5 Myths about SharePoint Records Management

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Keywords: SharePoint, Records Management

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Myth #1: It is too hard to implement “true” Records Management (RM) in SharePoint.

Reality:  Microsoft made SharePoint more of a retention tool with an interface that is familiar to SharePoint and IT professionals than an RM solution whose interface is familiar to RM professionals.  “Out of the box” implementations of SharePoint RM require a wide variety of configuration settings, customizations and choices that must be established and maintained by someone who is familiar with both SharePoint systems administration and retention policies.

However, SharePoint add-on products are emerging that elegantly support the traditional principles and tenets of RM and enable the management of retention and disposition decisions based on information management policies in ways that are familiar to most RM professionals.  These products fit into the familiar SharePoint user experience and enable enterprise RM with few of the penalties that some RM solutions have forced on SharePoint users, such as requiring users to understand multiple product interfaces and to search for information in multiple repositories. 

Myth #2: SharePoint doesn’t scale to the Enterprise.

Reality:  Many of the characteristics of enterprise deployments of SharePoint RM require careful planning, including the following:

  • Scaling SharePoint from a few sites to an enterprise with thousands of SharePoint sites requires the consistent enforcement of retention and records policies.
  • Scaling to hundreds of Content Types and hundreds of nodes in a File Plan.
  • Mapping the nodes in a File Plan to legal citations and managing this across a distributed enterprise with multiple farms, specific international requirements, and other local exceptions.
  • Establishing the rules for metadata inheritance based on the SharePoint Content Types in the context of the sites, lists and libraries where the objects exist.
  • Establishing the rules for site provisioning and governance that ensure that consistent enterprise information management policies are enforced.
  • Application of new information policies on information stored in legacy SharePoint sites

However, add-on products are emerging that enable the implementation and maintenance of SharePoint RM for an enterprise in a scalable way.  RM dashboards are available in SharePoint that enable information policy and disposition instructions to be managed centrally and propagated to the appropriate SharePoint sites.  Content Type and SharePoint Feature inheritance enable granular controls to be consistently implemented and transparently enforced in SharePoint configurations that involve thousands of SharePoint sites.  Other SharePoint products support the migration of legacy SharePoint sites into standard and manageable configurations.  Extensive planning is required, but this planning enables SharePoint RM to be an integrated function supporting compliance within all SharePoint sites instead of a disconnected process that may or may not be adopted by users across the organization. 

Myth #3: SharePoint doesn’t support the RM administration paradigms that most Records Managers are familiar with.  These are features, unique to record management, that enable users, record managers and administrators to create, move, copy, administer, and dispose of records according to record management best practices. 

Reality:  It is true that several traditional RM administration tasks are managed very differently within SharePoint than in other RM solutions.  Below are several examples of records administration process requirements that are very different or non-existent in SharePoint “out of the box”:

  • File Plan Management – A file plan is a hierarchical structure that organizes records into a structure whereby rules for disposition and review can be cohesively applied.  File plan management provides a user interface for the definition of specific attributes and levels of the file plan structure.  File plan management also includes the ability to push the structure into a set of SharePoint constructs such as sites, libraries, and folders. 
  • Cut-off and Disposition Processing – Cut-off is the point at which a record begins the execution of the associated retention schedule.  Typically, a cut-off is a set of criteria that must be met prior to the action of processing the associated retention schedule policy.  The required capabilities include setting the scheduled cut-off review process periods, specifying and managing the cut-off event relationships and their execution, and performing the associated pre and post reporting functions.
  • Transfers – The Transfer function provides the ability to export selected records into a specified output format.  In addition, records also need to be imported into SharePoint through Transfer capabilities.  The import and export functionality provided through the Transfer function should also include the ability to extend the input and output formats and to map specific record attributes to these formats.
  • Record Relationships – This provides the ability to create bi-directional, parent-child and peer-to-peer relationships between two or more records.  Relationships provide the ability to maintain connectivity between associated records as well as the ability to enumerate superseding and supporting record information.
  • Vital Records – This includes specific functionality that addresses those records that have been identified as critical or “vital” to the organization.  These capabilities include the ability to identify, track and systematically review these records and their designation. 

However, add-on products are emerging that enable the implementation and maintenance of SharePoint RM in a manner that is not only familiar but is powerful and complete from the perspective of records managers. 

Myth #4: SharePoint can’t be certified as compliant by DoD 5015.2, MoReq 2010, or VERS in the relevant regulatory jurisdictions because of core product limitations.  Even in organizations that are not required to have certified RM solutions, these standards are recognized as important qualifiers for vendors to achieve and Microsoft chose not to include all of the features in SharePoint to enable it to be easily certified by these standards. 

Reality:  It is true that:

  • Some RM certifications require content to be forensically deleted.  This requirement can be easily met by externalizing SharePoint content, but content that is stored within SQL Server cannot be forensically deleted, so SharePoint requires an add-on product to achieve this function.
  • SharePoint has the ability to process a retention policy based on a metadata value on the record and therefore can process a disposition policy once the specific metadata value has been set (such as an event date).  What isn’t manifested in SharePoint is a consistent manner to handle this event date and the process of triggering the date on hundreds or thousands of records.

However, add-on products are emerging that provide certified solutions in the relevant certification jurisdictions, such as North America, Europe and Australia.  As long as the add-on products add value and behave in ways that extend the SharePoint paradigms and add capabilities as opposed to limiting the ability of organizations to grow their SharePoint configurations, why is it critical that Microsoft build all of these capabilities into the core of SharePoint?  As Microsoft has noted, this would significantly add to the size of the SharePoint code base that Microsoft would need to maintain, is not needed by most users, and some of the local regulatory requirements may be incompatible with the requirements of other jurisdictions. 

Myth #5: SharePoint RM is better with a 3rd Party Repository of Record.

Reality:  It is true that many vendors have more experience with managing repositories of record than Microsoft has with SharePoint, including Autonomy, EMC, HP, IBM, and Open Text. 

However, maintaining a separate repository of record for SharePoint content requires:

  • An ongoing synchronization of platforms that goes well beyond straightforward integration.  Customizations in SharePoint need to be tied to customizations in the repository of record solution.  Version updates require extra coordination.
  • Multiple user interfaces to find content depending on the system in which it is located.  Multi-repository solutions are often more confusing from a user perspective.    
  • Multiple teams with skills in each of the tools involved to implement and integrate the tools into an integrated RM solution. 
  • Extra license costs for the repository of record solution.  If the organization already has SharePoint licensed, the additional license and maintenance costs can be significant. 

Conclusion

SharePoint is rapidly becoming a standard for collaboration, knowledge management and portals in most organizations for reasons that are well documented in the AIIM Communities and elsewhere.  The requirement for the content in SharePoint to be managed according to retention and disposition policies of the organization is clearly achievable.  While there are some challenges to achieving this within SharePoint, these same challenges exist in all of the alternative approaches to achieving enterprise RM.  The capabilities of add-on products from such vendors as Automated-Intelligence, RecordPoint, Collabware, GimmalSoft, Colligo, and others are rapidly maturing and deserve a careful review from organizations that are considering how best to achieve their enterprise retention and disposition goals for SharePoint-based content. 

 

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Comments

Kevin Parker

Great Post on RM in SharePoint

I just recently completed the AIIM SharePoint Master course (which is excellent) and learned a bit about the issues around SharePoint 2010 and the need for certified records management. Your post adds a lot to what I learned. Thanks for sharing!
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Mike Alsup

SharePoint RM

Kevin - Thanks for your comments. Gimmal is proud of the work that we did to develop the AIIM SharePoint on-line courses. This article expands on our understanding of SharePoint RM from subsequent project experience.
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Tikim Shelly

Myth #5: SharePoint RM is better with a 3rd Party Repository of Record.

Great posts!!!

With the assumption, and I agree that it is a big assumption, the clients are concerned with SharePoint RM maturity (or the need to rely on 3rd party add-on to address RM needs...the question is

Why maintain a second repository? Why not use something like "FileNet Content Manager connector for SharePoint Web Parts" that will basically allow the user leverage the SharePoint interface but use, in this case, FileNet's create, browse and manage content stored in FileNet Content Manager as well as initiate FileNet BPM workflows from SharePoint.

Your thoughts?
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Mike Alsup

Why maintain a second repository?

Four comments.

First, FileNet Content Mgr Connector for SharePoint is a second repository. By definition, a connection that is made through web parts is in a foreign database, so all the ease of integration and efficiency within SharePoint and the Microsoft environment is lost.

Second, the cost of integration is spread across two environments. We have built some of the largest integrations between SharePoint and ECM Suite repositories of record that have ever been built and the cost of synchronization is a significant cost.

Third, if someone has already licensed FileNet, this might be reasonable. Otherwise, the cost of the SharePoint solutions is a fraction of the cost of the FileNet maintenance in many cases, let alone the cost of a net new FileNet environment. Add to this the cost of the IT teams that own and maintain the two disparate environments and you are escalating the cost.

Multi-repository solutions are fine, but the best ones are the EMC and Open Text solutions that are invisible behind SharePoint, not a separate web part window.
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Mark Mandel

SP and OpenText

Thanks for the plug, Mike. Also, in most organizations you have content from applications such as SAP, email, and other sources that you would likely not want to manage in SharePoint. Therefore an enterprise repository that encompasses all these sources, including SharePoint, makes sense - with full ECM capabilities including Records Management, Archiving, and so on...
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Kimberly Byrne

Sharepoint RM in International locations

What are your thoughts on this? We are just rolling out SP2010 in international regions. How does the SP RM solution need to be considered? Thank you for your response.
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Mike Alsup

SP2010 in International Regions

Maintaining the uniqueness of file plans and retention schedules by geography is really important. The retention rules are just different. SharePoint RM supports the ability to define file plans globally and define the uniquesses locally, so you get the best of both worlds. Some of the SP2010 RM tools do at least as elegantly as alternative solutions. Not sure from what your question really is. Contact me offline for more information.
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Tomas Šileikis

Sharepoint document management

Hello I am thinking about buying this sharepoint document management software http://www.enovapoint.com/jungledoc/. Maybe someone try it? I need any review about it. Thanks
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Mike Alsup

JungleDoc

This product looks like a nice plug-in for some document mgmt. functionality in SharePoint. It has no features related to records management which is what I was talking about in this thread. Let us know what you find out. MRA
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Adam Fullarton

Sharepoint Add-On Vs Integrated RM to Sharepoint

Good post. In looking at Myth 1 & 5, I would be keen to get your view on the benefits of making use of Sharepoint Add-On products (eg RecordPoint) vs Integration with heavyweight RM products (eg HP Trim, Documentum).
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Mike Alsup

Add-ons to SharePoint

Adam -

I have several AIIM Communities posts on this topic. The RecordPoint guys are good guys and have done some interesting things. Gimmal.com would show you several analyses of this topic and product demonstrations in the product section of the site. Gartner had a good analysis of the Sharepoint ECM ecosystem providers that was released the week of the SharePoint Conference. Generally, I think that the SharePoint add-ons have many advantages, including significantly lower cost, less integration needed, and higher user adoption if done well. HP Trim is particularly expensive to try to integrate to SharePoint for RM across hundreds or thousands of sites. It is less and less clear that the traditional heavyweights are still heavyweights. There is only one DoD 5015.2 certified solution inside SharePoint, Gimmal, although the Collabware team has recently announced their plans to certify.
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