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© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 1
Metataxis
SharePoint in a
Regulated Environment
(Or, can you really do DM/RM with SharePoint?)
Marc Stephenson
March 2014
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 2
Yes
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 3
But…
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 4
About Metataxis
• Information architecture/management consultancy
• Not SharePoint specific – not Microsoft partners
• Worked on 40+ SharePoint projects
• QA, strategy, requirements, IA, design, implementation, training,
governance – everything but development
• Micro-organisations (20 staff) to corporates (100,000+ staff)
• Projects from 2 days to 2 years
• We like and use SharePoint…2003, 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016…
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 5
What is SharePoint?
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 6
What is SharePoint?
“Office SharePoint Server 2007 provides a single,
integrated location where employees can efficiently find
organizational resources, access corporate knowledge,
and leverage business insight to make better-informed
decisions.”
“The business collaboration platform for the enterprise and
the web.
- Connect and empower people.
- Cut costs with a unified infrastructure.
- Rapidly respond to business needs.”
“SharePoint 2013 is the new way to work together. A
simplified user experience helps you organize, sync and
share all your content. New social capabilities make it easy
to share ideas, keep track of what your colleagues are
working on, and discover experts you never knew existed.”
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 7
SharePoint according to Microsoft
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 8
SharePoint according to Microsoft
Share
• Put social to work
• Share your stuff
• SharePoint on the go
Organize
• Keep projects on track
• Keep your team connected
• Store and sync docs
Discover
• Find experts
• Discover insights and answers
• Find what you are looking for
Build
• Apps in the cloud
• Publish apps
• Eye-catching sites
Manage
• Costs
• Risk
• Your time
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 9
Why is SharePoint so popular?
• Key to Microsoft’s software vision of the future
• Very well funded
• Many organisations already have it…kind of…
• License is cheap (relatively…)
• Very broad and deep functionality
• Strongly integrated into Office
• Large ecology of products and services
• The top in many Gartner Magic Quadrants
• Because it’s Microsoft
• Because there is no real alternative
• Because it’s good, in general
• Or good enough, for RM?
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 10
Why does SharePoint fail most often?
1. No information architecture
2. No ongoing governance
3. Not enough training/support
And also…
4. Unrealistic expectations – stakeholders and project team
5. Too much configuration and customisation
6. No support for the cultural change needed
7. The project is IT driven
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 11
Some SharePoint statistics*
• SharePoint Projects
• 33% of organisations are “struggling”
• 28% are “stalled”
• 40% are “moving forward”
• 6% describe SharePoint as “a great success”
• SharePoint and records management
• 45% prepared to use it (16% of which need third party products or customisation)
• 11% of small organisations feel SharePoint still can’t meet their needs
• 24% of large organisations feel SharePoint still can’t meet their needs
• 21% already using a dedicated RM system (mostly not linked to SharePoint)
* AIIM Industry Watch SharePoint 2013 “Clouding the issues”, October 2013, © AIIM 2013, www.aiim.org
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 12
What can SharePoint do?
• Collaboration
• Social Media
• Web Content Management
• Document Management
• Records Management
• Business Intelligence
• Workflow
• Electronic forms
• Enterprise search
• Provide mobile access
• Provide offline access
• Be configured easily
• Be customised easily
• Be integrated easily
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 13
In other words…
It’s a general purpose
enterprise information management
platform, not an application
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 14
Document Management
in SharePoint
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 15
Document Management
• Create, edit, delete
• Find – search, browse, filter, view, sort, group
• Versioning - major, minor or none
• Check in and check out
• Move and copy not simple
• Edit “in page”
• Security and access control
• Auditing
• Rich metadata configuration and management
• Rich structuring options – i.e. fileplans
• Rich navigation options
• Workflows
• Significantly better than any network drive
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 16
Records Management
in SharePoint
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 17
Records Management
• Since SP2010 – now a viable RM system
• Integrated into ECM
• Proper scalability - 10s of million records
• Better functionality
• New functionality
• Better than nothing (includes paper systems)
• Increasingly being used – big RM system procurement gone
• Manuals very thin on the ground
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 18
Records Management functionality
• Manual and automatic record declaration
• Document/record routing mechanisms
• Retention and disposal rules – event, trigger, action, (workflow), (code)
• Retention and disposal can be based on fileplan or content type
• Support holds and e-discovery
• Supports auditing and reporting
• “In-place” and separate “records centre” models
• Very configurable and therefore flexible – but config heavy
• But very IA dependent
• Significant simplification of the RM regime often needed
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 19
Records Management weaknesses
• Email capture
• Digital preservation - needs add-in and/or code
• Complex non-document capture needs add-ins and/or code
• Office has no RM features
• Physical RM – possible with config, add-ons exist
• Security uses the “containment model”
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 20
Records Management strengths
• Retention and disposal – ok
• Capture and declaring – ok
• Security – mostly good
• Metadata – very good
• Search – very good
• Administration – mostly good
• Fileplan and structuring – mostly good
• Workflow – ok
• Integration – very good
• Offline and remote access – good
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 21
Many add-on options for the gaps
• Managing physical records
• File format analysis
• Capturing web pages as records
• Outlook email management 
• Scanning/capture
• Security/permission management 
• Auditing and reporting
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 22
Add-on issues
• Free to very expensive
• Simple to complex
• Easy to hard to integrate
• Often overlapping functions
• Many licence models
• Evaluation of each a project in itself
• Make sure you have budget
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 23
What do I need to do to
get SharePoint right?
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 24
Understand the context
• Your SharePoint implementation needs a context
• With respect to overall information management
• To be successful you need to think about the big picture…
• …even if you don’t “do” all the big picture
• Not doing so risks an unsuccessful project
• Things to think about:
• Why am I doing this?
• What else has to happen before SharePoint?
• What else has to happen after SharePoint?
• What other things do I need to think about?
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 25
Consider existing systems
• Will those (non-)SharePoint systems persist?
• DM, intranet and social media especially vulnerable
• What other “systems” can be brought into the fold?
• SharePoint as front-end, a homogenising layer
• Simple information systems easy to (re-)create:
• Logs, registers
• Excel and Access
• Very niche systems
• Small number of users
• Paper
• Commonly – contracts, FOI, planning, bugs, resourcing
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 26
Consider process changes
• Use SharePoint as a change agent – it will be anyway
• Use it to change the information culture
• Use it to change (streamline?) the way things are done
• You may have to change existing processes…
• …or spend a lot of time and money
• …go with the SharePoint ways of working
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 27
Also think about
• What is the business case?
• Is there buy in from
• senior management?
• middle management?
• users?
• 80-20% rule, is “good enough” good enough?
• Really bespoke development?
• Skills in house?
• Skills transfer?
• Don’t under estimate effort - this is unstructured information!
• Don’t assume functionality - beware of the documentation
• A project plan ≠ success - get a PM who knows IM
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 28
Think of the “Big Picture”
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 29
Collect an information inventory
• Sometimes called an “information audit”
• May overlap with a “system audit” – but not the same
• Aim is how to get “a handle" on your information
• Or discover the “information landscape”
• The picture now, distinct from what it might be
• Aims are to find out:
• What information exists
• What it is
• Who owns it
• Where it is
• How much there is
• How it is used
• How it relates to other information
• What are its characteristics – size, date, format etc.
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 30
Have a strategy
• What are you trying to achieve? And why?
• Answers more complex than a “typical” IM system
• Share Point's huge depth and breadth
• What functional areas do I need to:
• Architect? (all width first at least)
• Implement? (in phases)
• Plan for?
• A good plan:
• Intranet, DM, collaboration – do at once
• Social media – if appropriate…
• Extranet (collaboration) – factor into IA (infrastructure issues)
• RM – really factor into IA – even if you don’t do it
• BI – factor into IA but can come latter
• Internet – think about last (infrastructure issues)
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 31
Have an information architecture
One definition of an information architecture is:
A way of organising your information to most benefit
This covers at least:
• Fileplan
• Metadata
• Taxonomies
• Navigation
• Wireframes, look and feel
• Findability (not just search)
• Security model
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 32
Have a fileplan
• Maybe considered an old-fashioned idea, but…
• SharePoint has many mandatory structures
• Must consider structure functionality
• Must consider finding UI (navigation and search)
• Must consider document volumes
• Must consider folders to create, if at all?
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 33
SharePoint fileplan
Folder
Policy
Web Part
Web Page
View
Document
Document Set
Content Type
Document
Column
Workflow
Workflow
Workflow
Policy
Policy Site
Site Collection
Site
Library
Column
Column List
Content Type
ColumnPolicy Content TypeWorkflow
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 34
Consider the wider implementation
• Be realistic – don’t try to boil the ocean
• Plan for complexity, but…
• …implement with simplicity (think big, act small)
• The right methodology – agile, but beware of “prototypes”
• The right phasing – may ways to break it up
• New systems require cultural and practise changes
• Have a communications plan - What’s happening, when?
• Start infrastructure very early – many options
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 35
Think about resources
• Information architecture
• Information management
• Visual design
• Usability
• Infrastructure/technical architecture
• Software development
• Programme/project management
• Communications & marketing
• Change management
• Supplier management
• Trainers
• Technical support
• Governance
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 36
Have a migration strategy
• New systems need to be populated
• That’s why you create them in the first place
• Your information is valuable
• Real information in new systems helps users
• And system creators (testing, training)
• Full migration allows decommissioning of old system/s
• Saves money (hardware, licences)
• Saves effort (maintenance)
• Reduces risk (support elapsed, cleaner information)
• Simplifies your “information estate” and “IT estate”
• Strategy on semantic (what), technical (how), planning (when)
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 37
Don’t forget the training
• System should be as simple as possible, but some training always needed
• Styles
• Drop-in sessions
• Formal teaching – expert and standard levels
• Online FAQs and help
• Written – Quick Reference Guide only
• Extent
• IT (easy to get)
• IM about the system (harder to get) but more important
• Floor walking – kills many birds with one stone
• Helps less IT/IM literate without slowing down others
• Support when its needed – actual and imagined problems
• Builds insight from floor walker
• But hot-desks complicate it
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 38
Remember user engagement
• System will only succeed if users believe it is relevant and useful
• Engage with users to elicit and confirm requirements
• Communicating effectively with users
• Prior, during and after development
• Communication should be frequent enough to build interest, but…
• …not be too onerous of user time
• Show added value to users’ working lives
• Written communication can be effective if not too complex
• Seeing the system as it is developed is very powerful
• Incentives and punishments for using/not using the system
• Get metrics (qualitative and quantitative)
• “Naming and shaming” - works for the good and bad
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 39
Recognise the importance of culture
Communication, training, incentives/punishments can only take things so far
Must change the culture (shared history, expectations, unwritten rules, customs)
The system must become part of the culture via fostering:
• Leadership
• All senior staff actively endorse the system and promote its usage
• System usage part of appraisals, inductions and organisational development
• System “champions”
• Engage, encourage and support “change agents”’ or enthusiasts
• Grass-roots activists different but as important as senior support
• Understand working practise
• Goal is to encourage users to work more effectively
• Must save users time and not burden them with more work (eventually…)
• Understand user work patterns and account for them
• Cultural change must be worked on continually and must be resourced
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 40
Ensure you have ongoing governance
• Policies
• Procedures
• Roles and responsibilities for:
• Board
• Senior Managers
• Technical Specialists
• All Staff
• Consultants and Contractors
• Strategic partners
• Relationship between IT and IM
• Legal and compliance issues
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 41
Think of what you are governing
• IT governance (servers, backup, network)
• DBA (database admin)
• IM governance (IM policy adherence – pan-system?)
• SharePoint (architecture) governance (SharePoint owner)
• Site governance (site owners)
• Content governance (comms and marketing)
• Records management governance (RM)
• Legal/compliance governance (Legal)
• Integration governance (integration architecture – pan-system?)
• Individuals (its their information) or is it?
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 42
Governance top tips
• Information architecture 
• Use templates
• Gateway processes
• Archive process
• Active site owners 
• IM responsibilities part of competencies
• Foster culture of responsibility for all users 
• Carrots and sticks – easier to be good than bad!
• Use “nudges”
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 43
Wrap-up
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 44
What SharePoint isn’t...
• An application – it’s an entire platform or toolkit
• A panacea (despite what Microsoft/IT departments think)
• As simple as you think
• Usually simple to configure
• Usually simple to migrate large volumes of content to
• Usually simple to manage
• Easy to get right (but it is very easy to “just do”)
• Industrial strength RM
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 45
What SharePoint is/will be...
• Very good for most IM tasks – especially for SMEs
• Good enough for RM? Better than nothing
• Here to stay
• Ubiquitous
• An entire low entry software economy
• Constantly improving – SharePoint 2016?
• Very customisable
• Very integratable – big and small players
• Relatively cheap
• The death of all other IM systems?
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 46
Final thought
It’s all about
the information
© Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 47
Questions?
marc.stephenson@metataxis.com
www.metataxis.com
Metataxis

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SharePoint in a Regulated Environment

  • 1. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 1 Metataxis SharePoint in a Regulated Environment (Or, can you really do DM/RM with SharePoint?) Marc Stephenson March 2014
  • 2. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 2 Yes
  • 3. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 3 But…
  • 4. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 4 About Metataxis • Information architecture/management consultancy • Not SharePoint specific – not Microsoft partners • Worked on 40+ SharePoint projects • QA, strategy, requirements, IA, design, implementation, training, governance – everything but development • Micro-organisations (20 staff) to corporates (100,000+ staff) • Projects from 2 days to 2 years • We like and use SharePoint…2003, 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016…
  • 5. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 5 What is SharePoint?
  • 6. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 6 What is SharePoint? “Office SharePoint Server 2007 provides a single, integrated location where employees can efficiently find organizational resources, access corporate knowledge, and leverage business insight to make better-informed decisions.” “The business collaboration platform for the enterprise and the web. - Connect and empower people. - Cut costs with a unified infrastructure. - Rapidly respond to business needs.” “SharePoint 2013 is the new way to work together. A simplified user experience helps you organize, sync and share all your content. New social capabilities make it easy to share ideas, keep track of what your colleagues are working on, and discover experts you never knew existed.”
  • 7. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 7 SharePoint according to Microsoft
  • 8. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 8 SharePoint according to Microsoft Share • Put social to work • Share your stuff • SharePoint on the go Organize • Keep projects on track • Keep your team connected • Store and sync docs Discover • Find experts • Discover insights and answers • Find what you are looking for Build • Apps in the cloud • Publish apps • Eye-catching sites Manage • Costs • Risk • Your time
  • 9. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 9 Why is SharePoint so popular? • Key to Microsoft’s software vision of the future • Very well funded • Many organisations already have it…kind of… • License is cheap (relatively…) • Very broad and deep functionality • Strongly integrated into Office • Large ecology of products and services • The top in many Gartner Magic Quadrants • Because it’s Microsoft • Because there is no real alternative • Because it’s good, in general • Or good enough, for RM?
  • 10. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 10 Why does SharePoint fail most often? 1. No information architecture 2. No ongoing governance 3. Not enough training/support And also… 4. Unrealistic expectations – stakeholders and project team 5. Too much configuration and customisation 6. No support for the cultural change needed 7. The project is IT driven
  • 11. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 11 Some SharePoint statistics* • SharePoint Projects • 33% of organisations are “struggling” • 28% are “stalled” • 40% are “moving forward” • 6% describe SharePoint as “a great success” • SharePoint and records management • 45% prepared to use it (16% of which need third party products or customisation) • 11% of small organisations feel SharePoint still can’t meet their needs • 24% of large organisations feel SharePoint still can’t meet their needs • 21% already using a dedicated RM system (mostly not linked to SharePoint) * AIIM Industry Watch SharePoint 2013 “Clouding the issues”, October 2013, © AIIM 2013, www.aiim.org
  • 12. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 12 What can SharePoint do? • Collaboration • Social Media • Web Content Management • Document Management • Records Management • Business Intelligence • Workflow • Electronic forms • Enterprise search • Provide mobile access • Provide offline access • Be configured easily • Be customised easily • Be integrated easily
  • 13. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 13 In other words… It’s a general purpose enterprise information management platform, not an application
  • 14. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 14 Document Management in SharePoint
  • 15. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 15 Document Management • Create, edit, delete • Find – search, browse, filter, view, sort, group • Versioning - major, minor or none • Check in and check out • Move and copy not simple • Edit “in page” • Security and access control • Auditing • Rich metadata configuration and management • Rich structuring options – i.e. fileplans • Rich navigation options • Workflows • Significantly better than any network drive
  • 16. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 16 Records Management in SharePoint
  • 17. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 17 Records Management • Since SP2010 – now a viable RM system • Integrated into ECM • Proper scalability - 10s of million records • Better functionality • New functionality • Better than nothing (includes paper systems) • Increasingly being used – big RM system procurement gone • Manuals very thin on the ground
  • 18. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 18 Records Management functionality • Manual and automatic record declaration • Document/record routing mechanisms • Retention and disposal rules – event, trigger, action, (workflow), (code) • Retention and disposal can be based on fileplan or content type • Support holds and e-discovery • Supports auditing and reporting • “In-place” and separate “records centre” models • Very configurable and therefore flexible – but config heavy • But very IA dependent • Significant simplification of the RM regime often needed
  • 19. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 19 Records Management weaknesses • Email capture • Digital preservation - needs add-in and/or code • Complex non-document capture needs add-ins and/or code • Office has no RM features • Physical RM – possible with config, add-ons exist • Security uses the “containment model”
  • 20. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 20 Records Management strengths • Retention and disposal – ok • Capture and declaring – ok • Security – mostly good • Metadata – very good • Search – very good • Administration – mostly good • Fileplan and structuring – mostly good • Workflow – ok • Integration – very good • Offline and remote access – good
  • 21. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 21 Many add-on options for the gaps • Managing physical records • File format analysis • Capturing web pages as records • Outlook email management  • Scanning/capture • Security/permission management  • Auditing and reporting
  • 22. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 22 Add-on issues • Free to very expensive • Simple to complex • Easy to hard to integrate • Often overlapping functions • Many licence models • Evaluation of each a project in itself • Make sure you have budget
  • 23. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 23 What do I need to do to get SharePoint right?
  • 24. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 24 Understand the context • Your SharePoint implementation needs a context • With respect to overall information management • To be successful you need to think about the big picture… • …even if you don’t “do” all the big picture • Not doing so risks an unsuccessful project • Things to think about: • Why am I doing this? • What else has to happen before SharePoint? • What else has to happen after SharePoint? • What other things do I need to think about?
  • 25. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 25 Consider existing systems • Will those (non-)SharePoint systems persist? • DM, intranet and social media especially vulnerable • What other “systems” can be brought into the fold? • SharePoint as front-end, a homogenising layer • Simple information systems easy to (re-)create: • Logs, registers • Excel and Access • Very niche systems • Small number of users • Paper • Commonly – contracts, FOI, planning, bugs, resourcing
  • 26. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 26 Consider process changes • Use SharePoint as a change agent – it will be anyway • Use it to change the information culture • Use it to change (streamline?) the way things are done • You may have to change existing processes… • …or spend a lot of time and money • …go with the SharePoint ways of working
  • 27. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 27 Also think about • What is the business case? • Is there buy in from • senior management? • middle management? • users? • 80-20% rule, is “good enough” good enough? • Really bespoke development? • Skills in house? • Skills transfer? • Don’t under estimate effort - this is unstructured information! • Don’t assume functionality - beware of the documentation • A project plan ≠ success - get a PM who knows IM
  • 28. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 28 Think of the “Big Picture”
  • 29. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 29 Collect an information inventory • Sometimes called an “information audit” • May overlap with a “system audit” – but not the same • Aim is how to get “a handle" on your information • Or discover the “information landscape” • The picture now, distinct from what it might be • Aims are to find out: • What information exists • What it is • Who owns it • Where it is • How much there is • How it is used • How it relates to other information • What are its characteristics – size, date, format etc.
  • 30. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 30 Have a strategy • What are you trying to achieve? And why? • Answers more complex than a “typical” IM system • Share Point's huge depth and breadth • What functional areas do I need to: • Architect? (all width first at least) • Implement? (in phases) • Plan for? • A good plan: • Intranet, DM, collaboration – do at once • Social media – if appropriate… • Extranet (collaboration) – factor into IA (infrastructure issues) • RM – really factor into IA – even if you don’t do it • BI – factor into IA but can come latter • Internet – think about last (infrastructure issues)
  • 31. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 31 Have an information architecture One definition of an information architecture is: A way of organising your information to most benefit This covers at least: • Fileplan • Metadata • Taxonomies • Navigation • Wireframes, look and feel • Findability (not just search) • Security model
  • 32. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 32 Have a fileplan • Maybe considered an old-fashioned idea, but… • SharePoint has many mandatory structures • Must consider structure functionality • Must consider finding UI (navigation and search) • Must consider document volumes • Must consider folders to create, if at all?
  • 33. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 33 SharePoint fileplan Folder Policy Web Part Web Page View Document Document Set Content Type Document Column Workflow Workflow Workflow Policy Policy Site Site Collection Site Library Column Column List Content Type ColumnPolicy Content TypeWorkflow
  • 34. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 34 Consider the wider implementation • Be realistic – don’t try to boil the ocean • Plan for complexity, but… • …implement with simplicity (think big, act small) • The right methodology – agile, but beware of “prototypes” • The right phasing – may ways to break it up • New systems require cultural and practise changes • Have a communications plan - What’s happening, when? • Start infrastructure very early – many options
  • 35. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 35 Think about resources • Information architecture • Information management • Visual design • Usability • Infrastructure/technical architecture • Software development • Programme/project management • Communications & marketing • Change management • Supplier management • Trainers • Technical support • Governance
  • 36. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 36 Have a migration strategy • New systems need to be populated • That’s why you create them in the first place • Your information is valuable • Real information in new systems helps users • And system creators (testing, training) • Full migration allows decommissioning of old system/s • Saves money (hardware, licences) • Saves effort (maintenance) • Reduces risk (support elapsed, cleaner information) • Simplifies your “information estate” and “IT estate” • Strategy on semantic (what), technical (how), planning (when)
  • 37. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 37 Don’t forget the training • System should be as simple as possible, but some training always needed • Styles • Drop-in sessions • Formal teaching – expert and standard levels • Online FAQs and help • Written – Quick Reference Guide only • Extent • IT (easy to get) • IM about the system (harder to get) but more important • Floor walking – kills many birds with one stone • Helps less IT/IM literate without slowing down others • Support when its needed – actual and imagined problems • Builds insight from floor walker • But hot-desks complicate it
  • 38. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 38 Remember user engagement • System will only succeed if users believe it is relevant and useful • Engage with users to elicit and confirm requirements • Communicating effectively with users • Prior, during and after development • Communication should be frequent enough to build interest, but… • …not be too onerous of user time • Show added value to users’ working lives • Written communication can be effective if not too complex • Seeing the system as it is developed is very powerful • Incentives and punishments for using/not using the system • Get metrics (qualitative and quantitative) • “Naming and shaming” - works for the good and bad
  • 39. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 39 Recognise the importance of culture Communication, training, incentives/punishments can only take things so far Must change the culture (shared history, expectations, unwritten rules, customs) The system must become part of the culture via fostering: • Leadership • All senior staff actively endorse the system and promote its usage • System usage part of appraisals, inductions and organisational development • System “champions” • Engage, encourage and support “change agents”’ or enthusiasts • Grass-roots activists different but as important as senior support • Understand working practise • Goal is to encourage users to work more effectively • Must save users time and not burden them with more work (eventually…) • Understand user work patterns and account for them • Cultural change must be worked on continually and must be resourced
  • 40. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 40 Ensure you have ongoing governance • Policies • Procedures • Roles and responsibilities for: • Board • Senior Managers • Technical Specialists • All Staff • Consultants and Contractors • Strategic partners • Relationship between IT and IM • Legal and compliance issues
  • 41. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 41 Think of what you are governing • IT governance (servers, backup, network) • DBA (database admin) • IM governance (IM policy adherence – pan-system?) • SharePoint (architecture) governance (SharePoint owner) • Site governance (site owners) • Content governance (comms and marketing) • Records management governance (RM) • Legal/compliance governance (Legal) • Integration governance (integration architecture – pan-system?) • Individuals (its their information) or is it?
  • 42. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 42 Governance top tips • Information architecture  • Use templates • Gateway processes • Archive process • Active site owners  • IM responsibilities part of competencies • Foster culture of responsibility for all users  • Carrots and sticks – easier to be good than bad! • Use “nudges”
  • 43. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 43 Wrap-up
  • 44. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 44 What SharePoint isn’t... • An application – it’s an entire platform or toolkit • A panacea (despite what Microsoft/IT departments think) • As simple as you think • Usually simple to configure • Usually simple to migrate large volumes of content to • Usually simple to manage • Easy to get right (but it is very easy to “just do”) • Industrial strength RM
  • 45. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 45 What SharePoint is/will be... • Very good for most IM tasks – especially for SMEs • Good enough for RM? Better than nothing • Here to stay • Ubiquitous • An entire low entry software economy • Constantly improving – SharePoint 2016? • Very customisable • Very integratable – big and small players • Relatively cheap • The death of all other IM systems?
  • 46. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 46 Final thought It’s all about the information
  • 47. © Metataxis 2014 Designing the information-centric environment since 2002 Slide 47 Questions? marc.stephenson@metataxis.com www.metataxis.com Metataxis