danielBpatton

Content Strategist. SharePoint windbag. Music junkie. Dad.

@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.

Filed under  //   learning org   sharepoint   techcomm  

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.

Filed under  //   learning org   sharepoint   techcomm  

Turning clip art into custom icons (via the MS Office Blog)

Did you know PowerPoint includes vector clip art? That's right. Once you have a vector item in your working area, you can ungroup, manipulate, and regroup to your brand. Great trick.

Filed under  //   PowerPoint   graphics   intranets   techcomm  

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.

Filed under  //   content strategy   sharepoint   techcomm  

Channel 9 on workflows using Visio 2010 and SharePoint Designer 2010

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Visio 2010 and SharePoint Designer 2010 can be used in concert to create a workflow. This video describes how each tool plays a specific role in the development process. Visio allows the business analyst to define the process and SharePoint Designer allows the power user to implement the process. Visio and SharePoint Designer feature a roundtrip import/export of the file that enables an iterative process during workflow creation.
via channel9.msdn.com

The temptation is great to move to a product like Nintex Workflow versus standard SPD wizard interface. Interesting to see how this compares.

Filed under  //   learning org   sharepoint   techcomm