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Sunday, September 12, 2010

SharePoint Portal Server - Benefits and Why Use SharePoint 2010?

Why Use SharePoint 2010?

The capabilities of SharePoint 2010 work together to help your company quickly respond to changing business needs. Using SharePoint 2010, your people can share ideas and expertise, create custom solutions for specific needs, and find the right business information to make better decisions. For IT, SharePoint 2010 helps you cut training and maintenance costs, save time and effort, and focus on higher business priorities.

Benefits
Deliver the Best Productivity Experience
SharePoint 2010 helps your people be more productive. It offers a familiar Microsoft Office experience so that people can quickly and easily access the business information they need to get their jobs done.

Cut Costs with a Unified Infrastructure

SharePoint 2010 helps you reduce costs by consolidating intranet, extranet, and Internet sites on a single platform—on-premises or in the cloud.

Rapidly Respond to Business Needs

SharePoint 2010 gives you the best of both worlds: out-of-the-box applications and a platform for customized solutions. You can use the features of SharePoint 2010 just as they are or quickly create secure and easy-to-use solutions for specific business needs.

SharePoint Portal Server - Benefits

Introduction

Some ideas are just great and SharePoint is one such wonderful idea.   SharePoint organizes all aspects of information sharing, from finding documents through to collaborating with version control and workflow.  It also works in partnership with other Microsoft products, from the Internet Explorer to see the site, to Office XP to publish the documents.

However, beware there are two products from Microsoft.  SharePoint Portal Server is the bigger and better 'full package', SharePoint Team server is the smaller 'cheapskate' product.  This page extols the benefits SharePoint Portal Server.

Problems that SharePoint solves

Allowing you to work with colleagues


The best feature for collaboration is the 'Check In' / 'Check Out for documents'.  This allows only one user at a time to modify a document whilst simultaneously creating document versions.   When one user has 'Checked Out' a document others can still get a read only copy of the last published version.

 

The key client is Office XP because it has this check in / out feature on its menus.  This in itself is good new as it tells me that SharePoint has a future if the client is built-in to Office.

Organizing Documents

Folders, Subfolders

The traditional way is to create folders, with SharePoint you can create what Microsoft call 'Digital Dashboards' to display the folders in a way which makes most sense to you and your users.

Tip - Use meaning full names for the folder and the documents

Metadata - data about e.g. time created

SharePoint cajoles, nags or even bullies authors to add metadata like author and keywords.  The result is that the documents are so much more valuable and easier to 'Find'.

Document Versioning

The twin concepts of publishing and metadata make it possible to give documents version numbers.  The author can control when a document has been changed sufficiently to warrant a new whole number, or whether its just a point increase.

Finding Documents

When you browse through documents, you do a lot of scrolling down or double clicking to open a subfolder.  With searching you put your criteria in a box and the engine searches the documents and pulls out matches.

SharePoint makes searching a pleasure.  It forces the user to add useful metadata

Telling you when a colleague has changed a document

SharePoint can link email address to a change notification process, the result team member know when a document is updated.

Enabling Workflow

In medium and large companies there are many scenarios where you need document approval, holiday requests, expense claims spring to mind.  SharePoint is flexible, you can set up documents for serial or parallel approval; in addition require that any or all must approve.

Leveraging security from Windows 2000

Author and Reader roles that you can assign in SharePoint remind me of public folder permissions in outlook.  'Under the covers' SharePoint uses Windows 2000 access control lists and bundles read, write, modify, full control into roles like Reader, Author and coordinator.


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