Leveraging Project Server 2010 for SharePoint Governance and Lifecycle Management’. The session will showcase the new SharePoint Lifecycle Management solution recently released by Microsoft and provide a glimpse of how this can be leveraged to improve governance and lifecycle management in your organisation.
6. Various Types/Sizes of SP Business Requests Creating sub-sites Creating pages Page edits Self-service Creating lists Custom columns CQWP edits (minutes/hours) Feature Activation Custom Content Type Install 3rd Party Software New site collection Deploy Custom Solution Restore Deleted Site IT Minor Project (hours/days/weeks) Major version upgrade Social Features Search Content Source Business workflow process Business entity (BCS) connection Executive dashboard Build custom web part(s) IT Major Project (weeks / months)
8. How can we manage business requests? Manually SharePoint List Project Professional Project Server
9. Synch to SharePoint Sites Demand Management Communities Composites The Business Collaboration Platform for the Enterprise and the Web Portfolio Selection BI & Reporting Content Insights Resource Management Project Team Collaboration Search Schedule Management
10. Five sample phases of a SharePoint Project Lifecycle Select Finish Manage Create Plan Execution Reporting /Assessment ResourcePlanning Project Selection Capture BusinessRequests
12. Project Server provides…… Project request and tracking framework Project selection via the Portfolio Analysis tools Complete project management toolset Collaboration environment Reporting environment ……and just a 23.8 meg install
So before I start, I just want to get a bit of a feel for the roomHow many people here are Devs / Business?Who has heard of Project Server before? Who has used project Server before?
We’re going to look at the IT Challenges that an organisation faces around Lifecycle management & Governance when implementing SharePointSome options to assistHow PS can helpAnd a few takeaways… so you can go off and try this for yourself.
So we’re going to start with a story.Your organisation has installed SharePoint, you know you have got an infra person in and clicked next nextnext
You’ve gone through rounds of workshops and set up your go live governance strategy,Things like,What will be turned on, What won’tWho is responsible for whatchange management done a great job – comms plan etcChange management team have done a fantastic job
And you’ve launched it. SharePoint has taken off, the organisation loves it, they see the potential of the platform, and that’s what it is, a platform, and start to think, wouldn’t it be great if we moved xxx to SharePoint, built a new list, built a dashboard etc. So the business requests start pouring in…
Three different categories of SharePoint business requests (four if you include help desk tickets)Self Service Include simple tasks that can be performed without impacting the platform, typical business as usual.Usually in the region of minutes / hours to performIT Minor ProjectInclude things like a new Site Collection, restoring, feature activation. May require access to Central Admin, may require design and definitely testing before they are deployed into the production environment.Things like feature activations of solutions from contractors, we need to make sure it is regression tested3rd Party tools – have to be very well tested to make sure it won’t impact the central sharepoint platform.Typically range from hours through to weeks of workIT Major ProjectThings like moving to the next version of the platform, installation of a Service Pack. Activating new core features that require regression testing, planning, change management, training etc. Custom web parts. The big items.Can take many weeks of months to complete.ORIGINAL SLIDE TAKEN FROM OSP202 TECH ED DECK BY SCOTT JAMISON AND CHRISTOPHE FIESSINGER (http://channel9.msdn.com/Events/TechEd/NorthAmerica/2011/OSP202)
With these kind of requests, there are a number of typical challenges that face the IT dept.QUESTION : What do you guys think the typical challenges are for IT with the business requests?Managing change in the production environmentNeed to ensure that your production environment is not too loose, nor too restrictiveOn one hand you don’t want a platform that sprawls and is uncontrolledBut you need to provide a platform that is flexible to the business.The governance plan needs to be just right.Capturing proposals and requests for new functionalityHow many proposals or requests come in via a telephone call or an email to your friendly SharePoint guy in ITNeed to put a formal process in place to capture new business requests, to provide visibility and to ensure that everyone’s request is captured.Objectively evaluating and prioritizing solution requestsIn bigger implementation you can have a large number of requests coming through, but how do you choose which ones to do?It’s usually the one who shouts the loudest or plays golf with the CIO These may not be the best waysForecasting resource needsNot every organisation has hundreds of SharePoint resources available, they are often scarce and over-resourced. So we need a way to forecast our resource needs and go out and supplement the team if it is required.Effectively management of the selected projectsOf the projects that are going to be done, have we estimated them correctly and formally organised. Bigger requests will need to be run like full on projectsTesting changes large and smallTesting is a major challenge for SharePoint request. Even the smallest change on a shared platform could have an impact on other business groups. You’ll need to organise testers, regression testing etc
QUESTION : How do you MANAGE BUSINESS REQUESTS?ManuallyUsing Paper, Excel or a simple trouble ticket solution.Most start off this wayBecomes unwieldy and opposed to all the good you’ve done by putting in SharePointSharePoint ListIf you’re a small organisation, or don’t have many requestsCreate a simple custom list in SharePoint where you can track relevant info, you can also attach documents, or if you wantcreate separate workspaces for the projects. Great for capturing the initial requests, but poor for tracking the implementation etc.Project ProfessionalOnce you have captured the requests, you can leverage Project Professional,Provides a better view of tasks, schedules, assignments and the status of the projectsIf you use it with a SharePoint task list, can synchronise information with a SharePoint site and get team members to directly update their progress, providing visibility etc.Project ServerWhat if you want to combine the two?But then there is Project Server, taking the best of SharePoint and Project ServerCreate and manage the portfolio of SharePoint proposals and existing ProjectsConsistently evaluate and prioritise SharePoint proposals through Project Server’s in built portfolio optimisation capabilitiesProvide a graphical dashboard of SharePoint projects
SharePoint blue donut, all familiar with.Sync to SharePoint with Project ProfessionalProject Server 2010, a service application for SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise, works with SharePoint to provide these capabilities
So I am going to look at this sample SharePoint Project Lifecycle and specifically how Project Server can assist us in implementing this lifecycle..Capture Business RequestsCapture the project ideas, and additional information required in order to understand the need andto provide enough information to fully understand the problem.Including things like cost, effort, risk, high level understanding of schedule and a high level understanding of resource requirementsProject SelectionAssess each of the projects, based on business drivers and perform analysis against those items. When your looking at the projects your going to do, think about them in the context of your business, take into account things like:Productivity Gains – Makes life easierEmployee Retentions – staff going to stay because of cool toolsQuality ImprovementsRiskRIO / TCOCost AvoidanceReducing time to marketResource PlanningAssign real resources to the project, to perform the project delivery.ExecutionImplement and track the project using the toolReporting and AssessmentReview and continuous improvementORIGINAL SLIDE TAKEN FROM OSP202 TECH ED DECK BY SCOTT JAMISON AND CHRISTOPHE FIESSINGER (http://channel9.msdn.com/Events/TechEd/NorthAmerica/2011/OSP202)
ORIGINAL SLIDE TAKEN FROM OSP202 TECH ED DECK BY SCOTT JAMISON AND CHRISTOPHE FIESSINGER (http://channel9.msdn.com/Events/TechEd/NorthAmerica/2011/OSP202)
Significant IT ChallengesWe saw that organisations can face significant IT challenges from requests to modify SharePoint, these can range from:Capturing proposalsObjective assessment of those proposalsResourcing needsProper management essentialBusiness requests need to be managed effectively to ensure, understanding the resources that will be doing the work, but also tracking progress and ensuring the teams know what they are doingProject Server 2010 can helpProject Server provides a mechanism to:1. Collect User Requests through a fully configurable forms and workflow capability2. Objectively assess each of the projects against drivers3. Plan resources4. Manage delivery5. Assess success criteriaNo Code Solution Available nowWhat I have shown you today is available:2 x white papers and 5 db attachPredefined custom fields / objective drivers Solution StartersVisualisation and DM Dynamic.