Friday, February 24, 2012

Your Very First Speaking Engagement...

This Wednesday, I had the pleasure to join the NY Office 365 User Group.  We were a small group this time, but the enthusiasm and community feel wasn't lacking. Gwen Bonaparte, the speaker arrived bright and early to greet everyone while she set up. She was there to talk about Automating Business Processes Without Code in Office 365. We learned quite a bit about Gwen, before the event began which made the intimate feel seem right. This was Gwen's first talk after all.

Unfortunately Gwen's  hard drive died prior to the presentation, which took away from her prepared talk.  But what the hard drive took away produced a very lively discussion around Office 365, SharePoint Online and InfoPath.  Gwen had excellent skills involving the audience, and getting us to ask questions from the basic to the advanced.

After Gwen demontrated a couple of timesheet workflows using InfoPath, she wanted to find out what we were doing.  Most were just beginning their adventure into the cloud.  InfoPath was glorified as a must have tool.  A very key misconception was also discovered and corrected.  InfoPath and all its heavy files do NOT have to live on every users computer in order for them to be able to use the handy forms. This made quite a few very happy campers.

Comparisons were also made about the different versions of Office and Outlook. Everyone was pleased with the progression. All in all, Gwen became the leader of a discussion based User Group where everyone including myself became involved. What we learned was that most of us were there for the very same reason, to learn what others were doing with Office 365, and to begin to venture off into a world of testing it's capabilities.

I want to add one final statement, I give credit to anyone who decides to speak at a User Group or any other event for the very first time. It's not easy, you really don't know what to expect. A million things can go wrong and for some reason they always do. But guess what, you are lucky to learn so much from that one experience. Gwen, through functionality hiccups, represented a person who actively used Office 365 and InfoPath and she created an overall enthusiasm for others to do the same.  Great job Gwen, keep going!

Want to begin speaking? Confessions of a Public Speaker is great book to get control of the jitters and gain confidence.

Have aspirations  to present a topic around SharePoint or share a SharePoint story? Contact me at jamees.wright@arcovis.com


Monday, February 20, 2012

You Took My Search Out of Context!

During February's NY Enterprise Search User Group, Michael Himelstein presented: Using Search to Create a Unified View of Information - The Roadmap to Creating Search Based Applications. Michael is the Director of Search Consulting for BA Insight, and he provided valuable information on how we should all think about Search.

In his abstract, he described the misconception of search as, A Search Box, A Search Button...and 10 Blue Links. However my great take away from his talk were the Search visuals that we don't think about. I'm getting a bit ahead of myself, let's first talk about how we view Search today.

Mike H. referenced Eric Schmidt's famous quote, "Every two days now we create as much information as we did from the dawn of civilization up until 2003." That’s something like five exabytes of data, he says. But what does this really mean? A host of of unstructured data, terabytes of information that is unclassified, information that lives in totally different silos. And this growing number is increasing exponentially because new sources of information are added daily.

This is where Search comes to play.  Search is when you realize the need to find a platform to bring all this information together in a unified view.  However what is usually missing when you think of Search as bringing necessary information together?  Context. When you bring a large source of information together without context, the obvious description would be "Information Overload."

So to avoid this and to add value to search means to find your company's individual context, understand the context that is important to your users and develop a solution based on your findings.  The great example Mike used was Zagat Survey, this site successfully took their selected topic of  Restaurants & Dining and built a contexual view around different pieces of relevant information.

With Search you can build significant applications today, the trick is to place your relevant information in one structured unified view, utilizing the power that is context.  Great job Mike, thank you for bringing your talk to the New York Enterprise Search User Group! Join us for our next meeting: Adding *Your* Business Value With FAST Search for SharePoint Pipeline Extensibility.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Searching for Search Speakers...

The NY Enterprise Search User Group (NYESUG) Members have spoken! Last week, we asked the group what Search topics they would love to see presented at The NYESUG. So we would love to see their requests answered! A list of the suggested topics is below for your review. 

Join the NY Enterprise Search User Group.

  Requested Search Topics
  Best Practices for Indexing Optimization of Performance
  Case Study of Enterprise Search for a Law Firm or Patent Search
  Cloud Computing
  Contextualization atypical Behavior of a Profiled User
  FAST and other Repositories
  Handling Huge (BIG (Data) 100 Million to 740 Tb/ Efficient Storage
  How to Architect a Search Infrastructure for Sources/Apps
  Internet Search
  Latest Developments in Search
  Managing Search Solutions
  MAP Reduce
  RESTful Web Services
  Search Implementation in a Finance Industry
  Search Trends
  Search Virtualization
  Search vs Business Intelligence
  Security
  SOA
  Social Media Incorporation (Twitter, FB, Feeds)
  Taxonomy & Search
  Understanding Search Driven Apps

Monday, February 6, 2012

A Review of SharePoint Saturday Philly

I've been to two SharePoint Saturdays in New York.  This year however, I decided to branch out for the first time and take the trip to Philly for their SharePoint Saturday. I must say that the trip was well worth it. Yes, I saw a lot of familiar faces, many who I've met in New York.  But I was able to meet new faces, and even met Sandy Ussia, long time supporter of SharePoint ShopTalk for the first time.   She traveled even further than I did, though living in Pennsylvania.

SharePoint Saturday Philly took place at Devry University.  This was a great option for the event location.  The space provided an intimate feel, and the classroom's and the school for that matter had updated technogy, which allowed for smooth presentations.
Ellis Luboff
Edmond Avanesian

I was able to drop in on a couple of presentations at 9:00am.  Ellis Luboff gave out some awesome tips for Administrators. However, his session ended a bit early so I made my way to Edmond Avanesian's talk: So you want to implement SharePoint in your organization. Now what? 

Edmond outlined key tips on the next steps for an organization.   The thought Edmond wanted to leave in everyone's head is "You can't treat SharePoint like any other project" and the importance of communication throughtout and after the project is completed.

A slide, I found very useful was a basic list of IT Skills that are needed when implementing SharePoint:

  1. Network Admin (Infrastructure)
  2. System Admin (Windows OS)
  3. Database Admin (SQL Server)
  4. SP Architect
  5. SP Admin (Farm/Central Admin)
  6. SP Developer
    1. Workflow
    2. Custom Web Parts
  7. SP Branding/Graphics
  8. SP      Site Owner Admin
  9. SP Content Migration (if applicable) 
Next up, I took a seat in Marcy Kellar's session: SharePoint User Experience, What Can it Do for Adoption? This was a very interactive session, as Marcy gave out neat gifts for those who participated and utilized some pictures to make you laugh and think while getting her point across. She quoted, Jeff Croft "Design by definition is the act of solving a problems. In order for anything to be designed well, we must first identify the problems we are trying to solve and the goals we are trying to reach." And stated The User Experience is the sum of all parts and it is tied to adoption by emotion, efficiency and engagement.

To my surprise, it wasn't the last time I was able to see Marcy, because she joined the panel on the first session after lunch, Women in SharePoint.  This session was a lot of fun.  These weren't women who bashed men and held up picket signs chanting.  No, these were women who loved SharePoint, who had valid experiences to share and who encourage other women to jump on board the SharePoint train. They expressed women are not necessarily emotional but passionate and that it is easy to be passionate about SharePoint because of the vast room for creativity.
Women in SharePoint
Women in SharePoint 2

Some of the attributes the panel found women usually brought to a team were, the ability to understand the end user, sharapy (sharing & therapy), teamwork, mentorship and  the ability to multitask. When leading a team, most women present themselves as approachable, patient and have the tendacy to express care.  Michelle, also known as @cyberslate shared two books she feels that women would benefit from reading: Nice Girls Don't Get the Corner Office and Leading from the Front.

After this session, I perused the vendor's booths. At this late hour, the representatives maintained excitement and shared their products and services with me. I met some new people and reminisced with some friends. Then, I went to see how my colleagues Paul Olenick and Natalya Voskresenskaya were doing as they prepared to set up for their talk: Migrating from 2007 to SharePoint 2010 - How to do it "Search First".

Paul & Natalya

On to the final session of the day. To my happiness it was lead by Stacy Deere and Stephanie Donahue as they discussed: Managed Metadata A to Z - Plan, Implement, Make it a Success. Talk about a session that was filled with information  that was clearly wanted and well received.  Stacy and Stephanie are a great team and they clearly understand how to get the most out of Managed Metadata. They highlighted the new functionalities of SharePoint 2010 Standard, Enterprise and Online editions which simplifies the task of assigning metadata.  During this session, questions were asked consistently throughout, and Stephanie and Stacy delivered. Review their blog: Not Just SharePoint.

Last, but certainly not least were the cool prizes given away and the after social at Brick House. Though, I didn't win anything post event, I did win a cool book, during the Women in SharePoint Session: The SharePoint 2010 Handbook.  I look forward to the read. I also looked forward to the after social, which I conclude as a another SharePoint Saturday Philly Success.  It was a great cap to the event, the community enthusiasm and love of social participation lived throughout the event and of course during the after social.  Good times.

Good Times...

Application Life Cycle Management w/ Jeremy Thake

Last week, I had the pleasure to attend the New York SharePoint User Group. The Topic was, Application Life Cycle Management (ALM), the speaker Jeremy Thake. I must tell you, before going to this event, I didn't know much about ALM, but I can say with confidence anyone in my shoes would benefit from Jeremy's talk. It's something special when you watch a presentation from a knowledgeable individual who is also an excellent speaker.

He began with defining ALM as the continuous process of managing the life an application through governance development. He also referred to David Chapell's Document, Application Life Cycle Management as a Business Process.

He then informed the group that there are three aspects to ALM, and they are Governance, Deployment and Operations, but the key here is that Governance should happen all the way through. He also went into deep discussion about Coding, Testing and Tracking.

Jeremy's message was packaged with warning labels.

What were we warned about?
1. To package all custom code as a WSP
2. The importance of Source Control, Build Server (no test should be deployed without putting it on a build server to make sure that they are checking in everything that is required), and Team Foundation Server (TFS) (also running in Azure)
3.  The SharePoint Designer danger of developing in production rather than a test environment
4. Always run SPDipsose Check

Jeremy, also took this talk to SharePoint Saturday Philly. You should be able to visit this site shortly and receive slides and possibly a recording of Jeremy's talk.

References
Jeremy Thake
Webcast: Introducing SharePoint 2010 (SP2010) Development to ALM (VS2010 and TFS 2010)
SharePoint ALM Resource Center
SharePoint Patterns & Practices Group (SPG)
SPDisposeCheckStatic Rules