BRAINYARDNEWS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR


David F. Carr
David F. Carr
See More From This Columnist >>
SHARE



How To Plug SharePoint's Social Holes

David F. Carr | June 22, 2011
 
      
How To Plug SharePoint's Social Holes Microsoft SharePoint offers a solid foundation, but many enterprises need to customize it or add third-party tools such as NewsGator Social Sites to get the desired social collaboration capabilities.

Microsoft SharePoint offers a solid foundation, but many enterprises need to customize it or add third-party tools such as NewsGator Social Sites to get the desired social collaboration capabilities.

Microsoft and SharePoint were only occasionally in the forefront of the conversations this week at Enterprise 2.0, a UBM TechWeb event, but ever-present in the background.

Enterprise 2.0
Pure play social software competitors may slight SharePoint for not providing a complete enterprise social media environment, but the product is ubiquitous in corporate computing and SharePoint 2010 added fundamental social media features like richer user profiles and news feeds.

In a panel discussion on SharePoint as a social platform, the consensus was that SharePoint contains many of the ingredients of a social application, but by itself doesn't get you all the way there--not without extensive customization or the addition of a third-party product such as NewsGator Social Sites.

Shawn Shell, head of the technology consulting firm Consejo, led the discussion with Sadie Van Buren, a senior software engineer at BlueMetal Architects and Unni Loland, a senior consultant at Bekk Consulting of Norway. All three said they had built successful social sites on SharePoint, but certainly not effortlessly.

Top 15 Cloud Collaboration Apps
Slideshow: Top 15 Cloud Collaboration Apps
(click image for larger view and for slideshow)

Loland said SharePoint offers some good features but that you should plan to customize if you want to use them effectively. "I work a lot in customizing intranets, where Facebook and Twitter have shaped the expectation for how social should work," she said. While it's possible to satisfy those demands, it takes a lot of work, she said.

"It's difficult to create the next good thing because you're limited by what SharePoint offers," Loland said. The list of things customers are often dissatisfied with includes the activity stream, the blog, the wiki, and the discussion forums in SharePoint.

Van Buren added the SharePoint calendar to the list, saying customers often ask her to make it work more like Google Calendar.

Van Buren said that by providing richer profiles and allowing users to create personal MySite pages, SharePoint is giving employees "a voice within the enterprise." SharePoint has become more social by letting you search for "people as well as content."

"What SharePoint does out of the box is so much more now," Van Buren said, but she still has plenty of work to do for the growing number of clients who want to make it work like Facebook.

Loland and Van Buren agreed that SharePoint wouldn't necessarily be competitive with other social platforms, except that so many organizations already have so much investment in it. "Lots of organizations won't even consider the other competitors--they're not going to open the door to other solutions that may be best of breed," Van Buren said.

A couple of audience members spoke up to say, "it seems like it all comes down to, SharePoint works if you customize the hell out of it," and that a successful social SharePoint deployment "involves custom development, a heck of a lot of time, and a heck of a lot of money."

Microsoft did also have defenders in the audience, who argued SharePoint is a broad platform that doesn't necessarily promise to be tailored for every need. "SharePoint is a platform, not a product," Shell agreed, arguing that organizations ought to be willing to invest in customization to get exactly the social environment they want.

COMMENTS

STAYUPDATED

Sign up to the BrainYard email newsletter

*Required field

Privacy Statement

BRAINYARDRESEARCH
The State of Community Management
The State of Community Management documents a comprehensive set of lessons learned to help define this emerging role and give you the tools to be successful in your social initiatives.
Enterprise 2.0: What, Why and How?
This paper is an introduction to Enterprise 2.0 ‐ why it is one of the most crucial concepts to understand in business today and how you can begin to take advantage of E2 in your organization.
Guide to Understanding Social CRM
This paper presents the foundational components of Social CRM and lays the groundwork required for your company to build and maintain long and valuable customer relationships.
VIDEOGALLERY
National Field: The Data Driven Social Enterprise
The Obama campaign used National Field in 2008 to bring together, and share all of the data around its outreach efforts -- all of its calls, contacts and meetings were tracked every day using the social enterprise platform. Watch this demo for more.
Keynote Panel: Pushing the Limits of the Consumerization of IT
Keynote Moderator Larry Seltzer Editorial Director, Byte; Keynote Panelist Robert Scoble Blogger, Technical Evangelist & Author; Keynote Panelist Oliver Marks Co-founder, Sovos Group
Keynote: Sandy Carter, IBM
Sandy Carter Vice President, Social Business Evangelism and Sales, IBM Mobile Panorama: The Three Headed Monster
SLIDESHOWS
Use Facebook Apps To Woo Customers: 6 Examples
Several savvy organizations use Facebook apps to increase brand awareness and engage new and existing customers. Consider these interesting examples....
Enterprise Social Networks: A Guided Tour
More enterprises are deploying internal social networks to encourage collaboration and improve productivity. Take a tour of the major platforms...
10 Big Tech Ideas For Retailers
Mobile and social lead the list of hot tech trends for retailers, but they had company at the National Retail...