Say “collaboration” and people will hear “wiki”. Similarly, in the minds of web 2.0 users, “information sharing” in many cases merges with “blogs”. Creating blogs and wikis is a useful practice for sharing facts and data and discussing the current project activities. Both the options allow accumulating information in an accessible and manageable way, either systematized (blogs) or unstructured (wikis). Both lie at the heart of the SharePoint platform and are available out of the box as site templates.
However, having to handle multiple sites in the framework of a pressed workflow pattern can face SharePoint users with additional challenges. This is where web parts come into play: by easily setting the look and feel of SharePoint pages, an average user can thus leverage powerful combinations aimed at getting the scheduled tasks done. If this is part of your approach as well, have a look at SharePoint Wiki and Blogs Web Parts.
However, having to handle multiple sites in the framework of a pressed workflow pattern can face SharePoint users with additional challenges. This is where web parts come into play: by easily setting the look and feel of SharePoint pages, an average user can thus leverage powerful combinations aimed at getting the scheduled tasks done. If this is part of your approach as well, have a look at SharePoint Wiki and Blogs Web Parts.
No comments:
Post a Comment