This article assumes that SharePoint has already been established as the technology of choice. If your project includes evaluating whether or not SharePoint is the right technology for your solution, this article may only partially apply. There is a lot of room for interpretation on what a “SharePoint Business Analyst” actually is. For this article,
SharePoint lists are awesome, they have so many possible uses. When you create a Custom list, the Title field is the only editable field you get out of the box. But I’ve built a number of lists in which the user wouldn’t necessary know what to put in the title. And although there a few
The Roles are SharePoint Administrator SharePoint Developer SharePoint Designer SharePoint Architect SharePoint Administrator The role of SharePoint administrator includes setting up the SharePoint infrastructure with servers and services; SharePoint 2007/2010, Exchange Server, Active Directory, Windows 2003 and 2008 Servers, SQL Server 2005/2008, IIS 6.0 and 7.0, network infrastructure, ISA server, etc. He is responsible for
Dashboards display just-in-time data – at a glance you can see how fast your process is moving and whether resource shifting is required. SharePoint makes dashboards easy and you can create them in many different ways. But, there’s a gap in the out-of-box story for displaying InfoPath data: you can only promote fields that are
Have SharePoint Tickets, but Can’t Get on the Train? InfoPath makes data collection easy – build a form, publish to SharePoint, and BINGO – your users fill them out. When users save or submit, the form promotes values to SharePoint and it’s easy to create custom views on that data or export it to Excel
I previously posted a request for assistance about this issue and thought I should blog about what combination of solutions ended up working. So here’s the scenario: We’re running MOSS2007 with Office 2010. Most users are running Windows 7 with either Internet Explorer 8 or 9. (Some are not able to run IE9 due to
Had an interesting “problem” arise for an end user today. This user has been able to open and update InfoPath forms in the past without a problem. All of sudden today she was getting the message “The Form is Closed”. From past experience I know that this message is commonly seen when a user access
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