Search (much improved relevance & user interface)
People (Profiles, Social networking, etc)
This all sits on a foundation of SQL Server (either 2000 or 2005 versions) and Windows SharePoint Services v3.0 (WSS). The integration is supported by the familiar (but now enhanced) web parts for example you can now use the web parts created in Visual Studio .NET. Under pinning this is enhanced security and workflow.
Of course ifs not all good news, – for example the offline working story is still not great - it gets better with OutLook 12, but it still takes more forward planning than many will use. But then again there are 3rd party add-ons coming that will help to improve this – take a look at Digi-Links products (www.digi-link.com) for example. Also some of the richer Records Management features, especially around email, need Exchange 12 to get the most from them, which could be a road block in the short term. Duplications are not automatically controlled in the product - although at least the Search interface will collapse the display of duplicates - making things easier to read
So what will all these well integrated functions give you?
Well one of the key advantages is that this is all Microsoft based (not everyone’s taste – but it is for a lot!) and is well integrated and familiar (particularly to current SharePoint users). It means that if you want to exploit things like enterprise blogging, role based targeted business information, document and records management or even the content management of your extranet or public facing web site (with much improved CMS tools – which can also be used to make your Intranet much more appealing than was practical with SPS 2003) then you can use a single Microsoft framework. Of course in true Microsoft fashion these features may only meet the 80:20 rule – there are better point solutions for each of the facets – but the point is the integration and ease of use (especially with Office 12) –and importantly lower cost of ownership being on the one platform. Of course you need to be a Microsoft shop to really benefit – this is not for the Linux/Unix brigade and access to .NET 2.0 developers will help a lot too.
So where will it be used?
An obvious application is compliance and compliance related activities. Now there is much better document management, with proper versioning with major, minor versions – (echoes of SharePoint Portal Server 2001 here), undelete (hurray!), and practical workflow. Add to this the abilities to properly lock the documents and seal them into a company file plan and to access key business data via the Business Data Catalogue, all the key elements are there to meet compliance requirements.
A more common use may well be the automation of simple business processes, such as holiday requests and staff appraisals. Using the enhanced people profiles and “My Sites” will make this role based workflow much richer. Such processes exploit the workflow and the new web based InfoPath forms capabilities alongside the improved document management (for example document level security, and the powerful concept of “Content Types”). Workflow has effectively 3 levels of complexity in SharePoint 2007, the out of the box pre-built ones – e.g. circulate documents for feedback, the next level is the rule/wizard driven flows you can create with the new SharePoint Designer (one of the sons of FrontPage) and finally the full workflow, which can be built with a graphics designer in Visual Studio (so not for the layman!)
With the right levels of knowledge and imagination powerful yet simple flows can be built – and if that is not enough for you there are still 3rd party tools that will extend it further!
A leading Energy company has already committed to a strategy of using SharePoint 2007 and one its key drivers will be the way that the can automate a large percentage of its business processes using a single standard platform
What sort of impact will this all have?
Remember Lotus Notes (yes I know its still around)? That made a BIG impact on business because it enabled integrated email, workflow and forms so that power users could configure without heavy and expensive IT involvement. Now it is possible to match and even extend what could be done with Notes but now using SharePoint 2007 and a browser – even tighter integration (something Lotus never quite managed) will be possible with Office 12! So watch out for viral growth within large enterprises.
|
-
Is information really treated in the right way in the enterprise? Is there a tendency to gorge on one type of information and the expense of another – and in doing so is the balanced view lost?
An analogy might help to clarify the situation.
People need both food and water to survive. However for healthy living and growth the quality and composition of the meals is important. For most people they want a complete meal – not the unprocessed ingredients, as they may not have the time or skills to prepare it themselves. A well balanced diet has long been recognised as a foundation to good healthy living.
Now consider a company and its need to be "fed" by information. We can consider "structured information", the numbers, like "drink" – you need it regularly and it must be clean and of good quality. A lot of companies do realise the importance of this and have their numbers well under control using tools like ERP and BI.
However let's take the "unstructured information", documents, emails, etc, and consider that as the "food". Again it should be of good quality, clean, well presented and hopefully a pleasure to consume. However when we come to look how some companies serve up their "unstructured information" it is often an unappealing stew.
What is needed is a more balanced approach. It is important that the numbers and the supporting documents are considered as part of the same balanced diet. The content of this diet must contain only good quality ingredients and it must be well prepared and served in an appealing way and should suite the needs of the consumer. A lot of times companies worry about sourcing information and buy expensive content management systems which help people get material on to the Intranet or Portal but not enough effort is placed on the quality and the relevance of it. Indeed just like food – information can go off and be dangerous to health once past its "use by date".
What must be remembered is that busy business people need business information to help them make decisions, not just raw unprepared information. It is this balance of clean well processed information; both structured and unstructured that should be the goal.
All these needs can be encompassed with a well planned balanced approach.
To add to this needed for this balance, compliance requirements mean that companies need to be very open about where information has come from and how it is processed. Just as with food it is important that it is fresh, clean and properly prepared – consider it as "health and safety regulations" for data!
What are the implications?
Companies need to take a more holistic view of what information they have, how it is looked after and served to the right people in the right way. This is not just a question of technology, just like preparing food is not just a question of buying the latest and most expensive cooker. The processes to look after the information and the people its intended for are just as important. Ownership is also needed, the various information needs to be owned and maintained by someone – with a overall information delivery owner guiding the process – in effect an information "chef".
Companies should look to a coherent information management strategy encompassing the handling of structured and unstructured information. They should define and standardise the way it is stored, labelled and handled and must consider all the different users and deliver channels it will use. They should decide what fits where and how it all should be labelled (we are getting hotter on labelling our food – but documents and other vital pieces of information rarely have so much as a meaningful title).
There is also much money to be saved in taking this strategic approach. Use of agreed technologies and processes will improve efficiency; reduce waste and the re-invention of the wheel that is associated with the common piecemeal approach of different parts of the company having their own "solutions".
It should not be left to be handled by local point solutions that are both wasteful and inefficient. Strategic consolidation of the approach to handling information should be seen as the goal. Too much critical intellectual property is lost without such planning.
Information processes need to be tailored to suit the company taking in to account the full information life cycle from creation to archiving and/or destruction. There is a strong need to change the way people handle, store and use information. Such change management is a major component in any information strategy. It is also often thought of as a one off step, this is wrong. Proper information handling and processes need to be part of business as usual. A healthy diet is for life, not just for a few weeks after Christmas.
Napoleon said that an army marches on its stomach, recognising that to be effective, an army needs good and plentiful food. Just as a badly fed army will not fight well – a badly informed company will not compete well.
|
-
Compliance is a word that continues to dominate business and IT thinking as deadlines approach (and then recede again, in some cases). One thing that is clear is that the current wave of compliance requirements, like Basel II and Sarbanes-Oxley will not be the last. A very clear message to CxOs relating to this was handed down recently in terms of a very long prison sentence – that sort of thing certainly clarifies the mind and boosts the budget, for ultimately its is them that pays. The UK has already had to deal with quite a lot of regulation – but how far off will a Euro - SOX style law really be?
The one thing they all demand is order. If you can account for every thing (meaning documents, databases, emails, etc) and how it is controlled – and you can show that you have taken good steps to prove a level of audit over it, you will be fine! This points to good document and records management and most importantly well designed and strongly enforced procedures. – This is not a problem that you will solve by technology alone. People may need to changing working habits – which in itself is a big challenge.
Now there are two main attitudes that you can take – firstly, that this is all a government-induced pain and let's see what we can do as the minimum, to scrape by, or secondly, the more positive and far thinking one, of seeing this as an opportunity to get properly organised and to sort out processes that have been neglected for years!
Of course, some would say that I am merely promoting compliance related services and some would therefore question my parentage. However, while yes, we are promoting assistance, there really is no good reason not to take the judo approach of turning the weight of the compliance burden to your own advantage? Now is the time to take a good long and holistic look at enterprise wide information architecture and information handling – not just at point solutions. It may seem more expensive – but it will save money in the long term.
So don't look for the halfhearted solution that will just do for now – because it will ultimately prove hard to keep going and may not be up to the job. It may be tempting to use a few sand bags for now, which might well keep the current level of water out - but perhaps now is the time for proper C-level defences - before the next wave hits.
To see more thoughts from Conchango around compliance go to I Love Compliance.
|
|
|
|