Experiences of an Inland Empire Dad

SharePoint 2010–What Is A Governance Model?

Recently I was having a discussion about SharePoint with a fellow IT colleague.  They expressed their opinion that SharePoint was just a big black hole where documents go to die.  Ouch.  So a quick post to discuss what SharePoint can be and why it is important to do a little investigation and pre-planning before just setting up a “content document store”.  Or, if you’ve already got a mess on your hands an effective way to dig yourself out.

SharePoint 2010 is far more “social” than the previous versions.  SharePoint 2010 relies not only on the structured design of site hierarchy and information architecture, but also relies heavily on the collective contributions of the user community (tagging and metadata). Whether ranking content that they like, creating content, or tagging content with their own taxonomy, users have the opportunity to improve the organization’s ability to deliver and share knowledge and best practices.  Because of this social component, if you don’t start with good Information Architecture principles, you will end up with chaos and the perception that SharePoint is a big sucking black hole.

The goal of information architecture is to create a system that helps users collect, store, retrieve, and use the information that is needed for the business. A Web site’s information architecture determines how the information in that site — its Web pages, documents, lists, and data — is organized and presented to the site’s users.

SharePoint has become both flat and social, an effective governance plan is critical if you want to build effective solutions on this platform. Without clearly defining an IA, you risk the following for your enterprise:

For those of you just getting started, here are some basic steps, the order and time of each step will vary based on your own needs and company culture:

  1. Identify a company wide team.
  2. Start with framing decisions.
  3. Determine your deployment model.
  4. Define a clear vision.
  5. Identify roles and responsibilities.
  6. Develop guiding principles.
  7. Decide your organizational comfort level with social computing.
  8. Define policies and standards.
  9. Document the plan.
  10. Socialize and promote.

The governance team

Governance of the information architecture requires the participation of all groups that have a stake in its success. A governance team should include the following primary members:

The best way to run the information architecture governance team will generally be based on the culture and methodologies of a company. However, here are some general guidelines:

 

More on governance to follow…