SharePoint 2007: Gateway Drug to Enterprise Social Tools

Overview

The last couple of years I have had many conversations with a broad selection of mid-sized to large organizations. Some of these are customers of mine or potential customers while others are conversations I have had, but all having the similar discussion about social tools in the enterprise. What follows is a collection of snippets from those conversations regarding Microsoft SharePoint 2007, most are not publicly attributed as they were not intended to be “on the record”.

One common element from all of the discussions is the frustration nearly all of these organization have with their experience with Microsoft SharePoint 2007. The comments are based on those spending one month to a year with the tool (the six month to one year club with tools offer best insight).

SharePoint does some things rather well, but it is not a great tool (or even passable tool) for broad social interaction inside enterprise related to the focus of Enterprise 2.0. SharePoint works well for organization prescribed groups that live in hierarchies and are focussed on strict processes and defined sign-offs. Most organization have a need for a tool that does what SharePoint does well.

This older, prescribed category of enterprise tool needs is where we have been in the past, but this is not where organizations are moving to and trying to get to with Enterprise 2.0 mindsets and tools. The new approach is toward embracing the shift toward horizontal organizations, open sharing, self-organizing groups around subjects that matter to individuals as well as the organization. These new approaches are filling gaps that have long existed and need resolution.

Broad Footprint

What SharePoint 2007 Does Well

Microsoft SharePoint 2007 seems to be in every enterprise I talk to, at least somewhere. It is used if a variety of different ways. When SharePoint is included with addition of Microsoft Office Online (MOSS) is a helpful addition for simple use of these older prescribed methods. MOSS is also good at finalizing documents that are the result of a collective, to group, to collaboration knowledge work process. MOSS and SharePoint are not great at anything but the last step of formalizing the document for distribution in another workflow.

A recent report from AIIM that was written-up by CMS Wire in “Study Finds SharePoint Primarily Used for File Sharing” states “47% use it primarily for file sharing (and/or as an internal Portal 47%)”.

How Did We Get Here?

There is one common point I have heard with nearly every company I have talked with over the last couple years, MS SharePoint 2007 is nearly ubiquitous in deployment. Nearly every organization has deployed SharePoint in some form or another. Many organization have tested it or have only deployed pieces of it. The AIIM survey reported by CMS Wire states: “83% currently use, or planning to use, SharePoint”.

Organizations either sent their IT out for training on SharePoint 2007 and/or brought in consultants to help build an implementation that fit their requirements. Most of the requirements IT departments started with were rather thinly informed, as they have nearly all stated after using SharePoint for a month, most realize after six months or so, their requirements are vastly different than what their initial requirements were, as they have learned more deeply about social tools in the enterprise.

Many who deployed SharePoint, thought it was going to be the bridge that delivered Enterprise 2.0 and a solid platform for social tools in the enterprise is summed up statement, “We went from 5 silos in our organization to hundreds in a month after deploying SharePoint”. They continue, “There is great information being shared and flowing into the system, but we don’t know it exists, nor can we easily share it, nor do much of anything with that information.” I heard this from an organization about 2 years ago in a private meeting and have been hearing near similar statements since. This is completely counter to the Enterprise 2.0 hopes and wishes they had for SharePoint. They were of the mindset that open sharing & having the organization and individuals benefit from a social platform.

MS Marketing’s Promise

The Microsoft marketing people seem to have performed their usual, extend what the product can do to the edges of its capabilities (and occasionally beyond) to map to customer stated desires. In 2006 and 2007 the advent of social computing on the web (Web 2.0) had entered the hormone raging stage gathering attention in boardrooms and IT departments who had been playing around with the ideas of bringing these tools inside the firewall in an official manner. The desire for social software to be part of the enterprise was an interest and desire.

The Microsoft marketing materials they focus on “collaboration and social computing”, which is more of a document management and workflow process tool that they put the more fashionable moniker on. But, it is this Microsoft marketing that engendered many organizations to the idea of the value and promise of social computing inside the firewall and Enterprise 2.0. Microsoft’s marketing legitimized the marketplace, but in typical Microsoft form did not exactly deliver on the promise of marketing.

Part of the promise of SharePoint is a malleable platform, which many developers who work across platforms complain is one of the least malleable and easy to develop on platforms. There are many constraints built into SharePoint and developers for SharePoint are not cheap. Development cycles for SharePoint as said to be about one third to half longer than most other options. At the Enterprise 2.0 Conference this past Summer in Boston, Lockheed Martin had a session demonstrating what they had built on top of SharePoint and it was quite impressive. But when asked about costs and resources, they said: “It took about one year, 40 FTE, and 1 to 5 million U. S. dollars. Very few organizations have those type of resources with availability to take on that task.

What Microsoft marketing did well was sell the value that social tools bring into the enterprise. They put the ideas in the minds of those building requirements (at a minimum to be included in pilot programs) as well as the values derived from using this new generation of social software inside an organization.

Multiple Micro-silos

At various conferences, across many industries, I have spoken at I have been asked to sit in on the SharePoint sessions, which turn into something like group therapy sessions (akin to group therapy in the first Bob Newhart show). There is much frustration and anger being shared as people try to resolve how to share information between groups and easily merge and openly share information once it has been vetted. These groups consistently talk about going directly to their Microsoft support & SharePoint Experts with these problems only to be told it is doable, but far from easy and may break some other things. Finding relevant information or even the inkling that something is happening in some group is nearly impossible. The promise of setting up ad hoc open groups by employees across silos is nearly impossible with out getting authorization.

Information Locked

One of the largest complaints is the information is locked in SharePoint micro-silos and it is nearly impossible to easily reuse that information and share it. Not only is the information difficult to get at by people desiring to collaborate outside the group or across groups, but it is not easily unlocked so that it can benefit from found in search. The Microsoft SharePoint model is one that starts with things locked down (focussed on hierarchies) then opens up, but unlocking is nowhere near as easy a task as it should be.

SharePoint Roadmap Marginalized Over Time

Where do people turn that have gone down the SharePoint route? Well most start by adding solid functionality they had thought SharePoint was going to provide or wished it had. SharePoint has acknowledged some of this weaknesses and has embraced outside vendors that make far superior products to plugin as components.

Some common social tool plug-ins to SharePoint are Socialtext, Atlassian Confluence, and Connectbeam (among with many others). Then there are those who build on top of Sharepoint, like Telligent and News Gator Social Sites. While others are more prone to full platforms that deliver much of the functionality out of the box, like Jive Clearspace.

Plug-ins Extending Functionality to SharePoint

Microsoft makes great promises, or hints at them in its marketing materials for SharePoint along the lines of social software in the enterprise. The first step many organizations take with SharePoint after realizing it does not easily, or even with an abundance of effort, do the expected social software components is to start getting solid proven services and start plugging them in. Many tool makers have taken their great products an made it quite easy to plug them into the SharePoint platform. Want a great wiki tool, not the horrible wiki “template”, then Confluence or Socialtext is added. Need a great social tagging/bookmarking tool that ties into search (this starts enabling finding the good information in SharePoint’s micro-silos), then Connectbeam is added.

This list goes on with what can be plugged-in to Sharepoint to extend it into being something it hints strongly it is quite capable of doing. What one ends up with is a quite capable solution, but built on top of one of the more pricy enterprise platforms. In most cases the cost of all the plug-ins together is less than the cost of SharePoint. It is from this point that many organizations realize all of these add-ins work wonderfully with out SharePoint (however, getting all of them to work together as easy plug-ins to each other is not always easy).

Full-Suites On Top of SharePoint

Another option that organizations take is to move in the direction of putting a fully functional social platform on top of SharePoint. Tools like Telligent and NewsGator Social Sites. These are options for those who find value in what SharePoint offers and does well (but and therefore getting rid of it is not an option), but want ease of development and a lower cost of development than is the norm for SharePoint. These full-suites also provide the ease of not having to deal with working through plugging together various different best of bread solutions (this really reminds me of the path content management systems went down, which was less than optimal).

Not only is the Lockheed Martin example of building on top of SharePoint an example of expense of that platform, but the recent AIIM survey surfaces high cost of development as a rather common understanding:

“Another area of interest is the required effort to customize SharePoint and integration other third-party solutions. In this case, 50% of survey respondents indicated custom solutions required more effort than expected (33% “somewhat more” and 17% “much more”). The integration challenges focused on a lack of training/documentation and integration with non-Microsoft based repositories and existing applications.” From CMS Wire: Study Finds SharePoint Primarily Used for File Sharing.

Fully Replacing SharePoint

There is a third option I have been running into the last year or less, which is removing SharePoint from the organization completely. I know of two extremely large organizations that are removing SharePoint from their organization this year (once these organizations are public with this I can be). The reasoning is cost and under performing as a social platform and what is does well is easily replaced with other solutions as well. In one instance I know the people who brought in SharePoint are being let go as well as the whole team of developers supporting it. I am hearing business operations looking into having their IT department find something that is meets their needs and were promised by IT that SharePoint was that solution. This was echoed by Lee Bryant via Twitter [http://twitter.com/leebryant/status/1099413469]: “[…]problem is many IT depts just don’t care – it is a simple ‘solution’ for them, not their users”

When removing SharePoint some organizations are going the piece by piece approach and stitching together best of breed or are going the route of full-service social platform, like Jive Clearspace. The cost per users of such solutions is less, the time to install to up-and-running fully is reportedly a about a third and maintenance staffing is also reportedly lower.

SharePoint is not Enterprise 2.0

What is clear out of all of this is SharePoint has value, but it is not a viable platform to be considered for when thinking of enterprise 2.0. SharePoint only is viable as a cog of a much larger implementation with higher costs.

It is also very clear Microsoft’s marketing is to be commended for seeding the enterprise world of the value of social software platform in the enterprise and the real value it can bring. Ironically, or maybe true to form, Microsoft’s product does not live up to their marketing, but it has helped to greatly enhance the marketplace for products that actually do live up to the hype and deliver even more value.



30 responses to “SharePoint 2007: Gateway Drug to Enterprise Social Tools”

  1. alampitt@zagile.com Avatar

    2 points jumped out at me:1) “There is much frustration and anger being shared as people try to resolve how to share information between groups and easily merge and openly share information once it has been vetted.”2) plug-in hell.

    zAgile provides an open source application and repository in which you can “plug-in” tools and applications so that organizations have a unified semantic view of information and knowledge across an organization. The GUI can be SharePoint, a portal, a wiki, or whatever app.

  2. susan.scrupski@gmail.com Avatar

    Thomas– well worth the wait! “SharePoint… is not a viable platform to be considered… for enterprise 2.0.” That will be my QoTD. That being said, however, what’s missing from your analysis (IMHO) is what is coming next from SharePoint? I still don’t think we can count Microsoft out. The company has the $, the brains, the marketing brawn, and the massive base to steadily improve and make right SharePoint shortcomings.

  3. russellpearson2.0@gmail.com Avatar

    Excellent review. Duly bookmarked.

  4. kim@hatch.org Avatar

    Great post, Thomas! I can’t count how many times I have heard similar statements from my clients.

    I also agree with Susan Scrupski’s comment that we can’t count MS/SP out, mainly because of their massive installed base and marketing machine. I don’t know, though, how they can properly address SP’s shortcomings without fundamentally changing their document/hierarchy mindset. IMHO, the concepts of documents/folders vs tag/search are the competing models for enterprise 2.0. For MS to really fix SP and not just do their usual marketing fix, won’t they need to move to a tag/search model where information is free flowing based on need? What happens to MS Office, when that happens?

  5. thomas@vanderwal.net Avatar

    Oliver Marks has a good riff on this blog post in his Sharepoint as a Gateway Drug to Greater Efficiency.

    Alan Lepofsky has pulled out the nuggets he found helpful in this post in his post SharePoint – The Truth Is Out There

  6. emanuele.quintarelli@gmail.com Avatar

    Thomas,many many many thanks for the post. You know for how long we have been waiting this piece..

    I hope to read valid objections (like Mike Gotta’s ones) based on real customer experiences to further validate this discussion, but I was the one asking that question to Lockheed Martin and I believe their answer really makes the point here!

    My question is: why Microsoft has not being able to already catch Jive, Telligent, Newsgator? They have for sure the power, penetration, money, energy needed to fill in the gap. My answer is that E2.0 is still too small for them to play. Sharepoint (this is what I heard from Laurence Liu when he was with Microsoft) is a development platform (i.e pay and customize a lot) not an enterprise 2.0 platform (pure e2.0 nature, already emergent, transparent, open, freeform, with a low barrier of participation, easily customizable and integrated with a plenty of other tools). I completely agree on what Lee said: IT guys rarely think in terms of people adoption, while this is the only value realization for enterprise 2.0 (have a look to the recent Sandhill Group report).

    For many customers Sharepoint is and will be the best option, but selling it as an enterprise 2.0 is just silly and I don’t buy what Mike is saying on twitter. Enterprise 2.0 is not the technology but the (bad) technology can really hinder user adoption. Using it the right way doesn’t solve the issue with technology itself and simply means spending more money to potentially reach the same results.

    What I see for the future is Microsoft buying some of his sons. Telligent could be a tasty bite…

  7. wout3@hotmail.com Avatar

    Your mess up various SharePoint terms. How can we take this post seriously if you don’t even know the basics about SharePoint?

    What is enterprise 2.0 anyway? The same joke Web 2.0 is? Websites on Javascript steriods and a clever designed database?

    SharePoint has some flaws and poor support in certain area’s. Even in the server version. I totally agree with Andrew. Don’t underestimate Microsoft. They can get away with their errors and flaws. And from what I’ve seen on conferences they know darn well what their shortcommings are and what frustrates their users.

  8. doug@compliancebuilding.com Avatar

    One of the problems with SharePoint is its long development cycle. By tying it into the Office suite, it adds functionality, but makes it harder to program.

    Although SharePoint 2007 is now gettting widespread use, its feature set was locked in back in 2004. For 2004, SharePoint was not bad. It just got outpaced by all of the innovations since then.

    Like Susan said, don’t count out MicroSoft. The next version will probably have a great feature set for 2009 and Enterprise 2.0 as we understand in 2009.

    But SharePoint.Next will not end up being deployed until 2011. At which time, it will probably looked dated and have been outpaced by all of the innovations between now and then.

  9. cfford@mindspring.com Avatar
    cfford@mindspring.com

    I read through the post and what appears to be glossed over is that organizations that installed SharePoint did in general a poor job of projecting how permissions and feature decisions would affect their information being “findable”. There’s nothing magic about this.

    One of the big problems to making information “findable” is that business users trend toward wanting to “lock down their data” with permissions, which makes it only available to their workgroups. In some cases this is necessary (think HR), but in most cases it’s just silly. Then when the information can’t be found elsewhere in the organization, it’s IT and/or Microsoft’s fault. I saw this at a very large global company where I used to work and I’ve recently seen the potential for going down this same “old” road while doing a demo for an organization looking at SP for “Enterprise 2.0”. Allowing users to set their own permissons over who can see or not see data is going to lead to this type of partitioning.

    What is not pointed out strongly enough is that the mentality of the old file shares and permission structure has been replicated in the design of the SharePoint implementations and so “Enterprise 2.0” can’t happen. The resulting hoopla and comments seem to be the usual “MS Hating” that is prevalent with IT organizations that don’t want to take the time to understand the technology, do the real requirements gathering, execute carefully monitored and evaluated pilots, and thoughtfully consider how it will look a year or two into the future. Some of the complaints are valid about IT not considering how end-users will want to use it, but I think it’s more about the earlier comment about poor requirements gathering and poorly executed pilots.

    While it is clear that the Web 2.0 pieces of SharePoint cannot directly compete with products that have focused in this area (most wide suites also struggle here), with some careful consideration and planning it can get many enterprises moving along the way to Enterprise 2.0 with a suite to which they already have access. But with any suite in a 3.0 version, it’s going to take additional components to satisfy detailed requirements.

    However, it still remains to be seen where E2.0 actually brings real measurable value to an enterprise and not just additional complexity, oversight,cost, and management.

  10. lliu@telligent.com Avatar

    “47% use it primarily for file sharing” – so, why don’t you talk about the (larger) 53%? 🙂 SharePoint can do a lot of things, and it’s a big world out there. Some people aren’t happy because there are other products that do a (much) better job in certain areas (like blogs, wikis, forums, etc.). Well, that’s like buying a big (older) house and complaining about one of the bathrooms or the kitchen being not as nice as the one in a much smaller but newer condo.

    SharePoint has gaps, worts, and shortcomings. I know them well, and you seem to have rehashed much of what others had already written about during the past 2 years. So, instead of continuing to complain about SharePoint not being E2.0 this or not, can you please write more about successful E2.0 implementations? Are there any? Did it have a measurable impact on the company? Let’s move forward, not backward.

    Lawrence LiuFormer Senior Technical Product Manager of Social Computing for SharePointNow Director of Platform Strategy for Telligenthttp://twitter.com/lliu

  11. thomas@vanderwal.net Avatar

    Lawrence the 47% is the largest primary usage. But, using it as a broad social platform is not one of the top uses. You should have that stat at the top of your head, of all people. Care to share it?

    Yes, those within the SharePoint world know the beating and short comings, but most organizations I talk with and work with feel like they are the only ones with problems with it. Most believe the hype that it can do the wiki, blog, open sharing, MySite, etc. easily and passibly well.

    Lockheed, as mentioned, built on top of Sharepoint (one of the most expensive builds for an organization I have run across yet, not cost to MS).

    One of the points is turning to a Telligent type service that builds services on top of SharePoint is a good option that many organizations consider and have had success with. The cost of trying to do what Telligent type tools on top of SharePoint do is much less and has more success than opting to go it alone and develop those capabilities.

    There is a lot of understanding of how social tools should work and need to work in enterprise (deeply based on how people interact with others and with interfaces) that must go on top of the technology platform. I have deep interest in that story and that understanding, as it is one I rarely see inside enterprise, but I see with in the makers of the social tool products.

    The point I hear over and over from those trying SharePoint to accomplish enterprise 2.0 functionality (open social interaction, ease of use, ease of working in the flow, sharing collectively, aggregating in context, and eventually getting to collaboration) is not the platform on its own to do this without very deep pockets for development. Lockheed and Wachovia are the only big deployments I know that went down this path.

    Those I talk with who have had heavy talks with those two organizations about those deployments have said they are going another route in their own organization. They believe other options will be lower cost, deliver something that is quite close to what they are looking for, and have lower up keep in the long run.

  12. cuysal@opentext.com Avatar

    This is a great summary of the pulse of the Sharepoint community, and the real issues they struggle with. Worth mentioning in the Full-suites and Replacement category is OpenText. OpenText provides integrations to Sharepoint for breaking down document silos, preventing database bloat and most importantly is the ability to provide best-of-breed web content management and robust, social compliance features around making blogs, wikis and forums safe for enterprise adoption.

    http://www.opentext.com/2/sol-products/sol-pro-extensions-microsoft.htm

  13. bwinett@comcast.net Avatar

    Funny how memes seem to come into the world from multiple places simultaneously. My organization is – against my advice – diving into SharePoint. A couple of days ago I posted my thoughts about it (http://bwinett.blogspot.com/2009/03/sharepoint-for-internal-collaboration.html). Similar to your thoughts, some different points. Hopefully we can help someone dodge a bullet.

  14. lliu@telligent.com Avatar

    E2.0 emerged as a hot button after SharePoint 2007’s feature set was finalized – sometime in mid 2006. IMHO, SharePoint itself isn’t as much of the problem as SharePoint’s lengthy product cycle is and may or may not continue to be. For example, the “asymmetric follow” pattern was supported way back in SharePoint 2003’s MySites. SharePoint even had “activity streams” before Facebook popularized the News Feed concept though SharePoint’s activity streams were/are limited to actions within MySites rather than anywhere within SharePoint, which would have addressed the current silo’ing problem caused by the rapid proliferation of SharePoint team sites. I could go on, but like I said before, there’s really no point (pun intended) to dwell on the past.

    At Telligent, as a close Microsoft partner in this space, we have the benefit of getting numerous referrals from MS account teams for SharePoint customers, who need best of breed E2.0 tools and capabilities. In some cases, the introduction of Telligent technology into the customer’s environment marginalizes the use of SharePoint for social computing apps. Some MS teams are okay with that while other teams aren’t, which is understandable. In most cases, Telligent and SharePoint coexist just fine. We’re not trying to replace SharePoint (though I can’t say that it’s never happened); just complement and/or supplement where it makes sense for the customer.

    What I have noticed is that many of the people complaining about SharePoint don’t appreciate the value of SharePoint as a platform for other important apps (document/records management, workflow, LOB integration) within an enterprise. E2.0 tools, much like IM from several years ago, are just a small albeit fast growing portion of the overall Business Productivity Infrastructure that every company needs. It’s amusing to me that some so-called E2.0 vendors actually believe that they’re “social stack” is all that a business needs to get work done. Business involves a lot more than just being social. 🙂

  15. etoelle@gmail.com Avatar

    From KimberlyAnna: “For MS to really fix SP and not just do their usual marketing fix, won’t they need to move to a tag/search model where information is free flowing based on need?”

    Did you guys pay attention to the FAST / SharePoint announcement about a month ago?

    http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2009/feb09/02-10NewEnterpriseSearchPR.mspx

    SharePoint is moving to a tag / search model in vNext. One of the best features of FAST is that it can parse metadata / tags from any document, including Office, therefore eliminating the need to train the end user to tag content. The end user can append tags if necessary.

  16. alltechcenter@gmail.com Avatar

    Great Post. Alfresco, as you know claims to be a SharePoint alternative and then there is cyn.in http://cyn.in yes this too is open source. The difference between the two is Alfresco is more tilted towards replacing SharePoint in all the aspect and cyn.in is towards SharePoint in back-end and Enterprise 2.0 in front end. 🙂

  17. alora@socialcomputingmagazine.com Avatar

    Excellent analysis.

    Would you permit us to re-syndicate this on Social Computing Magazine? All links and attributions to be maintained, of course; as well as distribution via Google News.

    Regards,

    Alora C. ChistiakoffManaging EditorSocial Computing Magazine

  18. thomas@vanderwal.net Avatar

    Erica, I saw the announcement, but have not seen the Enterprise Search. Very few of these solutions are done well with respect to tagging as the tagging functionality is really short sighted and only aims to focus on adding metadata for things to be found and not the other 8 to 12 core value use cases for tagging, most which have even greater value to the individuals and the organization as a whole.

    I would love to see and review MS Enterprise Search as I never believe anything they say and have been burned too many times believing their marketing. But, I have found solid functionality and and use in many of Microsoft’s tools. Deep assessment and from those with solid understanding is the only thing I value as assessments of MS products.

    I have been a fan of Fast search for many years and also like Google Search Appliance.

    Relying on embedded metadata in documents I find to be only a very small step in getting information found in organizations by the people who want and need that information. Organizations, particularly large organizations (although all levels are prone to the problem) have a diverse set of terms that their information and objects are called. Very few taxonomies are close to exhaustive enough to cover the needs and they don’t provide context as to who is using the terms and the meaning that can be derived from that use. Putting a lot of focus on embedded metadata is a thin means to solving the problem and often has limited results to a much larger gap and problem.

    If you know how I can get a good look at vNext I would love to do that.

  19. thomas@vanderwal.net Avatar

    Alora —

    I am quite happy to have this syndicated with attribution and links. There are some great points from others here in the comments that add great value to this post, so links in would be greatly appreciated.

  20. slamb0513@gmail.com Avatar
    slamb0513@gmail.com

    Working at a fairly large company that had SharePoint forced on them from IT, I can tell you that we are already looking at a solution like NewsGator to add functionality to SharePoint. This article does not help to calm my fears about SharePoint. Stay tuned!

  21. jamal.johnson@gmail.com Avatar
    jamal.johnson@gmail.com

    “Working at a fairly large company that had SharePoint forced on them from IT…”

    That’s unfortunate, Jim. SharePoint is an incredibly powerful platform and business tool, but it should be implemented around business problems, not technical problems. Generally speaking, IT is in the business of solving technical problems, which is why so many of the IT-lead SharePoint initiatives turn into abysmal failures.

  22. pankajunk@gmail.com Avatar

    I agree with the commenter above who said – “One of the problems with SharePoint is its long development cycle. By tying it into the Office suite, it adds functionality, but makes it harder to program.”

    this difficulty in programming makes it a slightly unviable option for small businesses which are looking for quick to deploy, low expertise and low maintenance solutions. such companies would do better to opt for SharePoint alternatives like HyperOffice, which have “push button functionality”. of course SharePoint offers extra power, but this power is mostly wasted for smaller businesses.

  23. andrewvevers@gmail.com Avatar
    andrewvevers@gmail.com

    Thomas – those organisations who removed SharePoint – how long had they been using it before they took that decision?

  24. nick@griffonsolutions.com Avatar

    This disappointment sounds (mostly) driven by the gap between marketing and reality!

    Well, most clients I’ve worked for knew the importance of planning for SharePoint – they treated it as an Enterprise platform and understood it would take effort, time, and money, and wouldn’t solve everything at once.

    We always explained the importance of a good governance model and suggested that those things SharePoint wasn’t so good at (wikis, blogs) could be improved (by themselves, CodePlex or vendors), or integrated (even if that just meant a hyperlink to a better forum, blog or wiki system).

    SharePoint isn’t a silver bullet, but these days you need to pick a platform, or you are always reinventing the wheel, retraining, and redeveloping (what’s the hidden cost of that?). Microsoft has built a powerful platform with SharePoint, and as the ecosystem builds on it, and MS improves it over time, the hard bits will get easier.

  25. tim.gray@rbc.com Avatar
    tim.gray@rbc.com

    Scanning through the comments, I wonder why there’s no mention (other than the mention of Fast) of SP14. Isn’t that being positioned as the “fix” to all the social computing gaps inherent in v7? Or does the nature of SP as a development platform vs a highly usable and functional application forever (or at least in the foreseeable future) make it a lame duck for social networking purposes?

  26. wrogers@corasworks.net Avatar
    wrogers@corasworks.net

    I’ve read through the comments. What no one seems to talk about is the core architecture. SP 2007 is now commonly implemented as a vast, distributed work environment; natively siloed with site security, data typed, content-centric, logically hierachical.

    Now look at the Social vendors; Telligent, Newsgator, Lotus Connections, et al. Note, that they all use a single, structured database for social data. Hmmm…

    Now, imagine that Microsoft a) drops a single, structured SQL database for social computing in SP vNext, b) provides (or partners provide) a UI that allows contextual “tagging” of all of that distributed data into a social context, and c) provides slick UI for Social functionality.

    You will suddenly have the market leading, widely adopted, sprawling distributed siloed work environment integrated into a slick social computing platform.

    I have no inside info, but, with a few tweaks, I could see a new playing field.

  27. jfrank@tractionsoftware.com Avatar

    Thomas’ point here about micro-silos is the achilles heal in most E2.0 solutions as compared to W2.0.

    The primary challenge when you step into the enterprise is that people need to work across teams while also respecting the permission issues which are not present in the Web 2.0 model where everything is open.

    So, when each workspace in an “E2.0” model carries its own Read permissions, it becomes a silo and prevents the benefits of open bookmarking, tagging and search.

    I talk about how to solve this problem, and go into detail about the two types of Silos (Content Type and Workspace Boundaries) in Enterprise 2.0 and the importance of SILO SMASHING: http://traction.tractionsoftware.com/traction/permalink/Blog1049

  28. kha.tran@tagore.Fr Avatar

    Excellent article!!

    I have translated it into French, after agreement from the author.

    Here is the link :http://blog-techno-tagore.blogspot.com/2009/11/sharepoint-2007-nest-pas-entreprise-20.html

    Kha

  29. tlurne@googlemail.com Avatar

    As with all software packages, it is impossible to meet the needs of every user. SharePoint web parts are a great way to provide tools and options to these people.From organisational and departmental charts that help with all communication aspects in the business, to web parts that allow company news to be efficiently distributed, these products truly enhance a user’s overall experience, and meet their requirements.

  30. designuir@yahoo.com Avatar

    Sharepoint doesn’t really provide all effective user interfaces. And yes it wasnt able to hold people for longer time on social platform.

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