Reality: Microsoft made SharePoint more of a retention tool with an interface that is familiar to SharePoint and IT professionals than an RM solution whose interface is familiar to RM professionals. “Out of the box” implementations of SharePoint RM require a wide variety of configuration settings, customizations, and choices that must be established and maintained by someone who is familiar with both SharePoint systems administration and retention policies.
However, SharePoint add-on products are emerging that elegantly support the traditional principles and tenants of RM and enable the management of retention and disposition decisions based on information management policies in ways that are familiar to most RM professionals. These products fit into the familiar SharePoint user experience and enable enterprise RM with few of the penalties that some RM solutions have forced on SharePoint users, such as requiring users to understand multiple product interfaces and to search for information in multiple repositories.
Reality: Many of the characteristics of enterprise deployments of SharePoint RM require careful planning, including the following:
However, add-on products are emerging that enable the implementation and maintenance of SharePoint RM for an enterprise in a scalable way. RM dashboards are available in SharePoint that enables information policy and disposition instructions to be managed centrally and propagated to the appropriate SharePoint sites. Content Type and SharePoint Feature inheritance enable granular controls to be consistently implemented and transparently enforced in SharePoint configurations that involve thousands of SharePoint sites. Other SharePoint products support the migration of legacy SharePoint sites into standard and manageable configurations. Extensive planning is required, but this planning enables SharePoint RM to be an integrated function supporting compliance within all SharePoint sites instead of a disconnected process that may or may not be adopted by users across the organization.
These are features, unique to record management that enable users, record managers, and administrators to create, move, copy, administer, and dispose of records according to record management best practices.
Reality: It is true that several traditional RM administration tasks are managed very differently within SharePoint than in other RM solutions. Below are several examples of records administration process requirements that are very different or non-existent in SharePoint “out of the box”:
However, add-on products are emerging that enable the implementation and maintenance of SharePoint RM in a manner that is not only familiar but is powerful and complete from the perspective of records managers.
Even in organizations that are not required to have certified RM solutions, these standards are recognized as important qualifiers for vendors to achieve, and Microsoft chose not to include all of the features in SharePoint to enable it to be easily certified by these standards.
Reality: It is true that:
However, add-on products are emerging that provide certified solutions in the relevant certification jurisdictions, such as North America, Europe, and Australia. As long as the add-on products add value and behave in ways that extend the SharePoint paradigms and add capabilities as opposed to limiting the ability of organizations to grow their SharePoint configurations, why is it critical that Microsoft build all of these capabilities into the core of SharePoint? As Microsoft has noted, this would significantly add to the size of the SharePoint code base that Microsoft would need to maintain, is not needed by most users, and some of the local regulatory requirements may be incompatible with the requirements of other jurisdictions.
Reality: It is true that many vendors have more experience with managing repositories of record than Microsoft has with SharePoint, including Autonomy, EMC, HP, IBM, and Open Text.
However, maintaining a separate repository of record for SharePoint content requires:
SharePoint is rapidly becoming a standard for collaboration, knowledge management, and portals in most organizations for reasons that are well documented in the AIIM Communities and elsewhere. The requirement for the content in SharePoint to be managed according to retention and disposition policies of the organization is clearly achievable. While there are some challenges to achieving this within SharePoint, these same challenges exist in all of the alternative approaches to achieving enterprise RM. The capabilities of add-on products from such vendors as Automated-Intelligence, RecordPoint, Collabware, GimmalSoft, and others are rapidly maturing and deserve a careful review from organizations that are considering how best to achieve their enterprise retention and disposition goals for SharePoint-based content.