Of Web 2.0 and SharePoint 2007
April 28, 2008
Web 2.0 made a big bang in 2007 advocating and offering new avenues for information worker collaboration to increase their productivity. Forrester Research expects that “adoption of social networking solutions for business” will “accelerate dramatically in 2008 with many firms looking for internal social networking solutions”.
Web 2.0 in the enterprise is now here and companies, big and small, are having to figure out how best to deal with it. Technologies such as blogs, wikis, RSS, instant messaging, surveys, team workspaces, web conferencing, mashups and the like have grown immensely in popularity. In many cases, employees have figured out for themselves how to accomplish their work more efficiently using such technologies without formal offerings or support from their companies, and so it has now become imperative that businesses and especially their IT departments seriously consider how they are going to support this growing need for social computing in their organizations.
One of the primary contenders in the enterprise web 2.0 space is SharePoint 2007 from Microsoft. In the short period of a year since it was first released, SharePoint 2007 has generated over $1 billion in sales for Microsoft and has become their fastest selling server product ever. Industry analysts such as G. Oliver Young of Forrester Research say that “Microsoft’s SharePoint will continue to steamroll the market” in the enterprise Web 2.0 space (see Forrester Research’s “Top Enterprise Web 2.0 Predictions For 2008” by G. Oliver Young, January 25, 2008). He also says that “for SharePoint, 2008 will be another banner year.” Forrester also expects that the IT departments taking a leadership role in enterprise 2.0 deployments will look at SharePoint first.
For Lucrum, SharePoint 2007 is currently a cornerstone of our collaboration strategy. In subsequent blogs, I plan to spell out in greater detail those aspects of SharePoint 2007 that make it such a strong contender in the enterprise web 2.0 space. Of course, one cannot assume that SharePoint is the holy grail of social computing and it is what everyone needs - depending on the customer’s needs and environment, it’s possible that other tools might be better suited for them.
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Raveen,
I agree with you. It is clear that SharePoint 2007 has great potential for growth. There are numerous features that were not available in the previous version that improve upon its functionality and usability. Is it right for every business? Of course not. There are certain instances where SharePoint just is not the right fit. LUCRUM adds value by knowing when that is the case, and informing our clients of the best choice available to meet their current needs. While the number of alternatives in collaboration platforms is growing rapidly, SharePoint is still the dominant player in the space. Thus, our ability to deliver innovative solutions with this tool is important. In my brief time with LUCRUM, I have seen us do some amazing things with SharePoint. I am looking forward to learning more about the capabilities of SharePoint 2007 in your upcoming posts.