Comcast has experienced a lot of bad press and customer feedback the last few years; searching for “ Comcast” on YouTube still shows “A Comcast Technician Sleeping on my Couch ” as the first result (ahead of all Comcast-produced videos). I have never experienced anything like that, but I thought...
I have spent thousands of hours with users figuring out what metadata should be put on documents. In my experience, once they learn that they can “tag” unstructured content with searchable, filterable values, they go a little crazy. They want every possible value they might ever...
I often see organizations struggle with content classification and retention policies and my 2 cents are that you should keep it simple. The more complex your policies are, the more complex they are to maintain and explain to your end users
Our direction to clients just beginning to enable social content archiving capabilities is to keep it simple. Costs can escalate quickly, so try to define a minimal set of requirements to start with
Trust me I know from experience, it works!!! KEEP IT SIMPLE Records management professionals tend to be overcomplicated when getting the chance to sell InfoGov to C-Level Executives
” Shortly after the post went to Twitter Pie (the reputable and wise sage otherwise known as Laurence Hart) responded back telling me that I was wrong and to keep it simple. I half agree with Pie and I am terrible at making 140 character arguments, so I am going to add a bit more perspective here and would love to hear the thoughts of other more experienced information professionals
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The key is to keep it simple. When your buying a home, it's important to learn everything about it and identify any problems or defects that need to be fixed
Publish and communicate the process to the organization 6.) Try and keep it simple a. Don’t make processes that are hard to follow b
Quentin: Getting hundreds or thousands of people using your solution is no small task. 1. Keep it simple and easy, get people using OneDrive for Business, then basic team sites before throwing them at a structured repository with 10 content types and 20 metadata fields. 2
To make up for jumping the gun so badly, I’ll promise to keep it simple: two predictions for Enterprise 2.0 in 2012, no more
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