Social Media for enterprise – Do it properly or not at all

19 07 2010

First Blog on months. The birth of my baby girl Scarlett in December has a lot to do with that but not making excuses

A few months ago, I had the pleasure to attend the first day of the #SimplySummit , a conference for the communications professionals across the Uk.

There were some great speakers throughout the day, but Jim Ylisela and Steve Crescenzo were the ones that grabbed my attention. (interestingly they had to do this via Webcam as the Volcano meant they couldn’t get over from the States!)

Having seen Jim speak a few years ago I knew what to expect and he didn’t disappoint the army of people I had told about him, during the coffee break and lunch beforehand!

Essentially, they stated that every business should be using the right Social Media Tools. The thing was how puzzled some people were when they just didnt know where to start.

This got me thinking that SharePoint 2010 truly has got the potential to offer businesses the tools that their staff use outside of work in a working environment.

As I mentioned in my last post SharePoint 2010 offers true web 2.0 functionality and has the ability to engage the millennial / Generation Y that live, work and breathe through Social Networking.

If a forward thinking organisation truly wanted to embrace Social Media (i.e had the balls to do it!) SharePoint 2010  could offer LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter Web Parts with minimal coding effort.

Having this kind of functionality come up in the User Workshops all the time.

Sadly, I don’t think ‘Compliance’ allows this yet for most organisations but the willing is there.





SharePoint 2010 New Features explained for ‘the business’

18 03 2010

SharePoint 2010 –  The best bits

As promised in my last post, I’ve summarised my personal favourite features in SharePoint 2010, which I really think as a SharePoint Business Analyst will really matter to the businesses that will use them.

I’ve tried to keep the format for the ‘leyman’ but please do get in touch if you want me to clarify anything (or I’ve got something wrong!).

1)    Sites (Web Experience)

Microsoft have incorporated the Office Ribbon within SharePoint 2010. Not only does this allow, web editing ‘in place’ ( WYSIWYG, ‘Drag and Drop’ etc -  Like many other site builders have allowed for years!), but provide support for multiple browsers.

Workspace (previously called Groove) allows offline working and synchronisation. It also supports advanced features like bringing external business data offline. Its also smart enough to sync changes and not entire files!

Office Web Apps (Word, Excel, Powerpoint, OneNote etc)now means that not only can multiple people work on the same document.(Different people can work on different sections at the same time) Plus, you no longer have to have the latest version of Office stored locally on your laptop or PC. Its all done through the browser.

SharePoint Workspace Mobile Client, provides a clean way to view SharePoint on mobile devices and also allows offline access. This Allows search and navigation on content within a browser

2)    Communities (Enhanced Social Networking)

In true Web 2.0 fashion, Collaborative Content of Blogs, Wikis, Calendars, Discussions, Tasks, Contacts, Pictures, Video and Presence.

Social Feedback allows users to provide, Bookmarks, tagging and Ratings on ALL content types. Social Tagging allows all users to add tags to all forms of content.

User Profiles can now reflects expertise via Tagging or even make recommendations based on an Outlook or OCS plug-in that crawls your outbox and picks up the subject matters you most talk about. (This is  ‘opt-in’of course, so your boss won’t automatically know you are an expert on Fly Fishing due to your outbound emails)

MySites contain enhanced Newsfeed (like the Status update on facebook), personalised content and Quick Access to Content and social network. This also encompasses a facebook type ‘wall’ for letting users interact with each other the way they do in their personal lives.

People Connections show Online presence and also allow you to search colleagues using an Interactive  Organisation Browser (using Silverlight)

3)    Content

One of the most exciting features that I feel the business will really appreciate is Top down Taxonomy / Bottoms Up Social Tagging . Essentially, this lets Users (rather than the publisher) define what the content is (So someone might tag this blog post as “SharePoint 2010”, even though the title is completely different.) This means that content should be easier to find as the users are the ones labelling it.

Large Lists and Libraries now allow tens of Millions of documents to be stored (Big failing in MOSS 2007 was it struggled at 2,000+).  Enterprise Metadata generally

means it’s easier to apply Metadata (tags, keywords) and thus easier to find information.

Digital Asset Management now allows Thumbnails, Metadata and ratings for images & Video Streaming from SharePoint.

Governance & Records Management Features now make it a lot easier for compliance people to do their job using SharePoint.  

4) Search

For me, this is the best and most useful component of SharePoint.

SharePoint 2010 now provides a completely  Interactive Search Experience. Some much needed things like automatic search query completion (like Google or Bing), Spell Checking and Wild Cards (“Did you mean?”) generally make it easier to find stuff!. Another massive factor is generally Connectivity is a lot better.

Business Connectivity Services (BCS) replaces the Business Data Catalogue and makes it easier to both search external databases, but also provides the ability to ‘read and write’. So now, you can update the number ‘Chesney Hawkes – Greatest Hits’ albums you have in your externally stored inventory, all from within SharePoint. The great thing about this also is you can create Search Connectors without writing any code using SharePoint Designer. (Free tool that comes with within SharePoint).

For Enterprise customers, FAST can be utilised (which is the mother of all search!). This will allow users to search EVERYTHING! including multiple platforms, databases and other external systems used across the organisation.

There is a lot more relevance in the search results now, as this includes social data such as tagging and usage. People Search incorporates Social Networking algorithms, so results are displayed dependent on the degrees of separation between you and your searchee. (Think Linkedin style!) A Phonetic Search Algorithm for finding names is pretty cool also. (So people searching for me as ‘Lea Steevans’ will be able to find me now)

Increased Scale and Platform Flexibility now also makes it quicker and easier to search Millions of items.

4)    Insights (was B.I)

Insights will be much loved by the accounting types and generally anyone that is swamped by reporting numbers who needs to publish the data in an elegant, professional presentation style. Excel Services allows user rich visualisations such as Heat Maps and Spark lines present data. Think of a map that Police Forces could use that plots where Anti-Social behaviour is happening based on an Excel Spreadsheet and you get the drift.

Performance  Point Services now gives enhanced scorecards, dashboards KPI’s & navigation features.  SQL Server services such as Analysis Services and Reporting Services are now easier access for reporting.

Gemini is the name for the memory database that allows reporting on Excel Spreadsheets containing millions of lines of data without needing a developer.

Visio Services – Allows rich user rich diagrams to be produced within SharePoint and also includes SharePoint workflow designer. Very handy for process mapping!

5)    Composites (Custom Solutions for SharePoint)

As I said, Microsoft are really empowering the Power users and composites is a handy toolkit that gives competent users the tools they need to build their own applications without IT.  These are the main ones.

SharePoint Designer

  • Office Ribbon
  • User Customisation

InfoPath Forms Service

  • Easy way to build forms

Access Services

  • Lets you create and publish database applications

Sandbox Solutions

  • Allows custom code to be produced in local sites without affecting the whole SharePoint Platform E.G Webparts, Event Receivers. Same will apply for “SharePoint Online”.

Business Connectivity Services (was BDC)

  • 2 Way Connectivity

Hope you found this useful. Please do contact me





SharePoint 2010 – New features are ‘The Business’

3 03 2010

The rise and rise of the Information Worker (and SharePoint Business Analyst!)

A lot of noise has been created about the key features of SharePoint 2010 to date. However, it mainly seems to be the SharePoint Developers and SharePoint Consultants (Techies – Including those that work with me at Collabr8!) that are getting excited on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and other forums about SharePoint 2010 in general.

But what about ‘The Business’ users?

Talking to a few of the other attendees at the recent London meeting of SharePoint User Group UK, proved to me that here is a massive appetite for information about SharePoint 2010 from non-technical, business users, but not a lot of information out there easy to understand. You know those Techies just looove to talk code!

The good news for ‘The Business’ is that all of the language that Microsoft are using in their marketing collateral for SharePoint 2010 is not about the code, configuration or even permission levels but focussed on empowering the business user.

Just looking at their three tag lines (see pic of SharePoint Pizza) indicates that a there is going to be massive shift in the in the very near future. In the next decade businesses are going to rely less on IT Directors and more on operational staff to create the Business Systems and Applications they want, when they want.

Most business people are very technology literate these days and generally know their stuff. They have to. Gone are the days where an IT Director could baffle Stakeholders with Technical Jargon and a long list of excuses why things could not be done ‘Technically’ or ‘within the tight timescales’ the business needs. If you don’t believe me, just look at the Composites element of SharePoint to see where this is going.

Now this isn’t going to happen overnight. Also, I truly believe that there will ALWAYS be a need for technically astute professionals, who ensure their organisations remain at the cutting edge of technology to keep their organisations’ competitive advantage that they strive for. If anything, the shift in power will actually free up the time of the IT Departments by removing what they see as ‘menial’ tasks to focus on larger strategic issues.

For me, SharePoint 2010 also represents a huge opportunity for businesses of all sizes to start collaborating and sharing information in exactly the same way as their employees do in their personal lives.

In the next few days I will be posting my personal summary of the SharePoint 2010 key features, which I hope will help many others.





Welcome to my SharePoint Business Analyst blog

26 02 2010

Ok, it had to happen. With the amount of SharePoint Blogs that are out there, someone had to do a blog about the Non-technical side of the product surely!? As a SharePoint business Analyst, I thought why the hell not me?

Hopefully for those of you that know me (and those that don’t), you will find some of my general ramblings around SharePoint, Business Analysis, Agile and Scrum of interest.

As its 2.07am and my eight week old daughter Scarlett is crying her eyes out, screaming for milk, it wont be tonight!








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 322 other followers