Home >> Information Architecture >> Messaging and Collaboration

Users claim six month wait for SharePoint support

Users claim six month wait for SharePoint support By:  Shane Schick On: 21 Jan 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Microsoft’s portal product is a hit with many enterprises, but Canadian research firm Info-Tech says they’re disappointed by the technical help. Avanade raises management concerns



Email a friend   |  









Print   |   Text + / -   |  Add a Comment   |   Views: 581   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Canadian and U.S. companies are sometimes waiting up to six months to resolve support issues associated with Microsoft’s Sharepoint portal product, according to a market research firm.

According to London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group, customers expressed satisfaction rates in the 92 per cent range around the functionality and total cost of ownership of SharePoint, but nearly one quarter said they were disappointed with how well the world’s largest software company was able to assist them with it. SharePoint is Microsoft’s Office SharePoint Server is a tool that companies can use to create an internal portal to collaborate, share ideas, and manage documents.

Info-Tech published a sample comment from one of the 258 respondents to its survey, who said: “I don’t think they (Microsoft) knew what to expect, and they were the first ones to admit it because they didn’t expect that SharePoint was going to reach this kind of demand. They are just overwhelmed with calls.”

Tom Rizzo, director of Microsoft Office SharePoint Server, took the Info-Tech survey in stride.

“I would agree with the report in terms of the demand and the deployments,” he said. “From a support standpoint, there’s always the flip side of having a very popular product. You do get overwhelmed.”

Fen Yik, the research analyst who wrote the report, said Info-Tech has been in contact with Microsoft, which he said is aware of the support problems around SharePoint. “They’ve been very up front with us in acknowledging that adoption has exceeded their expectations,” he said. “Right now it’s really a question of how they’ll be able to adapt.”

Yik said the support problems varied by respondent, but some were more severe than others. If there was a common theme, he said, it was around the level of customization that a specific SharePoint deployment required.

“Part of the problem is because of the wide range of functionality, the degree of customization really is an unanticipated issues,” he said, adding that it was survey respondents to cited the half-year wait time for help. “As of today, there are still outstanding issues that have not been resolved.” Rizzo said some issues were more likely to get pushed to the top of the support priority list than others.

“If any customer comes in with a critical situation – the server’s down and not responding and it’s running line of business systems, we go through and try to fix that immediately. That has a complete escalation. It goes all the way to Steve Ballmer if it’s not fixed in 24, 48 hours,” he said.

One of the largest consulting firms focused on Microsoft technologies said SharePoint sometimes leads to management as well as technical challenges. Larry LeSueur, vice-president of infrastructure technology solutions at Avanade Canada, said many companies are looking at the Microsoft product as a collaboration aid without knowing what they’re getting into.


Sign up for our Newsletters
Tags:
Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada, a media company that brings together communities of technology professionals.     Shane joined the IT Business Group in 1997 as a sta... more

Related Articles

Related Blogs

Comments (6)

Project Manager
4/3/2009 12:00:00 AMI disagree with Larry, it seems to me he is looking for someone to blame, also my comment above geared toward using SharePoint in public sector. And I was correct on my assumptions above, Microsoft introduced CSP (Citizen Service Platform) that promotes SharePoint among other apps and listed set of tools, analysis and business models that finally present a near complete solution that fits the public sector's needs. And I personally do like it.
Sharepoint Consultant
12/13/2008 12:00:00 AMThe problem that MS faces is, their Partner Account Managers really don't understand the platform, much less how to deploy it, best practices, or what appropriate levels of functionality should be introduced and in what phases. In a simplistic fashion, they will say 'sharepoint does collaboration' or 'sharepoint does document management' with little regard for it's deeper implications from the enterprise perspective. I've also encountered that with consultants who simply want to jam a solution in place without understand the business' strategic or tactical requirements. As to the comment from Hanna above, he's obviously inexperienced and misinformed. The deployment best practices have been created by MS.
I.T Workers
1/23/2008 12:00:00 AMI also read an article about I.T grads being down, I am sure this is not helping Microsoft's plight. More outsourcing to follow?
Project Manager
4/3/2009 12:00:00 AMI disagree with Larry, it seems to me he is looking for someone to blame, also my comment above geared toward using SharePoint in public sector. And I was correct on my assumptions above, Microsoft introduced CSP (Citizen Service Platform) that promotes SharePoint among other apps and listed set of tools, analysis and business models that finally present a near complete solution that fits the public sector's needs. And I personally do like it.
Sharepoint Consultant
4/12/2009 12:00:00 AMBlame is not the case at all. MS is an amazing at marketing. CSP is a great idea, but it is vapourware and marketing, nothing more. Somebody show me a fully integrated install that runs a city. Nothing's been done, nothings been actually installed from a full integration perspective. Outside of a couple of fancy conceptual videos (note the Contoso in the screen caps in the promo videos). I guess Contoso is a city somewhere in the world?
Project Manager
1/25/2008 12:00:00 AMI believe that organizations that jump into the implementation of Sharepoint solution or similar platforms without proper due diligence, they introduce major risks to their own portfolio such as Support, operations? governance; change Mgmt, just to name a few. After all ?It's all about fitness of the solution not perfection?. On the other hand, vendors as experienced as Microsoft may need to integrate deployment best practice strategies as part of the tool sets or solutions that being introduced to the market place.
You are currently not logged in: Register | Login

You must be logged in to submit a comment.