I’m writing this as I sit in the final session of the first day of the 2008 SharePoint conference in rainy downtown Seattle. It’s been a big day and I definitely need a beer but I wanted to share some of my thoughts before I head for the pub.
My most important learning has been definitive confirmation that Microsoft takes a different view of ECM than traditional ECM vendors. The ‘tone from the top’ was set by Bill Gates himself in his opening keynote. He reiterated Microsoft’s focus on the end user as the primary goal of SharePoint and related applications. This vision manifests itself in the expectation that users should be able to own team sites in SharePoint. Here’s a quote from Bill to back this up which came as part of a discussion about the horizontal focus of SharePoint. He said that “you should just allow sites to spring up in a broad fashion”. In my experience, people who want to be successful in their organizations will follow the lead of their boss, which is why SharePoint works the way it does.
A further indication of Microsoft’s unique view of ECM is the fact that this conference is opposite the 2008 AIIM Conference, which tells me that Microsoft is either deliberately trying to draw attendees from that event or simply didn’t realize that AIIM was going on at the same time. It’s probably the latter but either way, to me this is an indication that Microsoft sees SharePoint as more than an ECM application tasked with managing documents and other unstructured content. Bill Gates talked about SharePoint as the place that workers will go to access all of the information they need to do their jobs. This includes documents, structured data from line-of-business applications like CRM systems, tasks, and information about other people. By definition, a platform that is intended to give users the power to create ad hoc information structures is a platform that’s difficult to control. To make up for this, a big focus of this conference is how SharePoint deployment team can reign in the application before it gets out of control.
I am not saying any of this is a bad thing. In fact, it’s probably a very good thing because the vast majority of business use cases are inherently ad hoc. What it tells me, however, is that there are a few very clear use cases that are best supported by traditional ECM applications like Livelink, Documentum, etc. My last blog post discussed the differences in approach and application two of my clients are taking based on the use cases they are trying to address and the tool they are using. To cut a long story short, Livelink is being used to manage a highly controlled process where SharePoint is the platform of choice for a more collaborative process. The analysts in attendance at this conference seem to agree with this (probably to the chagrin of most of the Microsoft personnel in the room), when they universally discounted the records management capabilities of SharePoint and suggested that it is not even in the same ballpark as existing RM tools. I’m not sure that’s true, but there is some legitimacy to saying that a tool that’s only had RM capabilities for a year can’t be considered as robust as applications that have been around for 15+ years.
Finally, I’ve noticed an interesting convergence between the Microsoft approach to ECM and the response by traditional ECM vendors to the emergence of social networking in the enterprise. Open Text announced Livelink ECM – Extended Collaboration at the AIIM conference today. The tool is intended to bring a free-form collaboration layer to the Livelink platform. Here’s a brief synopsis from the news release:
…[the tool] encourages people to work together, while capturing critical project information in an underlying ECM framework. Security, access control, and retention policies are strictly enforced using the native security mechanisms already in place, without adding another administrative layer.
The question organizations have to ask is whether they think a platform rooted in strong records management and content governance (like Livelink) that adds on a collaborative layer is more likely to meet their needs than is a collaborative platform (like SharePoint) that builds out content governance features over time. I don’t have a short answer to which approach is better. I suppose the best I can do is to give you the stock consultant’s response: it depends on what you’re trying to achieve. Over time, we also need to consider whether SharePoint will truly dominate the space or whether there will continue to be room for applications like Livelink to continue to provide strong records management and compliance requirements even if the presentation layer ultimately becomes SharePoint. My guess is that’s exactly how things will evolve over the next decade or so. Let’s chat again in 2018 to see if I’m right.
There will be a lot to blog about over the next couple of days and I look forward to seeing if my perspective changes while here.

Hi Greg,
Hope you are enjoying the conference. So, did Microsoft present any live implementations in the area of Records Management? Or attempting to meet some sort of compliance. I know Moss is DOD 5015 compliant, was there any mention of implementations specifically focussed for complaince? Knowledge Management is another area which I am curious to find out more about using MOSS. Usage of any advanced techniques like Case-based reasoning. I am guessing the focus was mostly on Collaboration. I would love to meet with you and learn from your experience at the conference, once you are back.
Good luck and have a safe trip back.
-Pankaj.
Comment by Pankaj Bhawnani — March 3, 2008 @ 11:56 pm
Thanks Pankaj,
The DoD presentations are not scheduled until later in the conference (Wednesday and Thursday I believe). I plan on attending those sessions and will blog about them I’m sure. I’ve had some interesting “Microsoft Meets RM” moments which I’ll blog about shortly. As for KM applications, nothing to date about case-based reasoning but a lot about collaboration. I’m sure a smart developer out there could bolt on a CBR tool to SharePoint, especially if the tool is used widely in an organization to make collaborative decisions.
Let’s definitely grab a coffee when I’m back. All the best.
G.
Comment by Greg Clark — March 4, 2008 @ 3:10 pm
Greg;
Just so you know, I’m currently at the AIIM conference and just finished a session with the SharePoint product manager from Microsoft (Tricia Bush). There are also lots of other Microsoft people here pumping SharePoint. So they were at least aware of AIIM being held at the same time as the SharePoint conference.
I second your comments; MicroSoft does not seem to be more than peripherally aware of RM issues. In a presentation supposedly aimed at RM people they spent more time talking about the ability of SharePoint to search for people as well as documents than they spent talking about the RM capabilities of SharePoint.
And for what it’s worth, within the first hour of being here I must have heard half a dozen people say that they would be implementing a Tier-one solution (Documentum, Livelink) for Records or Content management and using SharePoint for the user interface. Given SharePoint’s roots as a portal I think this will be the preferred solution.
D.
Comment by Darrell Schroeder — March 5, 2008 @ 12:03 pm