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Christy Punch, Senior Intranet Strategist at SCANA Corp and Share
Conference speaker tells us about the lessons she learnt when
implementing a governance plan in her organisation and shares her tips
on what (and what not) to do.
Times are tight. You'll have to make do. We hear it all the time in
business and unfortunately there are not many organisations or
industries that are exempt from hearing these phrases.
When faced with tight budgets and limited resources, sorting out
SharePoint governance can be a daunting task. Especially if you're
largely managing it yourself. But SharePoint governance is an important
piece of the puzzle to get right and resource strain should not be a
reason to forget about it altogether.
The good news is that it can be done with limited resources and
virtually no budget. With some careful planning and strategic
positioning, you too can create a solid governance plan that everyone
can get on board with.
Here are three lessons Christy Punch with SCANA Corporation shared
with us that she learned from putting together a SharePoint governance
plan at her organisation that may help you when thinking about your own
plan.
Do your homework
Christy found that the best approach for her organisation was to do a lot of the work ahead of time and keep it very simple.
Based on her experience of managing the intranet and working with
different people across the organisation, she developed and documented
processes, guidelines, training plans, security levels and roles- all
the elements she knew her intranet stakeholders were going to be
concerned about. Christy made sure this governance documentation was
simple and succinct. For example, the SCANA Corp. intranet guidelines
for what content belongs on the intranet is only eight bullets long.
Once you have all your governance elements together, you’re ready to talk to the business.
Don’t get everyone in the same room
One mistake Christy thinks a lot of people make is pulling 10-20
people representing each area of the company together in a room to
decide on a governance strategy. What happens here is there are too many
cooks in the proverbial SharePoint kitchen. Most people don't know
where to begin, in fact most people don't even understand what
SharePoint governance is!
Christy instead created processes and documented everything ahead of
time before meeting with stakeholders. Then she met with stakeholders
individually and walked each through the governance plans and
documentation. She explained what they had set up and what risk
mitigation plans were in place to address the stakeholder’s unique
concerns. Christy then had each stakeholder sign the document to say
they had seen it and that they gave their approval to go ahead.
A key consideration here is to make sure to explain how each part of
the governance plan acknowledges their concerns and issues. What Christy
found was that most stakeholders were so impressed that the team went
ahead and did the work upfront and were willing to own governance. It
made the governance buy-in process go very smoothly.
Have a retention policy
Christy told us that if they could have done one thing differently,
it would have been to build a retention policy into the governance plan
from the beginning. For example, what do you do with content that is no
longer relevant on your intranet, but you need a record of it? What
happens to that PDF form that’s been updated? Does the older version
need to be archived?
This is one thing Christy and her team at SCANA did not do when they
created their initial governance, but something they are currently
trying to get in place before the upgrade to SharePoint 2013 next year.
The company has existing retention policies for email, personal drives,
and shared drives, but the team didn’t consider creating a policy for
the intranet. Christy admits that it is an easy need to overlook,
because when you launch your new intranet with updated and new content,
you don’t really think you’ll need a retention policy.
Even with audits in place to keep content up-to-date and to ensure
governance is being followed, four years later we make retention
decisions on a case-by-case basis. Content is only growing and we
realize that a formal retention policy is needed more than ever.