After much soul searching and research, SNAPPS adopts SharePoint
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Wow, this is a hard blog entry to write. I personally never thought it would happen. But people change, and so do companies.
You may know that I've been on the road much of the summer - four Collaboration University conferences, Advisor, GCPC, client engagements, and more. In this time out of the office, I've had the opportunity to reflect on the kind of work we do, the impact we're making, and the ways we communicate. I've also been able to grant a lot of autonomy and freedom to the staff back at the office (when they were not with me), a somewhat liberating exercise. And, we have found new ways to communicate about our projects, about clients, and about work in general.
But even with the success of this year (our best year ever, and there's still 3 months left), we have all felt that there was something missing. It was as if we were a one-trick pony, but with so much more talent and so much more to offer. So we decided to try something new, and it really got us hooked.
Last week I was in Miami in pretty much a typhoon. Viktor joined me and Liz there for the Advisor conference, and told me what had gone on back at the office the previous week (when I had been in Boston, wishing for a laundromat). Apparently, Jerald, one of the other senior consultants, had come in to the office alone one day, and was greeted by a new occupant of the office - a spider.
The spider, staring him down across the hallway, was 3" long, had eight eyes and fangs the size of my first laptop. It was a wolf spider, one of the largest spiders in North America besides the turantula. He captured it, did some research, placed it in a container designed for such things, and started feeding it a steady diet of crickets, which it would run down and devour, leaving nothing but tentacles.
So - to recap - we found a massive, hairy, evil monster that can cause pain and most definitely fear in most human beings, especially around the office. So naturally, we named it SharePoint. Here is an actual photo of the beast, taken just this weekend.
Sadly this week, we're going to kick SharePoint out. Turns out it's too expensive to keep feeding it, and it really needs a bigger box (probably more than one) and more attention than anybody originally thought. It keeps getting bigger and bigger, and we're honestly getting more afraid of it every day.
Had you going, didn't I?
And yes, you can have my Quickr when you can pry it from my cold, dead hands.
Wow, this is a hard blog entry to write. I personally never thought it would happen. But people change, and so do companies.
You may know that I've been on the road much of the summer - four Collaboration University conferences, Advisor, GCPC, client engagements, and more. In this time out of the office, I've had the opportunity to reflect on the kind of work we do, the impact we're making, and the ways we communicate. I've also been able to grant a lot of autonomy and freedom to the staff back at the office (when they were not with me), a somewhat liberating exercise. And, we have found new ways to communicate about our projects, about clients, and about work in general.
But even with the success of this year (our best year ever, and there's still 3 months left), we have all felt that there was something missing. It was as if we were a one-trick pony, but with so much more talent and so much more to offer. So we decided to try something new, and it really got us hooked.
Last week I was in Miami in pretty much a typhoon. Viktor joined me and Liz there for the Advisor conference, and told me what had gone on back at the office the previous week (when I had been in Boston, wishing for a laundromat). Apparently, Jerald, one of the other senior consultants, had come in to the office alone one day, and was greeted by a new occupant of the office - a spider.
The spider, staring him down across the hallway, was 3" long, had eight eyes and fangs the size of my first laptop. It was a wolf spider, one of the largest spiders in North America besides the turantula. He captured it, did some research, placed it in a container designed for such things, and started feeding it a steady diet of crickets, which it would run down and devour, leaving nothing but tentacles.
So - to recap - we found a massive, hairy, evil monster that can cause pain and most definitely fear in most human beings, especially around the office. So naturally, we named it SharePoint. Here is an actual photo of the beast, taken just this weekend.
Sadly this week, we're going to kick SharePoint out. Turns out it's too expensive to keep feeding it, and it really needs a bigger box (probably more than one) and more attention than anybody originally thought. It keeps getting bigger and bigger, and we're honestly getting more afraid of it every day.
Had you going, didn't I?
And yes, you can have my Quickr when you can pry it from my cold, dead hands.

Comments
So how big is it exactly? quarter? Silver dollar? Fairground Lolipop?
Posted by Carl Tyler At 04:25:59 PM On 10/09/2007 | - Website - |
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I wouldn't go outside that nice house you have in the woods.
Posted by Tim Fountain At 04:34:18 PM On 10/09/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Carl Tyler At 04:53:03 PM On 10/09/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 07:31:09 PM On 10/09/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Satwik Seshasai At 08:17:34 PM On 10/09/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Julian Woodward At 01:43:14 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Thomas Carrier At 02:02:15 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
We once saw a Tarantula crossing the freeway in Oklahoma. It was certainly big, but not as big as the Buick that Sue drove right over it
Posted by Mike At 04:46:08 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
Great pre-Halloween story.
-Devin.
Posted by Devin Olson At 05:06:41 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
So then, the next question might be... What kind of animal would Quickr be?
Posted by Stuart McIntyre At 05:42:55 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Chris Blatnick At 05:59:42 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by David Bockes At 07:27:08 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
At first you had my skin crawling over the thought that SNAPPS went to <shudder> (don't even want to complete the sentence).
Now, my skin is just crawling...
Posted by Chris Toohey At 09:28:27 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
Liz is right, she needs to get you out of the house!
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 10:51:35 AM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Gerco Wolfswinkel At 02:18:10 PM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Alan Lepofsky At 10:19:33 PM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
I have a spider phobia and a phobia of all things called Sharepoint.
Posted by Nelson Morris At 10:34:17 PM On 10/10/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Kitty At 05:47:21 AM On 10/11/2007 | - Website - |
Posted by Daniel Lieber At 09:43:32 AM On 10/11/2007 | - Website - |
Sounds like the H.G. Wells 'War of the Worlds' scare. Started by blogging/email instead of radio.
LOL - Good one!
Posted by Curt Stone At 12:03:23 PM On 10/11/2007 | - Website - |
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Posted by Steve Hooper At 07:43:03 PM On 10/11/2007 | - Website - |