Expert Spotlight

Expert Spotlight
Tina Montgomery

EPC Group YouTube Channel

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Tina Montgomery - Director of Project Management Office (PMO)

Tina Montgomery is an accomplished Project Manager with in-depth experience in all facets of information technology, engineering, financial and operations. She has managed multiple national technical and capital projects for commercial, government and international contracts.

As a certified Project Management Professional, she is highly skilled in project management methodologies, scheduling, resource and budgeting and execution of projects. She has successfully defined and managed project definition and requirements development on multiple system applications. Tina partners with clients globally to perform analysis of business needs, current process state, impacts to business, define and document requirements, and creates a roadmap for implementing solutions. Tina has in-depth knowledge of Microsoft Project Server 2003, 2007, and 2010 as well as Microsoft SharePoint 2007 and 2010. In addition, Tina provides consulting business best practices in Portfolio, Program and Project Management, Project Scheduling, and applied uses of Microsoft Project Server, and Microsoft SharePoint Technologies. Since 1995, Tina has been managing technical, financial and capital projects. Tina is also an accomplished business and technical analyst, working with executive teams on large strategic issues as well as with delivery teams at fairly detailed technical architectural levels.

Tina attended the Arkansas State University where she studied Business Management and Health Sciences, as well as the University of Arkansas at Little Rock where she studied Project Management. As a business and technical analyst, Ms. Montgomery is responsible for the technical architecture and user experiences related to business productivity, social networking, corporate collaboration and enterprise content management for medium to large corporations and EPC Group’s government engagements.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Buyer's Guide: SharePoint Archiving Solutions

Buyer's Guide: SharePoint Archiving Solutions
"Archive SharePoint content to help keep your SharePoint environment running smoothly "

By: Caroline Marwitz
Windows IT Pro

Original article link (Windows IT Pro): http://www.windowsitpro.com/article/sharepoint/sharepoint-archiving-solutions-141264

Microsoft SharePoint has become what email was a decade ago: a dumping ground for content. Companies are realizing that this content needs to be managed, secured, and -- in many cases -- archived.

The first two needs are obvious, but why would you want to archive SharePoint content? For three simple yet compelling reasons: data reduction (which can affect performance), governance, and compliance.

"Archiving tools . . . help you maintain the size of your content databases as well as allow for real-time version-history archiving," said Errin O'Connor, who has more than a decade's worth of experience with SharePoint and is founder and CEO of EPC Group.net. Helping achieve the goals of a governance plan is yet another reason for archiving SharePoint content. "Archiving old sites that are no longer used -- this is key, as it's important to either delete or archive content that's no longer relevant," O'Connor said.

Easily retrieving that content is important as well. "You may have a project team site that was used for a project and that project is over, but in a year or two a similar project may pop up again and the project manager or team members may want to go back and restore that archived site to follow the best practices or lessons learned from that previous project," O'Connor said.

Archiving is a basic best practice in records management, but there's an even more compelling reason for some organizations. "Archiving is about compliance," said Ron Charity, a SharePoint product manager who has worked with SharePoint since 2001 and focuses on governance, information architecture, technical architecture, and operations. Compliance with industry or governmental regulations is essential for many, if not most, organizations, especially in the United States, which is home to the largest percentage of the world's lawsuits. Compliance and auditing capabilities go hand in hand with archiving. As O'Connor explained, "You can restore an archive to a site or SharePoint instance and make that data available to auditors and e-discovery activities without affecting the live SharePoint farm."

But SharePoint 2010 has the ability to declare records in place, so why would you need a third-party archiving solution? For one thing, Charity said, many organizations need a compliant archival engine (e.g., compliant with US Department of Defense -- DoD -- requirements). Another reason, he said, is that "enterprise records management systems scale much better due to N-Tier architecture and use of the file system for items and SQL Server for logic." Additionally, you can't beat the convenience of certain third-party products' features. "When archived data is disposed of, client systems issue certificates for legal purposes," Charity said.

What should you look for in a SharePoint archiving solution? Seamless integration with SharePoint is obvious, and vendors accomplish this goal in different ways. For example, many solutions stub the item in SharePoint and move it to the archive, whereas some solutions integrate with SharePoint at the event-handler layer to capture items. Can end users search for and access archived content in SharePoint? They'd better be able to, unless you like training them on new solutions and procedures.

E-discovery capability is useful; as part of that, so is the ability to archive all content types and data in SharePoint. Also consider how the vendor packages a solution, whether as a suite or a standalone product (only your organization's needs should determine which option is best for you). Then there are things that you won't know until you try a tool: how flexible it is, how easy it is to use, and how responsive the customer service is.

The buyer's guide table shows a sampling of SharePoint archiving vendors and the particulars of their solutions. If you're still not sold on the need for archiving SharePoint content, read the AIIM blog "The Case for SharePoint Archiving." Another useful blog post on SharePoint archiving and what to look for in a SharePoint archiving solution is Geoff Evelyn's "SharePoint Archiving -- Defining a Way Forward."