I feel ashamed to admit that six months ago I didn't even know of the existence of Sharepoint. Then we get a new head of IT and 'bang' my world comes back to life after years of being down-trodden by low IT support. The new IT head goes and buys Sharepoint licences and XP licences (yep, we're only on 2000 at the moment).
I can still hear the IT department whimpering, and to me it sounds like a world of possibilties and a possible world of pain. The reasons for that will be clear if I tell you a little of my history first, I guess.
I'm an Intranet Manager. For that, read 'smoother of choas'. I have looked after the Intranet here for 9 years (I really can't believe it's been that long). I got the Intranet by pure chance but could immediately see the benefits it could bring to my financial services employer and I set about making it a useful tool for everyone at work.
It was then that I hit my first hurdle. The Intranet had come about not by some elegant business plan with a sound financial case behind it, but more because we had some NT servers that could host web pages, and someone in the business had the time to play. When I first got it, it had about 100 pages of content on it. I set about telling people to use it a way to share information and do things more efficiently than passing paper around. I managed to get enough support that I was formally made Intranet Manager and soon enough I was busy trying to help more and more people create content in a non-content managed system. The poor authors just had to use Word or Excel (or if they were really clever, PowerPoint). People wanted to use the Intranet for more sophisticated content - I was asked to create a Forum when we had a new business strategy that we wanted to discuss. But [first hurdle] I had no budget [workaround] but I as Intranet Manager, did have FrontPage 98! Yes - Discussion Topics could (clumsily, I subsequently found out) do that. So I delivered a forum for discussion of our new business strategy!
That set a precedent for the Intranet - it could develop as long as it cost nothing, and required no IT resource. I rapidly skilled up to be able to develop little databases and applications to deliver other bits and bobs on the Intranet, like polls and a staff directory (although that wasn't able to interface with our Oracle HR system to be truly powerful). This was my second hitch. We are an Oracle House. This means we love Oracle and frown on Microsoft. If Oracle did a desktop app that people could use, we'd have it :-| As my luck would have it though, Mircosoft has the market buttoned up so that's what all our computer desktops run. Phew - if not for that, the Intranet might never have existed. However, my development of apps outside of the core architecture caused ripples and I was moved into the technical infrastructure team to be brought under control. All I did was learn exactly how the Intranet worked (I finally understood IIS for example), and I got a good look at our horrid Oracle email system.
I carried on working on the Intranet though, and by my cajoling and championing, the Intranet grew and grew until it had about 10,000 pages of content. The need for Content Management became more and more desperate and I was busily building a case for this, when along come a new executive and 'bam', we're implementing a Knowledge Repository. There was no way this organisation would pay both for KM and a CMS. Somehow I had to crowbar a CMS into a KM. Doomed from the start you say? Correct. It didn't, and hasn't, happened. And I still have no CMS, no consistent look and feel, and due to my involvement in KM taking me away from the Intranet, I don't even know who is creating content on the Intranet anymore. Sob!
So the budgetless, direction-less intranet has been crying out for something to give it some life, and along comes SharePoint. I'm told we've bought it, now we have to decide how we want to use it. I'm hugely excited - it sound like a great opportunity, but what do we do next?
The IT department is undergoing a major re-org due to the new head of IT, I still have no budget and also, as I now work in Internal Communications, not very much time to investigate SharePoint. I've spent a couple of months digging around the Internet and have found a few webinars and this Forum. I want to keep a record of what I find out, and will use this blog to note it all down. I hope that someone else in the same situation as me might find it helpful in the future, I will find it useful just for me any how.
That's all I have time for now. More later on in the week, with any luck!