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Welcome to New Zealand SharePoint Conference Event Blog Site!

We will be posting regular updated on this site about the different content and track and featuring speakers and what they will be presenting on. Please comment on any of the posts, share the information and let us know if there is a particular topic you would like to see posted here.  

May 14
Donations to Oxfam and Red Cross at the 2012 SharePoint Conferences

For the Australian and New Zealand SharePoint Conference in March, 2012, we decided to do something different with regard to the bags delegates receive when they check into registration. Information provided by sponsors goes into these bags.

We try hard to keep the event costs down for people to attend these conferences since they attract a wide community of Microsoft SharePoint users…and to that end, the bags in our budget are not as fancy as the likes of other more high end events for example. Often the attendees don't like or want them.

So…..we decided this year, to buy bags that were simple and environmentally friendly. As a result we got calico biodegradable bags.

We decided to donate the different in cost between the bags we would normally have purchased, and those we finally purchased. We ran a questionnaire at each event where people could vote for their favourite charity. There were 3 choices.

The Red Cross won for the Australian event and OXFAM won for NZ and our donations were gratefully received!

A quote from Oxfam is included below:

Oxfam is a global movement for change. We invite everyone to be part of building a positive future now: a future free from the injustice of poverty. Oxfam works with poor communities and local organisations to help people address the root causes of poverty. To achieve lasting change, we need to challenge the unjust policies and practices that prevent people from achieving their fundamental rights. That's why we work not only at the grassroots level but also with organisations, institutions and governments at the national and international level.

Thanks to the extremely generous donation from Envision IT NZ, we are able to reach more people, sooner. Thank you so much for your support and for all that you are helping us to achieve.

 

April 29
Heretical SharePoint speakers book wins award

Along with the book, Paul's sessions as always got rave reviews….this post is late in coming, but well worth the mention.

If you are sick of hearing "that's the way we do things around here," but don't have a good answer for how things should be, Paul Culmsee's Tuesday morning talk may be for you. Paul will be speaking about the challenges of aligning SharePoint to Business Goals in the morning session of day 1 of the Australian SharePoint Conference. Much of the content from this session is drawn from a business book he recently published called "The Heretics Guide to Best Practices: The reality of managing complex problems in organisations". On the eve of this conference Paul and his co-author Kailash Awati were thrilled to find out that the book was just awarded a medal at the 5th Annual Axiom Business Book Awards in the USA.

The book, which won bronze in the Operations Management/Lean/Continuous Improvement section, turns traditionally accepted approaches to problem solving on their heads and takes a "warts and all" look at the reality of dealing with organisational issues such as failing projects, adversarial behaviour and other dysfunctions. Paul's experiences with SharePoint projects and beyond was the inspiration for the Heretics Guide.

"When it comes to solving complex problems, we often perform elaborate rituals in the guise of best practices that promise a world of order, certainty, and control," Paul said. "But when rhetoric meets reality, the picture is often far different and practitioners are often reluctant to discuss this."

A witty yet rigorous journey through the seedy underbelly of organisational problem solving, The Heretics Guide not only pinpoints the reasons why best practices don't work as advertised, but also what can be done about them. To that end, in Paul's session, he will cover a couple of techniques that have proved to be very useful in successful SharePoint delivery, but the tools and techniques are equally applicable for many other types of complex projects also.

The rave reviews the book has received suggest it has struck a chord with the business and academic communities. Those who are tasked with successful SharePoint delivery will also find a lot to like.

*         "Hugely enjoyable, deeply reflective, and intensely practical. This book is about weaving human artistry and improvisation, with appropriate methods and technologies, in order to pool collective intelligence and wisdom under pressure." - Simon Buckingham Shum, Knowledge Media Institute, The Open University, UK

*         "This is a terrific piece of work: important, insightful, and very entertaining. Culmsee and Awati have produced a refreshing take on the problems that plague organisations... If you're trying deal with wicked problems in your organisation, then drop everything read this book." - Tim Van Gelder, Principal Consultant, Austhink Consulting

 

April 29
Formula 1, Kangaroo Meat, and Microsoft SharePoint

 

This was a great blog site from the AvePoint team, I thought it was worth while including on this site, especially given the great response to the debate style keynote delivered by Mike Fitzmaurice and Chris Johnson in Australia and New Zealand.

When we talk about the global SharePoint community, we really mean "global". AvePoint is a proud sponsor of the upcoming Australian SharePoint Conference and New Zealand SharePoint Conference later this month.

Before hopping on planes and traveling half way across the world, we caught up with several of the keynote presenters and speakers at the conferences – Mike Fitzmaurice, Vice President of Product Technology at Nintex, Chris Johnson, General Manager at Provoke Solutions, and Jeremy Thake, SharePoint MVP and Enterprise Architect at AvePoint. We got them all chatting about the hottest topics in the Australian and New Zealand SharePoint communities today, what they're most looking forward to at the conferences, and some must-attend spots for those looking for a true Australasia experience.

Mike and Chris, you're both co-leading a keynote presentation at the conferences entitled: "Right Place, Right Time, Right Information". Why did you select this topic as the keynote address?

Mike: There is a major shift in the SharePoint industry right now. The platform has achieved critical mass, and instead of the question being "Do you have SharePoint?", it is now "How much SharePoint do you have?" However, just because that shift has occurred doesn't mean there is clarity of how to properly use the platform. One of the reasons I'd like to think SharePoint MVP Debbie Ireland has us leading this keynote is because both Chris and I have been through many product development cycles of SharePoint when we were at Microsoft. We have the opportunity to share with attendees the most important trends they need to stay apprised of in order to stay current in this industry. Some trends make nothing but sense, while others might be flashes in the pan.

How do you identify what makes sense?

Mike: Not every trend needs to be jumped on immediately, and not every trend is a great idea for every company. We have an opportunity to bring clarity here, and it's backed up by no small amount of experience.

Chris: A bunch of topics are front of mind at the moment. Whether it's simply a buzzword or have real meaning behind them, a keynote is a way for us to give our perspective on each of those trends and shed light on how Microsoft views them as well. We'll provide plenty of background on how Microsoft approaches these SharePoint trends, and help connect some of the dots on what's hot, topical, and where the platform truly fits in to each.

Could you give a teaser as to what some of those trends may be?

Mike: Cloud and mobility are two of the larger trends. Extensibility and interoperability with other software is hot right now.

Chris: IT pros are wondering about their role in the platform's transition to the cloud. We know lots of customers aren't ready to go to the cloud today or tomorrow, but many are trying to gear themselves up for when they are ready in maybe 5 or 6 years. We'll explain how to get ready for that shift, and for the types of roles people will play in a SharePoint deployment of the future.

Have you done this keynote before?

Mike: No – we've come up with something special that we'll unveil first to the Australian and New Zealand SharePoint communities.

Chris: It's definitely not the first time we've talked about these topics, but it is our inaugural push to focus on these themes in a keynote address.

What can we expect as part of describing these trends in the keynote?

Mike: Do not expect a bull fight because we will not harm animals in the delivery of this keynote.

When you both prepare for a keynote like this, do you find you all get pressure from your own companies to add them within the content of the speech?

Chris: I don't get any pressure whatsoever from my co-owners or directors. Our opinion is that our company comes along for the ride. If you have something important to say, people will know you for it regardless of whether you throw your logo in their face or not.

Mike: Not at all. There are times when I advocate Nintex, times when I advocate SharePoint, and times when I advocate both. This is a keynote, and there is no pressure to "flog the wares" whatsoever. This is a talk about SharePoint and the sandbox in which all of our companies play. We've been at this a long time in many roles, and are probably regarded more for our presence in the SharePoint community than presence in other companies.

What is the one key takeaway you want attendees to walk away with after your keynote?

Chris: It's important to recognize that cloud mobility and workplace productivity are not big, scary problems that people can't solve or must solve immediately. It's a scale from, on one end, having to deal with these things today and, on the other hand, getting ready for them in the future. Just because things are buzzwords and hot topics right now doesn't mean they need to solve the world's problems over night. It will take some time.

Mike: Chris, that's a good point. SharePoint, like any technology, is in a state of constant flux. That flux is best met with a combo of healthy optimism and healthy skepticism. We'll give plenty of examples in just a few short days.

What's your favorite aspect of the Australian and New Zealand SharePoint communities?

Mike: Enthusiasm. The Australian community has historically looked at what SharePoint can offer, rolled up their sleeves, and have a really serious go at it. Other places are a bit more cautious, so I usually see crazy yet wonderful stuff happen from Down Under. The cool stuff often happens there first.

Chris: There are two countries that really stand out in the SharePoint world: Australia and New Zealand. More interesting solutions and talent come from those two countries, and there is much more going on down in that corner of the world. If you look at the sheer size of those countries in terms of population versus the innovation coming out of those countries, it's out of whack.

Mike: Actually, my favorite thing about New Zealand community is its dedication to the platform. If you look at the attendance per capita for the SharePoint portion at TechEd or SharePoint events of any kind, I am constantly amazed and humbled by the turnout we see there. Kiwis do not sit on the fence when it comes to SharePoint. There are a lot of times when you could use SharePoint to attack business problems or you could use something else. New Zealand is all-in when it comes to using SharePoint.

Chris: Kiwis have the tendency to get a lot done with a small amount of resources given size of the country, money, and population. I'm constantly amazed by what people are doing with SharePoint for that reason, by building interesting solutions and using the platform in ways most people wouldn't think of to get things done.

Jeremy, you lived in Australia for seven years before relocating to America in 2011. How does it feel to be going back home?

Jeremy: I'm excited to catch up with everyone, and especially to see how other local speakers' voices have matured in the past year. It'll be interesting to see first-hand how the market has changed in Australia, and I can tell by the topics highlighted in local SharePoint User Groups that the focus is shifting. Cloud is one of them, and search has a strong voice as well. I'm excited to see how these two topics play at the conference.

Jeremy, you're co-presenting a session on governance for SharePoint with SharePoint MVP and AvePoint Chief SharePoint Evangelist Dan Holme, and you're also leading a session on Windows Azure. What are you most excited about?

Jeremy: The governance topic has been around for a long while, but I'm really excited to scrutinize the reception of Azure with the local community. Chris and Andrew Connell have talked about it a great deal, but I believe the uptake hasn't been as strong as Microsoft had hoped. Many are still looking to conduct on-premise development as opposed to doing it in the cloud. The feedback I get for my Azure presentation will be interesting. While many may not be ready just yet, this is coming down the pipe and will be taken seriously at some point in the very near future.

Why has adoption not been as strong for Azure?

Jeremy: Many companies, especially government organizations, like keeping things on premise. I'm finding they are not ready to have fixed Service Level Agreements that are out of their control. There are some early adopters such as new Chief Technology Officers at some bigger organizations taking these risks, but many are risk averse at this point.

What is the most important need amongst the AU community today?

Jeremy: Sometimes the Australian SharePoint community feels isolated – there are some great pros that just do not get much visibility internationally. I think a large part of that is that many feel it is too far to travel outside of Australia, and so people can only have a voice through their blogs. If we could give the community more of a platform to stand on from a global perspective, it would be really cool. Unfortunately, not all of them are as nuts as I am and switched on to social media platforms such as Google+ and Twitter.

Chris, you're a Kiwi native but living in Seattle, WA today. What's the biggest thing the New Zealand SharePoint community needs at this point?

Chris: Been fascinating coming from the New Zealand SharePoint market to the one in North America. To give perspective, there's approximately 4 million people living in New Zealand today, and its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is about $100 billion less than the GDP of Seattle. So the market size is tiny compared to the rest of the world. Consequently, the New Zealand SharePoint market has unique problems that you don't usually see in the States: Simple things like software licensing and cost of doing business can be a real blocker in New Zealand. I'm excited about some of the moves Microsoft mad in terms of providing a standard license for SharePoint for Internet Sites (FIS) which is at a vastly reduced cost compared to the standard SharePoint license. That in itself has made a huge difference because previously, the costs were just extremely prohibitive.

Spending time now in America has helped me to really understand much more as well the unique challenges New Zealand organizations face. In America, it makes sense why products would be priced or designed in a certain way, but I can see more clearly why it doesn't work in New Zealand. For example, there are no data centers in Australia or New Zealand for Microsoft Office 365 – the closest one is in Singapore. International bandwidth is still scarce in New Zealand, and it makes a big difference in the way you can use services from the cloud. With that said, we're only starting to see the tip of that iceberg. Software's going to the cloud, but there are some specific problems the markets in Australia and New Zealand both face that must be addressed.

Jeremy, what is the key message you want to have resonate with the Australian SharePoint community by the end of the conference?

Jeremy: That I still have an Australian accent, and I still have an agnostic voice even though I've joined a software vendor. Hopefully, I have maintained the respect that I am an expert in the field. From a messaging perspective, I'm hoping that people think more outside the box with site collections, web apps, and the structure of SharePoint rather than thinking of it as one big dumping ground. It'll be interesting to see how that comes across in Australia as well as New Zealand.

What sets the Australian and New Zealand SharePoint conferences apart from others?

Chris: People are extremely enthusiastic. These conferences are less about the sessions and much more about the social connections you make when you attend. A lot of heavy lifting gets done with a beer in hand.

Jeremy: The people are extremely direct. Even if they're not sure how they're going to phrase the question, they will still ask. In America, I've found that many people feel they need to make sure they phrase the question correctly before they even ask.

Mike: I've found that Americans ask a question as much to get an answer as they do to demonstrate their grasp of the topic at hand. Europeans ask questions one-on-one, but not with an audience watching. Australians are not afraid to ask questions – which is extremely refreshing.

Chris: Forwardness is more prevalent in that part of the world. There is no real fear of reprisal, and I just believe that questions and healthy debate is more accepted in Australia and New Zealand than in other regions.

What are your favorite places to visit in both Melbourne and Auckland (New Zealand)?

Chris: In Melbourne, the Formula One happening the day before the conference. Lygon Street is also famous in Melbourne for its Italian food. I love going and sitting outside an Italian restaurant with a good bottle of wine watching Ferraris speed past me.

Mike: I'll definitely visit the Melbourne Supper Club and the Cosh Bar on Ponsonby, and I'll try to squeeze in a rugby match, but I'm really looking forward to Lamingtons and Squiggles. Sausage rolls, too. Pity whitebait aren't in season.

Chris: I'm 100 percent looking forward to meat pies – they're the undiscovered, "next big product" in America.

Jeremy: I'm really missing kangaroo meat. Stereotypical? Sure, but I really enjoyed it. I'm looking forward to a good kangaroo steak.

Mike: The general consensus here is that we're excited about Australian and Kiwi foodstuffs.

For more information on the upcoming conferences, please visit the event websites for Australia and New Zealand.

March 17
Mobile Phone App for Conference Agenda and More!

For this years Conference Enlighten Designs have built an awesome easy to use mobile application. The best part – you don't even need to download it as an application, instead just browse to http://mobile.sharepointconference.com.au for the AUS event or http://mobile.sharepointconference.co.nz for the NZ event. The agenda is displayed in order of occurrence with each track allocated an individual colour.

You can view the sessions by Track using the Filter funnel in the top right corner, and then selecting the track that appears in the view.

To see information about the session click on the session and the session date, time, length and description are displayed along with the Speakers Name and photo. For more information on the speaker click this speaker link to view the speaker's bio and all of their other conference sessions.

 

 

In the top right corner there is a second function use this icon to view, the Speakers list, Sponsors List, Event Survey and the Floor plan showing the rooms where all the sessions are on the ABOUT Page. Use the back arrow at anytime to navigate back to the screen prior or the filters to redefine your search criteria. Don't forget to complete the SURVEY to provide us feedback about the event.

Speaker List filter: displays speaker photo, bio a link to the speakers organisation and a list of each of the sessions they are presenting. Use the Sponsor list view, click on a sponsor name and you'll see the sponsor company profile along with a list of all speakers at the conference for that sponsor, again by clicking on the speaker from here you'll be taken to the Speaker/session view.

Once you're at the conference if you want further info on a session you attended or missed you can use the Completed button to view these past sessions. And the "Whats on now, takes you to current sessions happening.

This mobile agenda view is really user friendly, intuitive and much easier than carrying around a paper version J Don't worry there will be paper versions available for those who prefer that option.

It is recommended that this mobile web app is viewed using one of the following operating systems:

Android 2.3 & 4.0, iOS 5.1, Windows Phone 7.5 - User experience may vary if viewed on anything else.

Looking forward to seeing you there

 

 

 

 

 

 

March 17
Councils collaborating and the Power behind Projects! Case Studies not to miss!

SharePoint as a Shared Services Platform for Multiple Councils New Zealand Councils – 1:30pm DAY 2 (29 March)– Greys Room

Hamilton City Council (HCC) has a vision to become one of New Zealand's leading customer services organisations. Smart thinking and passionate contribution from the public are helping to shape the city and the Microsoft Citizen's Services Platform (CSP) is the platform selected to assist in enabling this vision. 

Enlighten Designs, Dimension Data and Microsoft Consulting Services collaborated to deliver a multi-tenanted shared services platform that allows HCC to distribute both the costs and benefits across New Zealand councils

Come and hear from Wayne Ewington (Microsoft Consulting Services) and Enlighten Designs on the benefits of a multi-tenanted SharePoint platform and how frameworks like CSP can be utilised.

Wayne Ewington is a Microsoft Certified Master (MCM) and a Microsoft Certified Architect (MCA) of SharePoint 2010. He is one of the first in the world to have gained both of these certifications. His SharePoint experience goes back to "Tahoe" and NCompass Resolution days (which is probably a little bit sad). As a Principal Consultant for Microsoft Consulting Services in New Zealand, Wayne works with corporates and partners helping them with their successful SharePoint deployments.

 

Mighty River Power Case Study - – 10:30am DAY 2 (29 March)– Greys Room

PIPC and Enlighten Designs' presentation will focus on how Mighty River Power (MRP) is using Microsoft Project Server 2010 to deliver projects in the right manner. The presentation will take you through the process of helping MRP upgrade from Project Server version 2003 to 2010 and the opportunities that the new Project Server 2010 offered MRP to take a step up with scheduling, collaboration and reporting. Also discussed in the presentation is the opportunity that now faces MRP and all potential users of Project Server 2010 to expand out into improving programme delivery and the prioritisation of the entire portfolio against the organisation's stated strategy and objectives. The presentation is prepared by Youssef Mourra and he will also touch on the integration points between MS Project Server 2010 and SharePoint 2010.

 

About Yossef Mourra

Youssef Mourra is a Partner and PIPC NZ's Country Manager. PIPC are a management consulting organisation with 14 offices around the world and with 2 in New Zealand. He has over 20 years' experience in the world of project, programme and portfolio management (P3M).  He has an excellent blend of 'soft' skills (Project & Portfolio Management) and 'hard' knowledge (e.g. certified PRINCE2 practitioner, expert in MS Project Server).  This enables him to guide and mentor successfully in P3M. Youssef has led hundreds of consulting engagements ranging from complex project and programme rescues, mobilisation of project offices, to implementation of project management information systems.  He has worked in Australia, UK, Europe and Asia and for the past 8 years has been based in Wellington, New Zealand and has gained experience with a number of clients both in the private and public sector.  He has been a Prince2 Practitioner for the past 10 years and has developed a reputation for thought leadership in the whole OGC (PRINCE2, MSP and MoP) offering.  He has, along with his team, taken the lead in adapting and customising OGC offerings to make them more practical and more pragmatic for use within Australia and New Zealand.  Youssef is recognised as a trusted advisor by a number of 'C' level  executives and project offices throughout the APAC region.  Youssef particularly enjoys the interaction with people in all assignments. He is a member of the Prince2 User group and the PMI in NZ and regularly speaks at functions organised by the PMI, Microsoft and other related trade associations

Youssef is married and has three children under 9 and when he has time, he enjoys music, reading, fruit trees, cricket, theatre, travel, wine, politics and etymology (the history and study of words).

March 10
Planned SharePoint Growth

Nintex provides another piece of insight on managing SharePoint growth.

 

Facing challenges managing SharePoint growth? Companies are commonly upgrading infrastructure and rolling out functionality associated with their portals and SharePoint workloads. Despite the large amounts of time and resources invested in such efforts, many organizations dive into these initiatives without the full and detailed visibility into areas of SharePoint that are growing and at what rate. As a result, there is no way of tracking hardware performance against usage trends.

 

Nintex Analytics can help solve that problem, by giving the required visibility into:

  • Document Storage Growth showed overall content growth over time
  • File types indicated what type of documents occupied the most space
  • CPU and Memory utilisation were committed to historical growth.

 

Enabling the establishment of a growth baseline to accurately forecast infrastructure requirements. Also identify stale content that could be removed from the intranet to ensure infrastructure is being used efficently.

 

Nintex Analytics 2010

Nintex Analytics 2010 is the next generation of SharePoint content and activity reporting and analysis, it provides insight into SharePoint adoption, content creation and usage, collaboration, search utility, and much more. Find out what you've got and how it's used, monitor and understand how SharePoint technology is making a difference in your organization, from a worldwide large environment all the way down to an individual site.

Ask for a Nintex Analytics Demonstration at Nintex booth number 19.

For more information see www.nintex.com/analytics

March 09
Planned SharePoint Growth

Nintex provides another piece of insight on managing SharePoint growth.

 

Facing challenges managing SharePoint growth? Companies are commonly upgrading infrastructure and rolling out functionality associated with their portals and SharePoint workloads. Despite the large amounts of time and resources invested in such efforts, many organizations dive into these initiatives without the full and detailed visibility into areas of SharePoint that are growing and at what rate. As a result, there is no way of tracking hardware performance against usage trends.

 

Nintex Analtyics can help solve that problem, by giving the required visiblity into:

  • Document Storage Growth showed overall content growth over time
  • File types indicated what type of doucments occupied the most space
  • CPU and Memoror utilsation were comated to histocial growth.

 

Enableing the establishment of a growth baseline to accurately forcast infrastructure requirments. Also identify stale content that could be removed from the intranet to ensure infrastructure is being used efficently.

 

Nintex Analytics 2010

Nintex Analytics 2010 is the next generation of SharePoint content and activity reporting and analysis, it provides insight into SharePoint adoption, content creation and usage, collaboration, search utility, and much more. Find out what you've got and how it's used, monitor and understand how SharePoint technology is making a difference in your organization, from a worldwide large environment all the way down to an individual site.

Ask for a Nintex Analytics Demonstration at Nintex booth number 19.

For more information see www.nintex.com/analytics

March 05
Encourage User Adoption with OnePlaceMail R6.1

James Fox gives us the run down on Scinaptic One Place Mail

Imagine if all users had 100% trust in SharePoint from day one - how would your SharePoint adoption be? Building trust in the SharePoint platform is the focus of OnePlaceMail Release 6.1, while continuing to provide seamless capture of content and delivering the full power of SharePoint within Microsoft Outlook. OnePlaceMail R6.1 has arrived just in time for the Australian and New Zealand SharePoint Conferences where we will be demonstrating the exciting enhancements at exhibition booths 11 and 13 respectively.

Available in either the free Express edition or the Enterprise edition, OnePlaceMail seamlessly integrates Microsoft Outlook Email, Office and Windows File Explorer with Microsoft SharePoint. This latest release is packed full of user friendly enhancements of which highlights include;

  • SharePoint Search - Define multiple SharePoint Search Scopes/Locations within Microsoft Outlook

  • Streamlined interface - More intuitive and improved first use experience
  • Performance - Greater performance saving content to SharePoint
  • Recent location tracking - More efficient saving and access to SharePoint content

  • Terms & Taxonomy - Create new Enterprise Keyword Terms and Managed Metadata.

    >> and many more – read about all of the new features.

For more information come and see us at the SharePoint conference in Melbourne and Auckland where we will be located at Booth 11 and 13 respectively - and for those wanting to learn how to encourage SharePoint user adoption, make time to hear our CEO James Fox run a session on the email challenge and how to tackle it! Melbourne talk details. Auckland talk details.

March 03
Nintex Talks Analytics

Nintex Analytics 2010

Nintex Analytics 2010 is a window into how your organization uses SharePoint 2010, providing valuable insight into content, collaboration and performance..

 

The insight you need

Are you reviewing your data governance plan? Do you need visibility on what information is being accessed on your company intranet, and by whom? Concerned that the information you are attempting to share is not being used as intended?

 

 

 

 

  • Site Activity to see what was being accessed, when and by whom
  • Popular Search Terms to see what users were searching for and whether it was appropriate
  • Content Database Growth to monitor for large, sudden growths or reductions

When it matters….

Have you posted a document to SharePoint and need to know if it is being accessed? Would you like to send usage trends to management once a month?

 

 

 

 

  • Quick and easy to subscribe yourself or other users to reports
  • Subscribe to a Watch report to see activity on sites or documents

 

The way you want it….

Need to have customized reports to suit your corporate image? Perhaps a custom report to show activity per department or region? Need to privatize the data in the report?

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Quick and easy report designer to customize charts
  • Design new reports from the existing Data Sets
  • Use the SDK and build your own Data Set templates

 

Ask for a Nintex Analytics Demonstration at Nintex booth number 19.

For more information see www.nintex.com/analytics

March 01
Bringing SharePoint to the Applications and Devices People Use Every Day

 

Update from Colligo – Silver Sponsor at the New Zealand SharePoint Conference. See them at their booth for more information…

A question we often hear from SharePoint professionals is "how do we increase the adoption and use of SharePoint in our organization?" Our answer is simple, "by integrating SharePoint into the applications and devices that people use every day."

At Colligo, we believe user engagement is not about bringing the user to the tool, but about bringing the tool to the user. In the SharePoint world, this that means bringing SharePoint to the applications and they use every day, like Outlook and Windows Explorer, and to the devices they love, such as the iPad. Whether you need to connect Outlook to SharePoint for email management or to provide offline access to SharePoint content for mobile staff on iPads, Colligo builds solutions that seamlessly integrate SharePoint into to the applications and devices that people use every day.

And to make it a truly seamless enterprise solution means being able to provide centralized management capabilities and again, Colligo delivers. All our SharePoint enterprise solutions can be centrally deployed, managed and monitored using Colligo Administrator, a product that allows you to set up sites, folders, favourites, and specific configuration options for users across all their mobile and desktop devices. It also provides reporting on usage so you can monitor and measure in order to get the adoption that you are looking for.

So make sure to stop by the Colligo booth and let us introduce you to our award-winning suite of SharePoint products for the enterprise. We'll show you why more than 4800 organizations worldwide rely on Colligo's SharePoint solutions to improve collaboration, increase productivity, and turn SharePoint users into fans. Make sure to enter our draw for a new iPad 2, pre-loaded with the exciting new Colligo Briefcase Pro, an iPad app that provides secure access to SharePoint, online or offline.

We'll also be doing a presentation titled "Best Practices for Driving Enterprise-Wide SharePoint Adoption and User Engagement" at the Vendor Track session on Feb. 29th at 10:30AM. This presentation will take a deep dive into some of the issues that organizations face in getting a high level of SharePoint user adoption and show how Colligo can help solve the problem. So, whether you're using SharePoint on-premise or Office 365 in the cloud, I recommend you attend the session. I look forward to seeing you there!

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Nintex Talks Analytics 11
Introduction to External Content Types 11
Let’s celebrate and tie Ribbons around SharePoint 10
IT Pro Track 9
SharePoint 2010 Caveats: Don’t get caught out! 7
Donations to Oxfam and Red Cross at the 2012 SharePoint Conferences 0
Heretical SharePoint speakers book wins award 0
Formula 1, Kangaroo Meat, and Microsoft SharePoint 0
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Debbie Ireland

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