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SharePoint And Building Data Portal Applications (spdata)

This Blog will cover my attempts, experiences, and suggestions regarding using SharePoint to build data-based applications and portals. I tend to also blog about SharePoint vendor stuff. For information about my company (real job when not blogging) go to http://www.nse.com

SharePoint, Tools, and Resources

OK, so riddle me this batman... I know that as somebody who works for a company that makes tools for SharePoint I am totally and completely biased BUT...  I hear quite a bit about how "you can't find any SharePoint people anywhere".  I find that statement to be generally true.  If you want someone who really knows SharePoint, it takes time and effort to find the right person.  Go to your favorite job search site and put in "SharePoint" and you will get a good list of SharePoint developer jobs. 

The question is, in this environment, are organizations properly leveraging tools that are available to them?  The whole idea of tools is that they should allow an organization to accomplish more than they could otherwise.  In this way tools "pay for themselves" by freeing up resources.  While the amount and types of tools in the SharePoint arena appear to be increasing, I think we have just scratched the surface of the total demand for SharePoint tools. 

Will the SharePoint skill shortage help boost the SharePoint tools market, or will the opposite occur as we see organizations shy away from SharePoint projects due to lack of (human) resources.  Thoughts?  We'll see...

Published Apr 14 2008, 07:23 PM by mikec
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Comments

 

AutoSponge said:

The team I'm working with right now on MOSS has several IT-related projects going.  One, which has been on-going for two years, schedules meeting rooms but there is no email, RSS, or web service integration O.o.  I didn't have the heart to tell them I could build something with all of that functionality in a few months on MOSS.

The same group has a person working on hand-coding a database to categorize and store PC build information--something the entire team has wanted for years.  Seriously?  It can be done in a day or two OUT OF THE BOX with MOSS!

These examples just highlight how some IT groups get stuck in their old ways of coding things by hand without leveraging a framework, API, or other tools available to them.

I think Java developers will learn Spring, .NET developers will learn MOSS, and Python/RUBY/etc. developers will come up with something all their own.  If a company's internal developers don't bring MOSS (or an equally robust technology) to the table, the business side of the house will contract with an outside vendor to set it up and run it themselves.

April 14, 2008 9:11 PM
 

Rich Finn said:

Nicely said. I've been thinking the same thing lately...

April 14, 2008 11:15 PM
 

Web Design » SharePoint, Tools, and Resources said:

Pingback from  Web Design » SharePoint, Tools, and Resources

April 14, 2008 11:33 PM

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About mikec

I focus on helping organizations combine SharePoint with their legacy data to build data-focused portals. I spent some of my time working on SharePoint as a power user, some as a "developer light", but mostly I deal with overall architecture and capability issues associated with SharePoint. I work for NSE Inc. and we are a Microsoft Certified Gold Partner specializing in SharePoint solutions. Michael Cox NSE Inc.

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Posts (c) their respective authors. Everything else (c) 2007 SharePoint Experts