Tag sharepoint

#contentstrategy reads from @BillIves @collabguy @hjarche @marisacp51 @sggottlieb @tacanderson

Overcoming Information Overload on the Web: Part 3: Organic Semantics
from Ives, Bill [Portals and KM] by Bill Ives @BillIves

Information Quality Management (IQM): Assessing Your IQM Practice
from BitPipe: Content and Knowledge Management

Have you modeled your content effectively?
from Content Here by seth @sggottlieb

Content Strategy: How to Diversify Your Content
from CMSWire.com by Marisa Peacock @marisacp51

The Social Media Strategists Power Tools [Consumption]
from New Comm Biz by Tac Anderson @tacanderson

SharePoint Adoption Trends and Takeaways
from KMWorld WhitePapers

Defining Collaboration – 5. Collaboration Scenarios as a Way of Classifying Collaboration Technology
from Sampson, Michael (on Collaboration) by Michael Sampson @collabguy

Frictionless learning
from Jarche, Harold by Harold Jarche @hjarche

SharePoint governance: Information architecture’s role
from KMWorld Popular Stories

Enterprise Social Technology – Review
from Jarche, Harold by Harold Jarche @hjarche

@joeshepley “Build So They Will Come” on SP planning, via CMSWire #sharepoint #techcomm

What I want to do in this post is to walk through some ways to avoid the if we build it mentality and better tailor your SharePoint implementation to the people who matter the most — the end users.

There are four broad activity areas you need to focus on to not only understand your end-users’ needs, but have a fighting chance of meeting them as well:

  • User Segmentation
  • Use Case Analysis
  • Technology Mapping
  • Training and Communication

Nicely written piece on the aspects of SharePoint planning that tend to fall through the cracks.

Interesting that these are best practices followed by the typical user-advocacy roles that have been around for years (usability, online help, documentation, training, change management, etc.).

The difference here, from my perspective, lies in the tendency for these concerns to be “tacked on” to the project after the fact — and ultimately squeezed when budgets overrun elsewhere. Software teams and their executive stakeholders have a sense of the results they want from the tool and will focus exclusively on those ends. Adoption is abysmally slow as a result.

With an endlessly configurable platform solution such as SharePoint, there are no concrete “ends” to speak of. Implement once and empower vertically, is the model.

It is the responsibility of the SharePoint end-user community to develop its own pool of expertise, its own minimum capability standards under proper governance, its own collaboration maturity trajectory. It is equally the responsibility of line of business management to set goals, enable the creative conditions, and then get out of the way.

Microsoft deal to hype RIM tablet entry? via CMSWire #sharepoint

As Research in Motion (RIM) tries to find new markets and a competitive edge for its soon-to-be-released tablet PlayBook, the company has announced a partnership with Microsoft that will enable it to offer Office 365 services.

Read full story…

Cursory research revealed a few iPad integrations which may or may not be one-way views into an enterprise portal. Surely not extended to doc collaboration, advanced workflow, and web content managmenet (anyone correct me?)

Long-time enterprise-friendly RIM, with its massive corporate Blackberry footprint, could win over corporate types from IT to C-suite with whole-cloth enterprise productivity integration with SharePoint and Office 2010.

Effectively communicating the power of SharePoint to a business audience | SharePoint Analyst HQ

We need to find a better paradigm to communicate with business users and
decision makers in a way that is much more in tune of their organization. Why is
this important you ask? Why not simply just show the IT department the pie? The
fact is that SharePoint is a business tool. More often than not it’s the
business that will drive the implementation of SharePoint rather than the IT
department.

With most of us coming from a technical background we sometimes miss the mark
in engaging with this core audience that SharePoint will ultimately benefit.
Honestly I keep trying to make sure that I am adjusting my message and content
depending on the audience that I am speaking to. But let’s be honest it’s not
easy!

So here are some of the things that I keep in the back of my mind when I am
talking to organizations about the platform.

SharePoint Pod Show on “What is a SharePoint Analyst?”

In Episode 57 of the SharePoint Pod Show, Rob, Nick, and Brett catch up with
Michal Pisarek to discuss the topic of being or becoming a SharePoint
Analyst.

Interesting discussion at the intersection between SharePoint functionality and business need. Michal Pisarek is quick to admit he’s not a hardcore SharePoint developer, but he knows enough to fill the interpreter role.

Starting with the needs of the business, the whiteboard meetings, the interrogation of legacy systems, the card sorts, the pie-in-the-sky ideas — this is the domain of the SharePoint Analyst.

Pisarek makes the case for establishing trust with business stakeholders first, speaking their language, and diving deep into the potential bottom line impacts BEFORE bringing in a developer. By doing so, quite often a deliverable featuring only out-of-the-box capability will suffice.

Managers love the turnaround time.

Developers love having their time protected.

Everybody wins.

Total Access Emailer 2010 sends Email Blasts from Microsoft Access 2010

Total Access Emailer is the most
popular Microsoft Access email program. The email addresses in your
Microsoft Access databases are a valuable asset. Whether it’s a list of
customers, employees, friends, prospects, or other contacts, email
offers an efficient way to communicate with them. Imagine the power
of your emails by merging that with all your other information for each
person.

Total Access Emailer runs directly from your Access database as a
Microsoft Access add-in with an interactive Wizard interface to guide
you through the process. Easily create personalized text and HTML emails
for each recipient using data from your tables to customize parts of the
subject and message. You can attach Access reports as PDF files filtered
for each recipient so they only receive their pages. The attachments can
even be compressed into a zip file and password protected.

Your selections are automatically saved
so you can run your email blasts again as your data changes.

A runtime library with programmatic interface is included to automate
the sending of email blasts and managing user settings through VBA. A royalty-free runtime license is included
in the retail product,
so you add email to your applications and distribute it
your end users.

If it can be used with linked SharePoint lists, sounds like the next step up in SP-enabled newsletter management.

Blessed be the Integrators

Img00448-20110313-1323b

Too many business users today view SharePoint as a place; another link to keep up with among the overflow of internal portals, applications, tools, wikis, and other supposedly useful repositories your organization throws at them and expects them to keep up with.

With the growth of SharePoint through the 2007 (MOSS) release and into the latest 2010 version, more and more enlightened companies are seeing the potential in SharePoint as an application and productivity platform. And while the transition can be painful politically, and the change management dreadfully slow, the consolidation of pet point solutions onto the SharePoint platform is proving a welcome reduction in enterprise server clutter.

But how do you manage the human transition from old-school process silos, isolated legacy applications, innovation inertia, and so much email, to a more streamlined environment leveraging the power of SharePoint?

You need smart planning and governance, surely. Of course you want to prioritize projects that will offer the most bang for the most users (if not the most “visible” users). Often this strategy takes the form of your corporate intranet. “Let’s move our exiting portal onto SharePoint,” say the powers. “We’ll rebuild the organizational chart there, give every team a home page, add some company news and a yellow pages, and voila.”

This top-down approach can look very attractive through a telescope. Through a microscope, though, not so much.

While you’re implementing your intranet (check), designing the portal layers (check), adding your company directory (check), building out team sites (check), and pivoting to your largest/loudest internal clients for custom development (check, check, check), where does that leave the average worker?

With more links to keep up with, that’s where. Legacy applications, manual processes, paper forms, email attachment ping-pong, and a new link to the fancy new intranet.

Maybe your plan is to stabilize the portal, put out the major fires, then swoop back in with your SharePoint analysts and your trainers, and enlighten your workers with the keys to improved collaboration. “You know that new intranet we rolled out a ways back? Well look what else it can do…”

Through your telescope you’ll see a cluster of work groups longing to be rescued from their medieval ways, waiting for that leader with vision and a great tool to lift them oily and wet from the mire.

Check your microscope, though, and I bet you’ll find workers jaded by promises, still smarting from failed initiatives of the past, and resistant to change of any kind. A few might be adopting tools of their own that may or may not be on your roadmap. All are overworked, underappreciated, and focused on getting by with what they have.

On the bright side, SharePoint is a large pond getting larger. As its capabilities grow into more and more areas, more and more expertise from different parts of your organization can play a part in its success.

Where there are pockets of adoption and grassroots innovation in the enterprise, where there is growth propagated by those outside the official roadmap, and where the industrious have taken it upon themselves to improve their lot, recognition and encouragement must follow. These groups are the ones bridging the gap between top-down aesthetics and bottom-up results. These are the integrators.

The Format is the Message – SharePoint Expert Blog

The story here isn’t that much of our virtual office park bonding is over menial, repetitive looping. It’s that we’re loopy. We’re there at the behest of the machinery. Reformatting as the basis for knowledge work crosses the line from using information to being used. And this is no cuddly humanist call to arms. There is no Luddite rejection. I’m not channeling Amish friendship bread. This is the thornier question of whether we’re better off freed of the mental labor that a well-run SharePoint farm is meant to eat for lunch, or, whether we’re happier rekeying the same tables into our siloed data fortesses

Get past the Dennis Miller-ish eyeball kicks in the first sections, and some interesting questions are posed here.

Forrester, KMWorld, and the evolving Content & Collaboration (C&C) function #contentstrategy

Putting the right people in place to lead content and collaboration (C&C)
initiatives for enterprises and government agencies is a growing imperative. The
skills mix required to deliver and to scale up enterprisewide workplace
solutions—like enterprise social tools, infrastructure for engaging Web
experiences and content management—is changing. Raw technology skills are of
lesser importance than in the past; instead, today’s content and collaboration
professional needs to be able to influence stakeholders across IT, legal,
communications, marketing and human resources.

In partnership with KMWorld, Forrester Research recently surveyed more than 200
professionals engaged in those initiatives. Their goal—supporting anywhere,
anytime access to information and expertise—remains unchanged. But the people
making those objectives happen are now highly compensated managers leading
cross-functional teams, particularly in sectors like technology and
telecommunications, financial services, government and business/professional
services.

A very nice encapsulation of what my career has evolved into. Mentions diversity of job titles and official roles in our ranks (a sign of immaturity overall, I’m certain), a broad cross-secton of industry application, where companies are investing, how much salary we tend to make and associated project responsibilities, barriers to success, and future direction. Of note: “Among other changes, Forrester believes the role of the C&C professionals will: organize and invest according to the industry they serve; focus less on technology, and more on people, process and change; orchestrate the interests of multiple functions; and take a greater role in mobilizing the enterprise.

Benefits Of SharePoint 2010 As A Product Platform (via Slideshare)