This whole thread caught my eye - a refreshingly intelligent conversation on here.
I'll chime in my $0.02 as a non-SSC, non-helpdesk, IT security & IM geek.
So... here's the two sides of the coin:
FJAG said:
Not so glad to see the continuing use of Outlook in its old fashion. My last job when I was serving was working for three years to deliver an new records management solution for JAG. Our biggest enemy was Outlook which has two major records management issues: Firstly by storing email in an individual's Outlook account, the emails (i.e. corporate records) were not transferable to an individual's successor (i.e. the records were stored by user rather than by file or project). Secondly, these emails did not become part of the corporate file for record keeping purposes dictated by Archives Canada legislation.
The work around had been that users had to print off the emails that they considered corporate records and then place them in the paper files. A cumbersome and paper wasteful system prone to many errors of duplication or omission. If some of you are wondering why it takes so long to role out software and why it's always a version behind, the answer is quite simple, it takes the IM security guys a long time to kick the programs tires to ensure it doesn't import system vulnerabilities and that it plays nicely in the box with all the other programs/servers/etc that it needs to be compatible with. We have too few security folks and too vast a system to do that quickly.
:subbies:
Pretty much bull's-eyes most issues. Except for the whole
Print it off ... I just about puked. We're in the dark ages enough.
Combine the above message with this message and you can fairly well see both the cart and the horse from an IM POV.
Colin P said:
My Outlook box is my main tool for communicating, I average 100-200 files at any one time, some them huge projects and receive massive amount of project related e-mails. Often it comes to fast to digest, so I move them into a unique folder for that project, which will contain various sub folders for the different issues. It's not perfect, but it's far better than any other method of quickly and efficiently receiving, storing, accessing, reviewing and forwarding large amounts of information.
As for SSC, forget ever again getting useful support for your issues. It will become a beast who's sole purpose in life is to generate "ticket numbers" to justify it's own existence. Even now try making useful changes to your department website and you are caught in a maze that supports the "Common look, Common feel, Common suck" mantra. I should bill IT everytime I have to help a proponent navigate the crap to masquerades as our website.
Outlook - is your day planner. It is not your entire office. Its great for personal time management, and that's how its packaged and produced as a product.
Personal time management.
When you're filling 100-200 messages a day - I'm not saying you're doing it wrong, you're doing it how you're taught and how you are comfortable.... but you're doing it wrong. We'll pretend I meant you're doing
IT wrong in a non-funny pun way
Now, the right answer probably doesn't work for you - I get it - I only bitch about it over a coffee and carry on.
Let's took a look at how IM *should* work. So, if you're dealing with that level of information - it's obviously a team/collaboration effort. Unless you actually carry out 200 orders a day. That's
actually the point of SharePoint. That level of info, should be passed on through 'group discussions', team sites, document uploads/downloads, and can be 'access-controlled' by the project administrator, managed and monitored by a much smaller network of IT guys - 1 or 2 sharepoint dudes, really (so others can do things like security audits on new software!) because SharePoint is easy to manage. Its also easy to keep backed up - as now I only have 1 server and its datacenter to store - not the 7500 users on AD and their beautiful snowflake individualities... Just 1 SP server, or my branch of the National tree.
SharePoint, however, is a great idea that turned into a gross mess by caveman army dudes that know enough about computers to break them- It's basically turned into the same dogs breakfast of shared folders (that were partly cleaned up in the last two years ) with a shiny web interface slapped on the front - mixed with a lot of 'Updated [Insert date 6 months ago] pages. You can also mix in the (mostly Jr. Officers trying to prove something, but only jokingly finger pointing of course) dick-measuring contest of the latest shiny embedded widget like live-weather, or (yup, its happened) the current Naval Op Map on some tiny units administrative page.
Instead of SP, though, you have 75 folders in a disgusting, non-sensical bilingual mess of folders that have Pte. Bloggins Dwyer Hill application in the same folder as your dentist reminder.... meanwhile, I'm getting work tickets requesting larger outlook storage. See the dilemma? When I do receive those tickets, you are pretty convinced I sent you a personal, professional letter, explaining why it can't happen at this time - when in fact, its totally canned, I don't care why because I couldn't if I wanted to, and the personal details were just outlook form fields grabbed from your work ticket, and auto-replied by keyword. Oops... secrets out.
Let's move on to the content of those 200 messages. If they're physical project-related - then I think SP with the proper training can be the right tool. Now, I think there needs to be a 'collaboration' expert in most geographic locations that can set it up quickly, give everyone who needs it a 1-hour brief on how to use it, and dole out the rights to those who aren't going to completely shag it up, or fill it with high-res pictures of unicorns or something...
Now, it gets a lot more intense if those are 'administrative', or now I'll switch to the word 'clerical' type messages. ORs, JAGS, PSS, C Clk, ULO, PSO offices etc - Those are the usual culprits for a decade of emails spanning 5 2GB PST files that are eventually going to ask me to move them over to a predecessors mailbox. I don't think SharePoint is the answer for these people - but Monitor Mass is getting closer.
What ALWAYS happens, is a RIDICULOUS redundancy of data. Not the good redundancy, like the hand of god wipes out the data stores and we bring it back online 4 hours type of redundancy. No, the 'Here's my NOK form' for my ARV. Then 'Here's my NOK form' for inclearance during a course. Then 'Here's my NOK form' before a BFT. Then 'Here's my NOK form' because its August and you asked me for one. Yup, that's 4 NOK forms in 3 weeks. True Story. You all know it. That's the redundancy that exists.
Why isn't my personal information centrally stored, then accessible by whoever/whatever needs it? I, as Cpl Flange Bulatron, or whoever, should be able to go on My Careers through an Emaa-ish site, and have a live offering of my options. There's no reason, I can't add 'Apply to..... CSOR, Close Protection, UTPNCM' into a shopping cart and checkout. My entire Pers file should be a series of table entries. I say scrap the paper entirely. That's the only way to clean it up and manage it properly. I can view it anytime. Heck, it could even become accessible from home in the same sense your bank info is accessible from home. Login from your underwear on PATA and check on your outstanding loan cards, upcoming course loadings, your notes to the CM, with an alert to renew your medical and its been 3 years since you hit the range GaraTrooper. This isn't daydreaming - I want to make this happen in the CAF in my career. I'm going to scream and puke simultaneously every time I fill out a duplicate form for my entire career - my hernia, not yours.
There's no technical reason, using
what already exists today, that loan cards should exist. A tool crib, should have a front facing keyboard/monitor that pops up what you're borrowing, and you login with a DWAN ID and now you've borrowed that 50lb torque wrench, or signed for that AHSVS - complete, or those 30 manpacks for a comms course.
None of this is possible, if the mentality still exists that Outlook is how to conduct business in the information world. It becomes too big of a task, then. It's like trying to tidy and clean up your whole house using only bleach and a snow shovel.
Lastly, one of those quotes griped about the 'common look and feel'... now, I've already stated that I think the current system isn't very functional - but the reason behind that mess, is to funnel the information into the right tables in a relational database somewhere (That means [Members NOK] is a field drawn by NOK forms, and BFT forms and everything else that cares). Once that's happening, the above pipedream of personalized shopping cart based applications et al. becomes possible. We could even start looking like an apple store by having you scribble your X with your finger on a tablet in the near future.
So, whats worked in the past? Google around, and find studies of fortune 500's that have disabled email for a 1-3 months. Its proven extremely effective for team collaboration and refacing Information Management.
Now, I think that's drastic - but I say disable attachments for the same reason. Keep the storage to 90Mb. Email is a 120+ character texting tool with spellcheck. If SharePoint is too difficult, maybe there's other options.
Now that I've chimed - I'm just looking to open discussion, not preach or profess.
What do you think would work for Information Management? It's a huge and daunting task, and is generally sluffed off to 'barely escaped JPSU' combat arms officers in more than a few places, but there has to be solutions that work. Work for the reservist who's crapping himself about his USB stick at PER season and works for the JAG and the dudes in between.
It both scares and excites me, and hopefully there's at least 1 or 2 people here who don't totally
tl;dr the jesus out of this post.