(AARHUS, DENMARK: jboye08) “MOSS is very good for very good in smaller, workgroup environments,” says Alan Pelz-Sharpe, analyst, CMS Watch and his presentation on Evaluating SharePoint. “It’s not traditionally very good for 5,000 or 10,000 concurrent users.”



 Content and Code's visual representation of the SharePoint Platform 


CMS Watch’s approach / focus to evaluating MOSS:


  • Customers that are making a purchase today (or shortly)

  • Independent, specific advice for end users and buyers

  • We never work for vendors… and in fact can be (even) ‘rude’ or honest about some products

  • We have a reputation of being anti-SharePoint; not true, we’re independent and in fact we’ve recommended MOSS to many

  • Sometimes however MOSS has not always been accurately advertised; not they’re (MS) dishonest, but it (MOSS) not always the best fit for an organization


PROS:


  • MOSS is really unusual: a lot of different dynamics

  • Most people are fairly happy with SharePoint

  • SharePoint is an end-user’s dream with some exceptions; users are usually very happy

  • For building small collaborative environments, it’s nearly perfect (I’m exaggerating for affect)

  • File sharing

  • Team sites

  • Well priced for small organizations


CONS:


  • Those that aren’t happy with it are those that use MOSS where it’s not a good fit

  • Those that aren’t typically happy are those that are in-charge of governance, legal, etc.

  • Before MOSS there was chaos… now the chaos is more visible with MOSS (and its bringing more visibility to this chaos)

  • Enterprise content management (ECM) which demands strict controls (compared with Documentum, Oracle, FileNet and IBM)

  • Very poor at index/search of non-MOSS info

  • Search results can be unexpected out of the box

  • Project / task tracking

  • Social networking

  • Discussion & collaboration and communication

  • Trouble consuming its own RSS feeds (authentication issue)

  • Pricey for larger organizations


Case study example (editor’s note: SharePoint sprawl):


  • There’s a bank HQ’d in the UK and they have SharePoint… started using it as a test in 2006 and immediately upgraded to MOSS in 2007… and now have 23,000 instances of MOSS… and it’s a massive problem for the bank

  • The way it was deployed and structured was deplorable… that’s the bank’s fault, not Microsoft’s

  • How to bring it under control? I’m not entirely certain…”


MOSS SharePoint history:


  • Initially a countermove to the success of Lotus Notes

  • When SharePoint was formally launched in 2003 MS had very low expectations

  • The initial success was very high… MS was stunned and very pleased

  • MS managers were stunned… “Why is it such a big success?”

  • The success was in users deploying it as a light-weight portal

  • MOSS launched in 2007 and updated to .NET 2.0 / 3.0 as a development platform


Recurring Threats:


  • Separation between underlying “free” Windows platform and richer portal product with extra services, for a fee

  • If you’re an MS enterprise client, you will get most MOSS services for free

  • Traditional disconnect between SharePoint and .NET (mostly resolved in 2007) (e.g. MS is very large but very much like a college campus with many different groups and departments… that don’t necessarily talk to each other… and there are times that products get ‘out-of-sync’ with each other

  • Endemic confusion about what resides in SharePoint and what does not (and licensing implications)

  • MOSS is very good for very good in smaller, workgroup environments (it’s not traditionally very good for 5,000 or 10,000 concurrent users) (e.g. Oracle on the other hand focuses on larger enterprises and are traditionally  “terrible” at the workgroup level deployments)

  • MOSS has to run on a MS technology stack (.NET, Windows Server, SQL server)

  • I’m not really convinced that there really is any business intelligence (in MOSS)… though MS says there is.”


Current SharePoint Product Universe:


WSS

  • Foundation components, free with Windows

  • Basic collaborative features


MOSS

  • Fee based server product that extends WSS

  • Advanced features like CMS, personalization, forms processing and Excel services

  • Some enterprise features not included


SharePoint Search

  • Search engine for MOSS

  • Can crawl a number of different content sources, including Exchange (email)

  • MOSS Standard can only index 500,000 pages


Forms Server

  • Form rendering and processing (“One of the best features of MOSS… I love this. Really good value add.”)

  • Used in conjunction with InfoPath to deliver electronic forms via the Web

  • Still retain interactive attributes provided via InfoPath


Key functions:


  • Functional capabilities:

  • Enhanced search

  • Business data catalog

  • Excel services

  • Forms services

  • Shared services: farm-level services

  • User import/management

  • Search engaging configuration

  • Basic usage reporting

  • Profile-based site for individual users

  • MySite

  • Both profile and personalizable home page

  • Somewhat controversial

  • Actually provisions entire site collection


Things that can affect pricing:


  • Extent of external connectors and licenses for “Internet Site” licenses

  • Enterprise vs. Standard CALs (licensing)”

  • Search

  • Forms

  • Implementation costs

  • Customization costs

  • Systems integration


ALSO READ:
The SharePoint Plan (MOSS)

Technorati Profile