SharePoint Records Management


Our friends at Gartner just released their annual Magic Quadrant report on Enterprise Content Management and it has some interesting things to say about the state of content and records management and SharePoint as a driving force in the market.

Interestingly, Gartner notes that even though the global economy has been in a prolonged recession the last few years, spending on enterprise content and records management actually grew on a year after year basis.  Spending was up 5.1% in 2009 and increased again by 7.6% last year.  Moreover, they predict growth will continue at an impressive compound annual rate of 11.4% through 2015.  (Hey, maybe my kids will go to college after all!)

Gartner says its clients use ECM solutions to meet a number of productivity objectives, including regulatory compliance and e-discovery goals.  One of the keys to reaching these goals, they say, is an ‘integration with Microsoft Office Suite for management of new and collaboratively authored content’.  This is apparently true regardless of the ECM solution being used.

As for SharePoint as an ECM solution, Gartner says that over half the inquiries they receive about ECM solutions include a discussion of SharePoint.  Also, fully one-third of their client base is using SharePoint as the core of their records and content management strategy. 

Gartner cautions that many organizations see a continued need to add third-party tools to SharePoint 2010 to realize an acceptably robust enterprise ECM solution. This may be true, but I would argue that this is also the case for most of the other major ECM solutions and Microsoft’s extensive partner ecosystem allows customers to chose the SharePoint features they would like to extend without paying for additional functionality that may provide them no additional value.

Some of the strengths Gartner found in SharePoint 2010 include features and functionality that directly affect its records management capabilities.  These strengths include greater content management, taxonomy, metadata and search capabilities.

As usual, this report makes for pretty compelling reading for anyone in the content and records management business.    If you aren’t a Gartner client, you might want to go here to get a full copy of the report.

SPRM Turns ThreeThis month marks the third anniversary of the launch of this blog and those of us at SPRM want to take a moment to express our thanks to all of you who have been loyal readers and contributors. 

Looking forward, we are all very excited about the future of SharePoint-based records and information management, which has come a long way since we first started reporting on it three short years ago. 

With the release of SharePoint 2010 last year (and the subsequent release of a few key partner add-on applications), the ‘Holy Grail’ of enterprise records management – one solution providing true enterprise integrated information lifecycle management – is now a reality. 

We believe the next few years will prove to be a whirlwind of change throughout the industry.  One that will mark the transition from disorganized silos of valuable, desperate organizational content to an environment of effective and efficient information management that will help organizations grow and thrive for many years to come.

Again, thank you all for your support and we look forward to hearing from each of you…

Cheers,

Don

After a great deal of hard work by some very dedicated and very bright people at GimmalSoft, the US Department of Defense has officially certified the GimmalSoft Compliance Suite for SharePoint 2010 against the US DoD 5015.2 Records Management Application Standard.

As I’ve noted on this blog before, I am a member of the team that produced this product.  I am extremely proud of this solution and I’m very excited about its future.  Having said that, I don’t want to jeopardize the independence of this blog by excessively reporting on this one particular solution.  If you are interested in learning more about the Compliance Suite, I would be happy to talk to you offline or you can contact GimmalSoft directly through their website.

A number of the major ECRM vendors – OK, I’ll be honest, all of the major ECRM vendors – have worked tirelessly to downplay the records management functionality provided in SharePoint. I know this to be true because I have worked for some of these companies. For many of them this has become a matter of survival. They recognize that their solutions can no longer openly compete with SharePoint in the traditional ‘document management’ space, so they desperately cling to the notion that SharePoint is incapable of managing records and only their solution can meet the customer’s records management needs. (And, their marketing message continues, ‘if you are going to buy our product to manage the records repository, you might as well implement our entire solution for just a few dollars more’.)

For some ECRM vendors, this is the last compelling argument their sales staffs can make. Unfortunately for them, it is simply untrue. Mike Alsup, my boss at Gimmal Group, has written a terrific article on the AIIM SharePoint Expert blog that details the myths perpetuated about SharePoint records management and explains why each of them is wrong. If you are revaluating your organization’s records management strategy or you are considering which ECRM solution would best suit your records management needs, I would highly encourage you to read Mike’s article.

Microsoft has made some fairly substantial improvements to SharePoint 2010 holds and electronic discovery functionality over the features that were first available in MOSS 07.  Perhaps the biggest change is making SharePoint 2010 holds available beyond the confines of the Records Center.  Unlike the feature in MOSS 07, holds in SharePoint 2010 can be managed across libraries, sites and site collections. 

In my next series of posts, I’ll describe how the SharePoint 2010 holds feature is activated, how holds are created and applied to content, out-of-the-box Hold Reports and holds discovery functionality.

Activating the Hold and eDiscovery Feature

SharePoint 2010 Hold and eDiscovery is a site level feature that can be activated on any site.  To activate this feature, log into SharePoint as a user with administrator privileges and click on ‘Site Actions’.  Select ‘Site Settings’ from the Site Action list and click on ‘Manage site features’ under the ‘Site Actions’ category.  Next to the Hold and eDiscovery feature, click the ‘Activate’ button.

 

When this feature is activated a new category is created in Site Settings called – not surprisingly – ‘Hold and eDiscovery’.  This category provides links to create and manage holds, run hold reports and search for content and add the search results to a hold.

The next post in this series will describe how holds are created and applied to SharePoint content.

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