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So You’re Building an Intranet
Becky BertramIndependent SharePoint Consultant, SharePoint Server MVP
www.beckybertram.com
With contributions from Mike HenthornCovenant Technology Partners, St. Louis
http://mhenthorn.blogspot.com/
Project Planning
Evaluating Scope and Granularity
Stakeholder = person footing the bill Important to prove business value and ROI This person is sometimes more concerned with
dollars and cents than usability. Usability must translate into cost savings.
End-user = person using the system once it’s build This person doesn’t care how much the system cost.
They care if it helps them do their job better. May not have an eye on the big picture. May wish
they could post pictures of their pets on their My Site more than whether the site saves the company money.
Stakeholders vs. End Users
Important to get input from both stakeholders and end-users (but not necessarily at the same time).
Stakeholders have final say in what gets built, but they must understand needs of their users.
Find representatives throughout your organization who know their business processes for their particular area/department.
Find tech-savvy “champions” who are excited about technology and are not afraid of change.
Steering Committee
Users either love or hate what they currently have, but it will serve as their frame of reference.
It’s important to get people to dream, whether that means giving them hope that something better is out there, or opening their eyes that there might be a better way of doing things than they have done things for the last decade.
A key to getting them to dream is to show what’s possible. Demoing gives people more understanding than talking about SharePoint’s features.
The Curse of the Past
When working with stakeholders, they might continually whine or lament that the new system lacks what either their current system does, or some system they worked with at another job.
Set the expectation that SharePoint is not WebSphere, Documentum, Fill-in-the-blank…
Sell SharePoint, but don’t oversell it. It won’t do their laundry or buy their groceries. It’s a tool, and it can be customized for their needs.
The Curse of the Past, Continued
Import for everyone to feel heard. Take a note of everything they wish to see.
Begin a process of group prioritization. If this is done as a group, everyone gets a
vote. If the loudest person insists on a priority, but it becomes apparent it’s only important to them when it comes to the voting process because it only gets their one vote, it’s hard for them not to understand if it doesn’t get implemented.
Primarily stakeholder(s) get a greater vote than everyone else. Dems da berries.
Requirements Gathering
Create a matrix of: costly, important, cheaper, unimportant. Prioritize the requirements along this continuum.
Prioritization
Costly and important Costly and less important
Less costly but more important
Less costly and less important
A house needs a foundation before you can hang the curtains.
When calculating “important” things, think about things that cannot be easily changed once you start your implementation. How users authenticate Number of site collections Retention policies Base content types Server location (hosted or on-premises)
First Things First
Easier to start with limited functionality and add it later. Too much functionality too early: Increases the chances that users are overwhelmed
and quickly disregard the whole system Increases the chances that users don’t know how
to use the system properly and make mistakes, causing frustration and limited usage of system.
Because of increased complexity, causes increased maintenance for site and farm administrators, who are new to this system as well.
Better to start with limited functionality with a strategy for expanding functionality later.
Starting Small
People hate change, by and large To get people excited about using the new system,
work to get their “buy-in” earlier than later. Do it while you’re building the system. Don’t present them with a shiny new system and than be disappointed when they don’t care about your pet project.
Ways to get buy-in: Periodic updates on project’s status. Perhaps this is in
an e-mail, a newsletter, etc. Prepare people for this new change that will happen.
Periodic demonstrations of new functionality Solicit feedback during the process
Encouraging Adoption
…they will not necessarily come.
A SharePoint site must present users with a better way of doing their job than they do it now. No Outlook = no e-mails at work.No SharePoint = business as usual (i.e. e-mailing documents, e-mail discussion threads, etc.)
People will NOT voluntarily add meaningful content to the site if they are not assigned it as a part of their meaningful job tasks. Make sure people understand this is a priority and not just “one more thing” they have to do. (Wikis, blogs, discussion boards seem like a great idea until no one uses them. )
If You Build It…
Planning your Site
This has an effect on a number of things: Technical:
Server load Maintenance
Logistical: How many people need training? How many people will need to be administering
the content on the site? How will you find your “champions”?
Number of Users
How many logical sites will be built? The smaller the granularity, the greater the number. You might need one public facing site You might need one intranet portal homepage You might need 5 departmental sites You might need 100 team sites You might need 300 My Sites
Scope and Frequency
Object model, navigation, browser tools, only work within one site collection. Better user experience when one site collection is used.
Monster big site collection = monster big database = bad disaster recovery scenario
Reasons for splitting site into site collections: Smaller DB sizes, i.e. faster backup and restore
scenario per DB. Quotas Expiration and deletion
Number of Site Collections
My Sites (Quota, permissions, OOTB) Project or team sites (Quota, expiration) Ad hoc sites (Quota, expiration) Document-heavy sites (Database size)
When do multiple site collections make sense?
Will your site need to support more than one language? Will the infrastructure team need to install
language packs? Will you be using site variations? How will the translation process work?
Multi-lingual Sites
Ad Hoc: Nearly anyone can create a site, create lists, add or remove content, etc.
Controlled content creation: SharePoint Administrators, Site Administrators put in place to limit who gets to create or modify content.
Publishing sites: Greatest level of control; usually only Content Owners are given permission to create content; page templates are pre-defined.
Spectrum of Control
Ad Hoc Publishing
Advantage of enabling Publishing in your site: branded look and feel, more pleasant Web experience.
Disadvantage of Publishing: meant for public facing Web sites, primarily. Can be inconsistent user experience if Publishing pages used for news stories while list views are used for lists, etc.
Blended approaches: Publishing and collaboration are layered in the same
site Publishing in one site collection, collaboration split
off in another area of the site
Publishing or No Publishing, that is the question
Benefit of SharePoint is that it allows for distributed use and maintenance.
For it to be effective, responsibility must be delegated.
How much centralized control do you want to cede in order to encourage distributed ownership? Depends on job responsibility or initiatives of
end users Maybe means making a distinction between
“official” and “unofficial” content. (Workflows, or publishing vs. non-publishing sites.)
Delegation
Think task over org chart People come to a page or a site because they
are trying to accomplish something Logical structure is also tied to security Key to effective content management is
creating multiple ways to retrieve the same data
Metadata, metadata, metadata: Sorting, grouping, filtering on lists Relevant search terms for data retrieval Content queries
Site Organization
Columns: At the global level, emphasize search-ability and retrieve-ability. At the list level, emphasize sorting, filtering, grouping, etc.
Content Types: Can be used for workflows and policies, as well as a collection of columns or document templates.
Global vs. local Fewer the better Take advantage of content type inheritance
Base content type at the top Inherited content type at the list level
Content Types and Metadata
Custom Search Scopes and/or Search Tabs Customized Advanced Search page Customized Results Customized Refinement Panel Canned Searches
Search
Approval workflows Sequential or parallel Who’s in the workflow groups?
Are you using a Records Center? Are you archiving content? Do you need to set up routing rules?
Are you implementing expiration policies on your content?
Workflows
Social media components can be implemented independently of one another. Use Personal Features
Contains Memberships, such as SharePoint sites and distribution lists; Colleagues, such as the My Colleagues list and colleagues recommendations; My Links; My Personalization links, such as personalization site pinning; and User profile properties.
Create Personal Site Creates a My Site Web site, which includes a personal, private My Home page and a public My Profile page.
Use Social Features Includes social tags, Note Board, and ratings.
(From http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee721063.aspx)
Social Media
Each user’s My Site is a new site collection. Possible to make changes to a site collection before it’s created. Doubles the effort or more to make changes to existing site collections after the fact, as well as provide for changes in new sites to be created in the future.
How does management feel about My Sites? Do they see it as “wasting time”?
How will you monitor the content that people publish? Are there policies in place if someone misuses their My Site?
Storage space estimate and quotas should be in place before enabling.
My Sites
How will you get content from your existing site (if you have one) into your new site?
What’s the process of scrubbing data before bringing it over?
Migration options: Manual Programmatic Third-party tool
Content Migration
Audience targeting is not the same as security
Do you want to target content to specific audiences? Can make users more interested in the site
because they only see relevant content Can also anger people if they want to see
content and feel like they were excluded in any way
What are the rules for setting up those audiences?
Will content owners take the time to actually target content?
Audience Targeting
Planning your Infrastructure
On premises Hosting Company BPOS
Hosting
How many servers of which type? (Web front end, application server, database server)
Do you have a development environment? Staging?
Is your hardware virtualized or not? Will you be extending the site’s availability
outside the firewall? Alternate access mappings VPN access
Will you be applying security certificates to the site?
Server Architecture
If you’re hosting in-house, do you need to order more hardware?
Do you have the appropriate software licenses?
What will the URL(s) for your site be?
Plan Ahead
SharePoint Server 2010 supports authentication methods that were included in previous versions and also introduces token-based authentication that is based on Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) as an option.
Supported authentication methods: Windows Forms-based authentication SAML token-based authentication
Authentication Types: Classic-mode Claims-based
Authentication
What is right for me? Classic mode
This is the same as used in 2007 Kerberos is still used No support for Forms or SAMAL Token-based
authentication Claims-based
What am I doing Who is my customer
Authentication cont.
What is supported under each Authentication Mode Classic-mode or Claims-mode
Windows NTLM Kerberos Anonymous Basic Digest
Claims Only Forms-based authentication (using)
LDAP SQL database or other database Custom or third-party membership and role provider
SAML token-based authentication (using) AD FS 2.0 Windows Live ID Third-party identity provider LDAP
Authentication cont.
Best Practice Guidance Claims-mode
Only if you have a need for one of the following Forms-based authentication SAML token-based authentication
Classic Use it if you don’t have a need for the above
Important: Classic-mode web application’s can be converted to Claims with PowerShell but, Claims-based cannot go back to Classic-mode.
Authentication cont.
Authentication = Are you who you say you are
Authorization = What do you have permission to see and do?
Who has permission to do what in your site? Does everyone get to edit everyone’s content,
or do people get to only edit content within their own department?
Does everyone have permission to view everyone else’s content?
Security
If users are being stored in Active Directory, which system will be used as the user identity management location? SharePoint 2010 now allows for SharePoint to read or to update
AD info. Will users update their own personal profile info?
Who will maintain the user groups? Adding people to SharePoint groups directly is not very scalable
but works for smaller environments (of several hundred users). Benefit: SharePoint administrators don’t need to contact IT people every time a change is made
Simply adding an AD group to a SharePoint group means users are managed within AD. This is helpful if you already have a system for managing users in AD. It’s also more scalable, and ultimately, allows AD to be used for what it’s intended: user management.
User Management
Are there external systems you want to connect to?
How will you authenticate with them? Will you use the BCS? Are you using additional applications like
SQL Server Reporting Services, or Microsoft Project? Does this affect your authentication requirements?
Are you wanted to install any third party SharePoint products, such as imaging/scanning plug-ins, server management tools, etc.?
External Systems and Applications
Ad hoc site creation Delegated site creation Centralized site creation
Sites defined by a feature, site template or definition
Request form for new sites
Site Creation
What is the disaster recovery SLA? Built-in products or third party products? Where are the backups being stored?
Physical Media? Cloud Storage?
Disaster Recovery
Planning Customization and Development
What skillset do you have to build and maintain your solution in-house?
Are you planning on building your solution in-house, or outsourcing the development to someone else?
If so, how will you maintain the application after it has been built?
Development
PROS: Code can be stored in a code-repository, providing
better disaster recovery Repeatability; code can be tested in one environment,
propagated to next Does not customize contentCONS: Requires SharePoint developers Requires investment in development tools (Visual
Studio) and development hardware.
Bottom line: Good approach for enterprise solutions.
SharePoint Development
PROS: Easy to use. Don’t have to be super-technical to use it. Little development effort. Cheap way to create a nice-
looking site.CONS: Making changes directly to content database
Must make changes directly to production database Cannot test changes in lower environment. Changes must
be made again in production, all over again Customizes content
Bottom line: Good for small sites with limited technical expertise on staff, provided a good disaster recovery plan is in place.
SharePoint Designer
Investing in People
“Train the Trainer” “Champion” or site administrator trains
others in department; delegated training Online or contextual training Lunch-n-learns, etc.
Training
What type of team do you have to support the environment?
What type of SharePoint administration training needs to take place before taking over the day to day management of the system?
Administration Needs
Who is responsible for the ongoing support of the site, once the initial training has been completed?
Are you going to use an existing Help Desk/ticketing system?
Are current Help Desk folks prepared to support SharePoint?
Is there an SLA in place for resolving issues?
Ongoing Support
Wrap Up
How are you going to celebrate the launch of a FANTASTIC intranet site that knocks everyone’s socks off?
Where’s the Party?
SharePoint Server 2007 Best PracticesBill EnglishMicrosoft Press
Association for Information and Image Managementwww.aiim.org
Helpful Resources
This is a time to ask questions, or to share with others in the room about your own experiences of building an intranet.
What worked?What didn’t?
Questions and Answers