SharePoint has become one of Microsoft’s fastest selling products of all time. Collaboration is the most popular application, followed closely by document management and file-share replacement. Portals and intranets are the next most popular usage. But implementing SharePoint requires...
Governance -- you can't come within a custom webpart of a SharePoint best practice webinar without the presenter drumming the governance refrain into every PMO ("program management office") slide
“I just want social") Customers often already own multiple competing technologies & need to understand how/when to integrate and consolidate (ECM, WCM, Search, BI, OCS, Java) Also need to think of how SharePoint fits in at an organizational level – such as enterprise records management & eDiscovery Organizations don’t always view SharePoint as an enterprise service or application That perception is changing & SharePoint is becoming “too big to fail” in some organizations and mission critical like Exchange Customers often have multiple SharePoint farms & site collections People are afraid of SharePoint sprawl like Lotus Notes & Access Many companies still on older versions of other products such as Windows XP, IE 6, Office 2003 Tide appears to be turning with Windows 7 & Office 2013, especially for people that decided to skip Windows Vista & Office 2007 Step back for a minute and take "SharePoint's" name out of the picture and let’s look at a SharePoint implementation (less the SharePoint Best Practices needed) as a typical I.T. project your organization may roll out
· SharePoint Best Practices for Site Owners (see also Appendix B) · SharePoint 2010 Glossary (see also Appendix A) · File Types that Cannot be used in SharePoint 2010 (see also Appendix C) Section One: SharePoint – The Big Picture Objectives By the end of this section, you should be able to understand the concept of SharePoint 2010 and its uses
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