Archive for October 2011

Law Firms Like Hosted SharePoint 2010

October 26th, 2011
Posted by: admin

By Laurie Head
AIS Network Vice President

Wondering whether your law firm’s new hosted SharePoint 2010 deployment will be disruptive to the office culture?  Significant key benefits for IT staff as well as legal staff and their clients may very well justify the trouble and cost of deploying SharePoint 2010 in a legal environment.

What’s new in SharePoint 2010?  First and foremost, SharePoint 2010 has strong document management and powerful search capabilities.  That, combined with its ease of use, has made SharePoint a popular platform among law firms.

What’s compelling legal industry clients to consider seriously a hosted SharePoint 2010 deployment (or a migration to SharePoint 2010 from a previous version)?  Among many features, here are a handful of new SharePoint features that law firms like because they save time and money:

SharePoint for law firms

SharePoint helps lawyers manage their documents.

Expanded library support for large docs. SharePoint 2010 now supports millions of documents, which is a critical need for most law firms.  Enhanced reporting and tagging capabilities make finding key files and documents so much easier.

More powerful search capabilities. Purchase an additional license and SharePoint administrators can beef up their searches with FAST, a powerful search technology.  FAST enables staff to index billions of documents; search by industry, legal field or client name; and preview relevance via a thumbnail image.

Better records management. SharePoint 2010 allows records to be listed in multiple repositories, which is incredibly useful in enhancing staff productivity.  Designated users on the network can access records for reference, and editing privileges can be restricted.

Improved, automated workflows. SharePoint 2010 employs a new, user-friendly interface to allow non-technical staff to create smooth workflows (automated processes for approvals, adding a new employee, opening a new client case, etc.).

Convenient offline work capabilities. Those staff who travel and/or work remotely on a regular basis will appreciate that SharePoint 2010 documents can be taken offline, edited and synchronized later.

Enhanced document editing. SharePoint 2010 users don’t have to call the IT department for help every time they edit documents.

If you are working for a law firm and are using hosted SharePoint 2010, what features do you particularly like?

TAGS:

CATEGORIES:

Boosting PR Agency Productivity: Cutting-Edge IT Tools and Cloud Hosting

October 21st, 2011
Posted by: admin

By Laurie Head
AIS Network Vice President, Marketing Communications

I’m hooked on the idea of boosting PR, marketing and advertising agency productivity through unified communications, collaboration platforms and cloud computing.  As a former PR executive specializing in tech PR for a large, global agency and later a DC-based boutique firm, I can see clearly how each of these cutting-edge technologies will provide a tremendous shot in the arm to the public relations, marketing and advertising industries.  In fact, I talked about it in my multi-media presentation, “Unlocking the Business Value of New Technologies,” at the Public Relations Society of America’s 2011 International Conference in Orlando this week.

In this new economy, if you cannot collaborate, you’re toast.  Gone is the super-competitive mentality of the 1990s.  As they adapt to changing markets, clients and employees, PR agencies are finding that they need to evolve from competitive to collaborative cultures.   But to do that, they need to think critically about the IT that they use and how to migrate their company toward more collaborative technologies.

Preferences for communicating change over time and that’s highly evident in this very cool video from Accenture (“Cloud Computing Here and Now – Our Youngest Experts Explain the Cloud”), which I used in introducing my topic at the PRSA 2011 International Conference.  The point is that regardless of whether they’re in the B2B or B2C space, companies that want to compete for customers as well as the newest, best talent must figure out how to get with the times and equip themselves with the technology they need to communicate anywhere, anyplace and anytime.  As communicators, “being social” is no longer just another prerequisite for getting along in our jobs.  Rather, we are currently experiencing a fundamental shift in how we interact with the world, and essentially, in how we get the information that we need in a global marketplace.

The goal of my talk was to allow attendees to walk out of the presentation knowing enough to at least recognize their own business challenges and begin a dialogue with their IT department about how to solve those issues.  To do that:

1)     We explored the most common business challenges in a PR agency today:  remote communications, collaboration and aging, vulnerable servers.  For the benefit of those who requested them, here are links to the videos that I used to illustrate those business challenges:

2)     Next, we surveyed briefly the corresponding IT solutions that are, in fact, transforming the workplace and saving businesses money:  unified communications, collaborative platforms and hosting/ cloud computing.

I recommended Microsoft Lync 2010 (unified communications) and Microsoft SharePoint 2010 (collaborative platform), but there are plenty of competitors, whom I also mentioned in my slides.  I demonstrated the value of Lync 2010 and SharePoint 2010 in specific cases (content management, automated workflows, business intelligence, internal networking and more) and used video testimonials from customers to illustrate how these technologies benefit productivity and cut costs:

Then, I offered a brief look at two more detailed case studies: global PR agencies Edelman and Fleishman-Hillard.  I particularly like the Fleishman-Hillard case study because it shows a forward-thinking agency using SharePoint 2010, plus a Web 2.0 application called Newsgator, to build its employee community through very robust, intra-agency social networking.

Following, we looked at a couple of raw video clips (fire in a server closet) and (sprinklers flooding a server room) and discussed how vulnerable these server rooms – or closets, as they may be – are to any number of natural or man-made disasters (not to mention spilled beverages).  I guided attendees through the decision process for kicking their aging servers out of the office and examining other hosting options.

Moving to a professionally managed, hosted environment in a secure data center – whether to a dedicated server environment or a cloud environment – is the way most businesses are going, according to industry analysts.  Industry analyst Gartner, Inc., projects that by next year, a fifth of businesses will not own any IT assets; at least 35 percent of U.S. midmarket businesses (100 to 999 employees) will purchase cloud computing and IT utility services.

What is cloud computing anyway?  For this part of the presentation, “Cloud Computing in Plain English” was a useful video to show.

We examined the benefits and challenges of hosting in-house and outsourcing, after which I answered the questions, “When is on-premise best?” and “When is the cloud best?”  I provided a detailed decision matrix for attendees to share with their IT department.

3)     Finally, we discussed how to measure success/business value, including return on investment (ROI),  return on objective (ROO), increased productivity, increased flexibility/ scalability, more time to focus on business and staff/stakeholder qualitative feedback.

To help PR, marketing and advertising agencies upgrade their IT and move into the 21st century, there are a litany of tools and applications – certainly many more that are specifically designed for enterprise-sized organizations.  Now that the year is drawing to a close, public relations, marketing, advertising and other communications professionals should evaluate seriously the IT tools they will need to communicate, collaborate and engage in the global marketplace next year.  Everybody wins when they use better tools like Lync 2010, SharePoint 2010 and cloud computing.  PR agencies benefit from greater productivity at a cost savings – not to mention happier clients and employees.

If you are in an agency currently, I would be interested in hearing what your agency is doing to address these business challenges.

PRSA, thanks for another great international conference!

TAGS:

CATEGORIES:

Microsoft SharePoint Conference 2011 Is a Sell-Out Event

October 3rd, 2011
Posted by: admin

Microsoft SharePoint Conference 2011 Welcome

7,500 attendees gathered for the Microsoft SharePoint Conference 2011 in Anaheim this week.

By Jay Atkinson
AIS Network CEO

The Microsoft SharePoint Conference 2011 has officially kicked off!

For those who are unfamiliar with it, the conference has been billed as “the most comprehensive event on SharePoint and related technology.”   SharePoint is a robust business and one of Microsoft’s best-selling products.

This year, 7,500 attendees make up the sell-out crowd in Anaheim.  They are gathering to participate in more than 240 sessions presented by Microsoft, SharePoint experts and customers — panels that  focus on how SharePoint customers “can use the product as a platform for critical business applications, collaboration, content management, search, enterprise social networking, and more.”  Microsoft intends to use this opportunity to “reflect on 10 years of redefining collaboration and look ahead to where the cloud and a growing SharePoint ecosystem will take the product next.”

This morning, conference attendees heard from Kurt DelBene, president of Microsoft Office Division; Jeff Teper, corporate vice president of SharePoint; and Jared Spataro, senior director of SharePoint product management.  Their combined keynote address examined “the current state of the SharePoint business” and its bright future.

Below are some key talking points:

  • In 2008, SharePoint exceeded $1 billion in revenues.  It is the fastest Microsoft product to attain this milestone, and it’s growing at double-digit speed.
  • More than 125 million SharePoint licenses have been sold to over 65,000 customers.
  • Over 62 million SharePoint 2010 licenses have been sold.
  • If SharePoint were a stand-alone company, it would be one of the top 50 software firms in the world.
  • 80% of the Fortune 500 run SharePoint.
  • SharePoint is #1 in satisfaction, likelihood to recommend, awareness, and market share.
  • SharePoint enjoys a healthy ecosystem with 700,000+ developers and 4,000+ trained partners.
  • Currently, there are 1,000 ISV solutions for SharePoint 2010 and another 1,000 in development.
  • This year alone, Microsoft trained more than 93,000 partners on the SharePoint platform.

We eagerly await the Microsoft SharePoint Conference 2012 (November).  See you then in Las Vegas!

TAGS:

CATEGORIES: