July 2010

Doug Schultz Wednesday, August 4, 2010 - 6:20am

I recently read a blog post by Daniel O'Leary at Friendly ECM - Why can't everything be like Pandora One?  I'll admit I have never used Pandora One so I can't speak for the features that he thought made it such a great application. 

Comments (0)

Doug Schultz Monday, July 26, 2010 - 10:06am

Michael Sampson, a Collaboration Strategist in New Zealand, has a short survey on his website asking people what they are using SharePoint for in their organizations.  He posted some in-progress results after a handful of people have responded to the survey.

Comments (1)

Doug Schultz Wednesday, July 21, 2010 - 1:57pm

I was reading a blog post by Seth Godin last week.  In upstream and downstream, Seth talked about how most people just think of their job as a set of tasks that takes place in a box.  He suggests that if we go upstream of what happens in our box and alter the stuff that comes to us, it is a lot easier to do great work.  He further suggests that if we go downstream and teach

Comments (0)

Doug Schultz Friday, July 16, 2010 - 9:28am

Not to intentionally steal the tag line from Randy Kahn's blog, but Are You Kidding Me?  How many times do we need to debate that keeping data forever is not beneficial to a company in almost any circumstance?

Comments (0)

Doug Schultz Wednesday, July 14, 2010 - 8:54am

An article from the e-Disclosure Information Project titled "SharePoint 2010 is the next dumping ground for lawyers to understand" caught my attention this week.  While the article was about a product to help organizations deal with e-discovery specifically for content stored in SharePoint, I was drawn to the notion of governance for managing information is still an afterthought in many technology implementations.

Comments (1)

Jesse Wilkins Wednesday, July 14, 2010 - 8:34am

The latest issue of ARMA's Information Management Magazine is out. I have the lead article, "Taking the Lead in the Information Race". In it, I argue that records managers cannot watch the technology world fly by - instead, they have to actively develop and maintain their "technology chops" in order to remain relevant.

Comments (0)