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Does your workplace group collaboration tool "suck"?

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IainB:
I was prompted by this post in Techrepublic.com: You think you use SharePoint but you really don't
...to enquire of DC Forum members what experience they had of using SharePoint to its fullest extent, or whether their use was of a "SharePoint that sucks" - or some other group collaboration and/or document management system that "sucked" - that was constrained by poor deployment (implementation and configuration).

I have had experience of client organisations where there were:

* "Collaboration tools that suck" like this, and also the odd "superb collaboration tool integration".
* SharePoint/Groupwise/Lotus Notes  implementations where you could be forgiven for thinking that a specific implementation had been so bad, it couldn't have been made worse even if the IT people had tried to make it worse.
The most egregious examples I have come across have probably been poorly-implemented integrations of Microsoft SharePoint + Microsoft Office + Internet Explorer. This sort of thing generally costs the organisation a lot in terms of productivity losses, dysfunction and wasted time/money - costs that are potentially avoidable.

I am curious: What has been your experience of this, and with which systems? What do you see as the likely causes of a good or bad implementation?

Renegade:
I have limited experience in this area, but it's certainly a point of interest for me.

I used an issue tracking system for a large project and it worked well. The only problem was getting people to use it.

I've used Exchange in one environment where everything went through Outlook. I hated it. It was little more than clutter. Almost infinite folders and incredibly complex structures were simply horrible to use. Tracking documents was not fun.

On the more general topic of tools, I've found that lack of education leaves people frustrated, which leads to low productivity. i.e. Training helps.

urlwolf:
Google apps is a fantastic solution, IMHO.
I wouldn't use anything else.

capitalH:
Google apps is a fantastic solution, IMHO.
I wouldn't use anything else.
-urlwolf (October 31, 2011, 08:32 AM)
--- End quote ---
The chances of that happening in most corporate environments = 0

Although we have GroupWise and SharePoint purchased - we use shared network locations for collaboration. And lots of e-mail.

40hz:
I have two clients that are currently using collaboration/CRM tools quite successfully. In both cases it works well because all employees have been given to understand that if something (i.e. service history update, client issue, budget, meeting notes, project document, etc.) which is supposed to be in there isn't, then whoever was responsible for dropping the ball would be fired.

To Superboy's earlier point, the effectiveness of these things are totally dependent on people consistently using them.

In the case of my clients, hanging a sword over people to use the system seemed to do the trick until it became habit.

Like Gerry Weinberg said: In the end, *every* technical problem comes down to a 'people problem.' And if it doesn't - check again.

-------

FYI: one client uses SalesForce and the other a super tricked-out version of SugarCRM in case anybody's interested.

Note: Neither was inexpensive to implement. Both dropped in excess of $75k getting their systems exactly right.

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