PLEASE DOWNLOAD TO SEE SPEAKER'S NOTES AND ANIMATIONS.
How to understand (and explain to your end users) the concepts of metadata and content types and then, how to build a SharePoint taxonomy.
(Let me know if you find this useful in your work.)
3. It’s all about me…
@ruveng
spinsiders.com/ruveng
Toronto
ruveng@navantis.com
Ruven Gotz
4. This is a Meta-Presentation
• Two Goals and a Meta Goal:
• Understand metadata
• How it applies to taxonomy
• How it applies to content types
• Understand why it matters in SharePoint
• Meta Goal
• Educate you
• Give you tools to educate YOUR stakeholders
24. Taxonomy Animal Kingdom
Kingdom
Superclass
Invertebrates Vertebrates
Mammals Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Class
Predators Primates Whales Rodents
Order
Squirrels Mice Porcupines Guinea Pigs Suborder
Mice & Rats
Hamsters and
Voles Family
25. Animal
Kingdom
The bottom of this tree
Invertebrates Vertebrates
Mammals Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds
Predators Primates Whales Rodents
Squirrels Mice Porcupines Guinea Pigs
Hamsters and
Mice & Rats
Voles
Real Hamsters Voles Gerbils
Short-tailed Long-tailed
dwarf hamsters dwarf hamsters
Djungarian
Roborovski
dwarf
Hamster
hampsters
26. X:
Taxonomy
Shared drive zoo Sales &
Production
Marketing
Marketing Sales Web Design Newsletter Social
Commercial Industrial Government Healthcare
Labs Hospitals Clinics Mobile
Private Public
Large Medium Small
Urban Rural
Not
University
Associated
27. X:
Taxonomy
Sales &
Production
Marketing
Marketing Sales Web Design Newsletter Social
Commercial Industrial Government Healthcare
Labs Hospitals Clinics Mobile
Private Public
Large Medium Small
Urban Rural
Not
University
Associated
29. X:
Taxonomy
Shared drive zoo Sales &
Production
Marketing
Marketing Sales Web Design Newsletter Social
Major
Commercial Industrial Government Healthcare
Hospitals
Labs Hospitals Clinics Mobile Colleges
Private Public Big Small
Large Medium Small
Urban Rural
Not
University
Associated
44. SharePoint Taxonomy (Metadata)
Customer Type Sector Size Location University
• Lab • Private • Large • Urban • Yes
• Hospital • Public • Medium • Rural • No
• Clinic • Small
• Mobile
51. Drug
Vacation Request
Reimbursement
Name _________ Name _________
Emp. # _________ Emp. # _________
Date _________ Date _________
Dates Requested: Drug Used:
From __________ Name __________
To: __________ Cost: $ _________
Manager ____ Manager ____
Approved Y/N Approved Y/N
56. Key Points to Take Home
• Metadata takes a while to understand
• Use of metaphors can help
• Use of visual tools can help a LOT
• Much more than technology, it’s governance that makes the
difference
• Folders are bad, except when they’re not
57. Did I meet my goals for you…
• Do you have a better understanding of Metadata?
• Do you understand why it matters in SharePoint?
• Do you think you’ll be able to explain these concepts more easily to your
stakeholders?
59. http://sdrv.ms/share2012sa <-- The goods!
Ruven Gotz – Navantis (Canada)
ruveng@navantis.com
@ruveng (twitter)
www.spinsiders.com/ruveng
May 2012
Notas del editor
Everyone knows the answer to this…
It’s “Data about Data” as Einstein proved all those years ago
Thanks for coming, we’re done now…This answer helps absolutely no-one – well, maybe Einstein
I’m not telling yet, but…It’s an iterative process – you won’t understand it right away, but you will circle in to understanding over time.
The sounds that these animals make are attributes that distinguish them from each other. The sound is NOT the animal, and does not replace the animal, but if I asked even a 3 year old, which one goes ‘quack’ they could point it out to me.So now, a more serious example…
How do you sort your CD’s?Artist? Title? Genre? Date? Cover Colour?You have to decide up front – and stick to it, because the objects are physical
What if the store was full of unlabeled tin cans? How could you tell which can had the corn?You would need to open every can to see if had what you wanted(Tin can example originally suggested by Serge Tremblay)
Now we don’t need to open each can, but they are all in a jumble and you have to pick up each can to check if has what you want.(Also, the fact that you may not know the language that the label was printed in could pose a problem)
Items are grouped by type (canned fruit, canned sauce, canned vegetables)Signs point you to the correct area so that you can quickly find what you need.BUT: Because the objects are physical, you need to pick a method and stick to itAND: Can cause duplication: Canned chilli’s may be in the veggie isle, but also in the ethnic food aislehttp://caseyxrobertson.deviantart.com/art/Grocery-Store-2-191196289
Data about dataYes, but not enough info Seth Maislin of Earley & Assoc. says it's the "Is-ness" of something:This 'is' a contract. That 'is' a pop album.For us it enables findability, policy and processFindability for locating the right documentsPolicy – records managementProcess – Status of a business process (e.g. Not started, In process, Complete, Approved, Archived)
Not really this, but let’s use these creatures to understand.
Swedish botanist, physician, and zoologist, who laid the foundations for the modern scheme of binomial nomenclature. He is known as the father of modern taxonomy
Review the animal kingdom taxonomy
Did you catch the subtle change here.The taxonomy is now of your ‘X’ drive.Which is your shared drive zoo!Let me zoom in
Here is where your file lives
Problem here is lack of governance – anyone can add any folder anywhere anytimeThis boils down to the ‘putability’ problem – I’ll search for a long time to find a doc, but not for long to see where to put it.
This uses the base metaphor that we live with every day.The concept of a “file” and a “file folder” as a way of storing digital data is a metaphor taken from the world of paper managementIt has become so ingrained, that we think of it as natural, but it’s not: It was invented in 1983 by Apple (wikipedia) [But they really stole it from Xerox]
All your files are stored in one folder and their names are completely meaninglessThis is like the unlabeled cans: You have to open each file to see what it contains
A bit of a better situationThe naming convention lets you find the file you need (but there’s no way to sort by year)Rely on users to follow the naming convention (religiously)
Now we’re in great shape!This is nicely structured and labeled, just like the supermarketBUT…
What a mess! Now, when you have to search for a document, you have to look in the ‘tree’ and also in all the other spots where the files could be.Another issue… If your boss needs you to find all ATT consumer files across all years, you have not alternative other than clicking all the parent folders open and drilling down to the documents that you need, one at a time.
There is a balancing act around finding and saving. The investment you make on one side, pays off (or costs you) on the other side.
On the findability side (searching or browsing) [Not a ‘real’ English word]If you really need that needle, you’ll look through a lot of haystacks
There is an essential asymmetry to putability [Also not a real English word]: (Except that I learned them from Bill English)You can give up fairly quickly on deciding where to save something – there is always a fast and easy way out….It’s called: I’ll just put it here – I’ll remember later where I left it. THIS IS A BIG LIE
I’m not Carl, but let’s talk about why this works.After all, it’s the same as a directory treeThe difference is governance
Is this too many to ask for?Do we force users to answer all these questions/enter all this data?
Instead of confusing people with the SharePoint interface, I use a familiar tool: ExcelUsing some simple macros, I am able to illustrate the power of filters and views.There’s no free lunch however: People now have to enter metadata.We can simplify this by defaulting values like “Date” to today and “Year” to current year.We can leverage content types as well
Explain metadata and then use this worksheet for ‘homework’
Think of them as different forms with slots to fill in.Two documents may have overlapping slots (or, metadata).It may make sense to store these two types of docs in the same library (HR Requests), but use content types to drive workflow, policy and prompt users only for the metadata that applies.
All columns (metadata) exist in the same list, even though the user is only prompted to fill-in the ones for the content type that they are using.
Content types cannot be used for security
What is this a picture of?With a lot of experience, training or imagination, you may figure something out – but the concept is ABSTRACT
This is something that people understand and agree on.It is concrete (no, not made of concrete – it’s marble)Visual tools can help make the abstract into the concrete
MindManager (from MindJet) is a tool that has changed the way I work. Here is a quick demo of how it works.
Using mind-mapping tools to build the taxonomy from the homeworkI use MindJet MindManager – and I like and highly recommend it.There are other tools that are less expensive such as X-Mind and freemind.