taming information chaos
DESCRIPTION
Taming Information ChaosTRANSCRIPT
Taming Information Chaos
Eric Shupps SharePoint Server MVP
Sponsored by:
Visit us on the web at www.binarywave.com
Real-time application monitoring, event management, and operational health metrics for Microsoft SharePoint
Reduce troubleshooting time by up to 30%Increase efficiency and improve user satisfactionAvoid downtime and costly outagesMeet or exceed service level agreementsMaximize investment in current infrastructure
About Me
• SharePoint Server MVP • President, BinaryWave • Microsoft Patterns & Practices (spg.codeplex.com) • CKS:DEV (cksdev.codeplex.com) • Web: www.binarywave.com • Blog: www.sharepointcowboy.com • Twitter: @eshupps • Facebook: www.facebook.com/sharepointcowboy
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-US/sharepoint/hh126808
Agenda
• Information Architecture • Metadata
– Demo: Using Managed Metadata • Taxonomy
– Demo: Creating Custom Solutions with Managed Metadata
What Is Information Architecture?
• An organizational structure for specific formats, categories, and relationship of data
• Organization of the various SharePoint entities and objects: – Planning for the type and number of entities – Scalability and performance considerations
• Navigation structure • Information architecture continues beyond
container structure into content types and metadata planning.
Why Does it Matter?
• Increases the chances that the solution design will be usable, reliable, and secure
• It’s often neglected during SharePoint projects, but is critical for success!
• Risks for not planning information architecture: – Decreased usability and findability – Performance and reliability issues – Lack of user adoption – Costly future enhancements
Usability and Findability
• How easily can the consumer either locate or discover information through navigation?
• How reliably can the consumer find information through the search interface?
• Consistency is key for discovery. • SharePoint metadata is key for search:
– Site columns – Content types:
• Enterprise content types • Local
– Managed metadata
Manageability
• How efficient is the authoring experience?
• How distributed is the content? • How distributed are the managers? • Minimize the “places” that authors and
managers have to “visit” to do their job. • Maximize the visibility and control of
content in each user’s area of responsibility.
Security
• SharePoint provides the capability to manage security broadly or on a granular level down to the item.
• Typically, security is managed at the site collection and inherited down to all objects unless broken manually. – When pages are loaded, SharePoint needs to check the
security on all the objects being rendered. – Breaking security inheritance puts a greater burden on the
server, thus hurting performance. • Consider security and organizational boundaries
when planning information architecture.
Definition of Metadata
• Data that provides additional information about a specific object or collection of objects – Structured – Descriptive – Administrative
• Facilitates identification, organization, discovery, and interoperability of information
Author
Creation Date
File Size
File Extension
Title
Keywords
Status
Revision
Benefits of Metadata
• Provides organizational structure for disparate types of data
• Supports rapid location of information • Enhances navigation • Enables advanced sorting, filtering, and grouping
capabilities • Allows for differentiation of similar objects • Contributes to ranking and categorization within
search results • Supports data portability (content without
context)
Metadata in SharePoint 2010
• Intrinsic – File Size – Item Type
• Derived – Created By – Created Date – Modified By – Modified Date
• Declared – List/Library Fields – Terms – Document Properties
Metadata Components Fa
rm
• Managed Metadata Services
• Global Term Sets
• Managed Properties
• Enterprise Keywords
Site
Co
llect
ion
• Site
Columns
• Content Types
• Policies
• Local Term Sets
List
•List Columns
•Metadata Navigation
•Key Filters
•Views
•Grouping
•Sorting
•Filtering
Ite
m
•Document Properties
•File Properties
•User Properties
Metadata and Search
• Quality and quantity of metadata influence result precision and fidelity.
• Custom ranking models permit fine-grained control over search result elevation.
• Managed properties permit custom fields to be included in search indexes, scopes ,and queries.
• Refiners allow users to drill into result sets based on metadata values.
• Authoritative pages, keywords, best bets, synonyms, and other parameters improve quality of search results.
Metadata Planning
• Identify common information types and required properties.
• Determine which data elements should be immutable (closed) and which can be left to the user’s discretion (open).
• Identify syndication requirements and managed metadata service application needs.
• Define term store roles and memberships. • Specify language requirements. • Group terms into a logical hierarchy. • Create term sets and terms.
Term Stores
• Database that contains information relating to taxonomies.
• Each Managed Metadata Service Application is a single instance of a term store.
• Includes groups, term sets, terms, and keywords.
• Web applications can have associations to multiple term stores.
Group
Term Set
Terms
Groups and Term Sets
• Groups – Contain one or more
term sets – Provide a security
boundary for term set administration (managers, contributors)
• Term Sets – Containers used to
organize terms – May assign stakeholders – Configurable submission
policy and tagging options
Term Store
Terms
Terms
• Predefined values that represent taxonomy objects.
• Can be nested up to seven levels deep.
• Terms can be associated with other terms as synonyms.
• Ability to define custom sort order.
• Organizational terms can be included that are not used in data selection.
Group
Term Set
Term Store
Managed Properties
• Metadata can be used in search scopes and queries.
• Custom fields must be defined as a managed property in Search Administration.
• Multiple fields can be assigned to a single managed property.
Metadata Navigation
• Expands the capabilities of list views to make locating information easier.
• Navigational hierarchies display items with matching values. Descendent terms are included by default.
• Key filters permit expanding filtering for multiple terms.
• Column indexing allows queries that return result sets larger than defined thresholds.
Syndication
Managed Metadata Service Application
Content Type Subscriber
Web Application A
Content Type Hub
Web Application B
DEMO Using Managed Metadata Creating a term store, defining terms, and using terms in list fields
Multilingual Considerations
• Each term store can have one default language and multiple working languages. – Requires language pack to be installed for each
language • Each term can have multiple labels defined for
each working language. – One default label per language
• Custom sort orders are applied to all languages in a term set.
• Terms are presented in the user’s preferred language.
DEMO Content Type Syndication Publishing and consuming enterprise content types
Taxonomy Definition
• Classification of data. • Structured
taxonomies organize data according to pre-defined relationships.
• Unstructured taxonomies (Folksonomy) allow users to tag content and create ad-hoc organizational structures.
Structured Taxonomy
• Metadata is defined administratively and utilized by content authors.
• Term sets are created in the term store.
• Content types are created and published.
• Site collections subscribe to one or more term stores.
• Terms are available in list fields for content tagging.
Term Store Term Term Term
Field
Field
Field
Unstructured Taxonomy
• Users tag content with applicable terms
• Content can be rated on a defined scale
• Classification occurs collaboratively, with content consumers contributing to the hierarchy
• Notes allow users to comment on sites, pages or documents for others to view
Field
Field
Field
Term
Term
Term
Taxonomy Benefits
Structured
Enforces content organization according to established guidelines
Ensures proper use of accepted industry-specific terminology
Aids compliance with regulatory requirements
Provides a familiar navigational hierarchy
Unstructured
Exposes information on how content is valued by contributors
and consumers
Allows users to participate in content classification
Defines ad-hoc relationships that might not have been anticipated or
envisioned
Publishing and Updates
• Identify which site collections will serve as content type hubs and which will act as subscribers.
• Identify stakeholders and create a taxonomy maintenance plan.
• Set schedules for a content type hub and subscriber updates.
Hub
Term Store
Subscriber
Importing Metadata
• Managed metadata can be imported from external sources into the term store.
• Organize into logical groups, term sets, and terms prior to import.
• Format data into a comma-delimited .csv file. • Synonyms and translations must be specified within the
term store management interface. "Term Set Name","Term Set Description","LCID","Available for Tagging","Term Description","Level 1 Term","Level 2 Term","Level 3 Term","Level 4 Term","Level 5 Term","Level 6 Term","Level 7 Term" "Sites","Locations where the organization has offices",,TRUE,,,,,,,, ,,1033,TRUE,,"North America",,,,,, ,,1033,TRUE,,"North America","Washington",,,,, ,,1033,TRUE,,"North America","Washington","Redmond",,,, ,,1033,TRUE,,"North America","Washington","Seattle",,,, ,,1033,TRUE,,"North America","Washington","Tacoma",,,, ,,1033,TRUE,,"North America","Massachusetts","Cambridge",,,,
Thank You for attending this session! Please fill in the evaluation form