Love these ideas. Especially the Welcome page. I've been adding the home page of the site as a tab, but I really like the idea of a more purpose built page to onboard our team members. I'll be building these out along with the Contacts.
Another list use I've found helpful is to create one for our team to mark their days away from the project (basically a Vacation Calendar). It's not uncommon for us to have external members and contractors that don't have access to our internal calendars, so this helps us to better manage tasks and timelines.
Appreciate that, Trevor. Glad to hear a few ideas carry forward into your Teams UX. “As a tab in Teams” is a great pattern for useful/helpful materials. And your list idea/workaround for calendaring free/busy insights for contractors is a win for all, and something you can use to increase visibility visually with Calendar view. 🗓️ #WellDone ✅
Great article!!! These are 4 things you can take as mainly basic things you can do in Teams.
I have to say that I saw this as so normal that I cannot stop and think about other people not used to use SharePoint or Teams and they (still) don't know about it.
I like your goals definition for each service and both together. I will take them if you allow me to do 😉.
Hi Jaime. Always a balance of what you think everyone knows and sharing under the assumption that not everyone knows. I tried to put most of the post into the frame of use cases and/or scenarios, so even if you knew the feature set, you might discover a new, still-simple-way of using it. Like trash, your 101 might be someone else's 201. And if its 401 to some, Levis for everyone! 👖
And to the 'service goals' definitions, please, steal away. I summarized-stole-pov'ed them, and happy if that simplification helps you/anyone going forward. #Allowed💯 And thanks for reading The KashBox. 🙌
Love these ideas. Especially the Welcome page. I've been adding the home page of the site as a tab, but I really like the idea of a more purpose built page to onboard our team members. I'll be building these out along with the Contacts.
Another list use I've found helpful is to create one for our team to mark their days away from the project (basically a Vacation Calendar). It's not uncommon for us to have external members and contractors that don't have access to our internal calendars, so this helps us to better manage tasks and timelines.
Appreciate that, Trevor. Glad to hear a few ideas carry forward into your Teams UX. “As a tab in Teams” is a great pattern for useful/helpful materials. And your list idea/workaround for calendaring free/busy insights for contractors is a win for all, and something you can use to increase visibility visually with Calendar view. 🗓️ #WellDone ✅
Great article!!! These are 4 things you can take as mainly basic things you can do in Teams.
I have to say that I saw this as so normal that I cannot stop and think about other people not used to use SharePoint or Teams and they (still) don't know about it.
I like your goals definition for each service and both together. I will take them if you allow me to do 😉.
Hi Jaime. Always a balance of what you think everyone knows and sharing under the assumption that not everyone knows. I tried to put most of the post into the frame of use cases and/or scenarios, so even if you knew the feature set, you might discover a new, still-simple-way of using it. Like trash, your 101 might be someone else's 201. And if its 401 to some, Levis for everyone! 👖
And to the 'service goals' definitions, please, steal away. I summarized-stole-pov'ed them, and happy if that simplification helps you/anyone going forward. #Allowed💯 And thanks for reading The KashBox. 🙌