What is our primary use case?
I'm the user of the SharePoint OpenText process 360 for SharePoint. Basically, we are using this for our internal knowledge management portal. We use the solution for all our accounts. It’s for major internal web pages or for internal work for SharePoint. We mainly use it internally.
What is most valuable?
It has a lot of flexibility, and Microsoft does come up with some new additions from time to time. In SharePoint, you do have the flexibility of uploading the documents, and then you can create the workflow, the workbench of curation and approvals. That’s for any content that is to be secured or to offer people to trust that their content is secure.
You have that all workflows can be built. The approval workflows can go from one person to another person. Since everything's virtual now and people are working from home, there are more security concerns in today's world. The most important thing at this point in time is for people to feel secure. I'm not in an office; I'm working virtually. I like creating content that is secure.
In that case, as a part of the knowledge management and content management, if the SharePoint can really help us in regard in terms of having a proper workbench in place, a workflow in place that can be built within that, where is what we can build the workflow and resolve things, however, that has the information rights management and those types of things to give the contributors of the content a trust that, the content is safe. I'm fine with sharing this content between the organization.
There are a lot of features.
What needs improvement?
If I have to really create an internal knowledge management portal, if I have to compare SharePoint and WordPress, WordPress is far, far better in regard to the SharePoint option. It has got a lot of added features into that. Both of them have pros and cons, and it would be OK to have SharePoint if you're not investing much into the WordPress side.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The solution is evolving. Microsoft really comes up with a lot of new products all the time. There’s Riva, which is their new thing, and then there’s Syntex, a new thing as well. They add a lot of things. We're exploring items for different areas that we are working on. Wherever we feel that "Yeah, that's really important, and that's really helpful for our KM, knowledge management area," we look into it and see how it works. Microsoft's been our partner for so long. They are there to really help us. In terms of the actual stability part, it's good. We haven’t had any issues.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
My understanding is the solution is scalable. We haven’t had any issues with expanding. However, there are a lot of areas in this regard that we still have to explore.
We have 200,000 people using OpenText.
There are a lot of POCs, and things are going on. Of course, when things grow, the business grows, and usage will grow.
How are customer service and support?
Our technical team mostly deals with support. I don’t deal with them directly. As for the contract and as for the consulting contract, those have been taken care of as part of the agreement in regard to the technical support that is required. Everything comes into what has been agreed upon between both parties.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I used that which was there internally when I onboarded into this company. It was there already, and it has been trusted within the organization.
How was the initial setup?
It was easy to set up. We had our Microsoft partner's help. We have our internal IT teams and then our Microsoft teams' help. It was not so tough, actually. The good part is we have a product team, a Microsoft team, and everyone who helps as a consulting partner knows their stuff. We also try to test any new things that come up from Microsoft to see if they can be implemented in our environment.
What about the implementation team?
We had assistance from vendors. We are premium partners for them.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
I know the licensing costs involved as I'm doing the budgeting part. I cannot really talk about the licensing things that have been agreed upon between Microsoft and us. Our procurement and finance team have taken care of the cost and everything. That's about their guidelines and things that they have between our organization and Microsoft.
What other advice do I have?
We have people who work on OpenText and Office 365. Our technical team works on it. Our portal and everything is on Office 365.
I'm not a technical person, basically. I do have a technical team who work along with me.
I’m not sure what the deployment model is and if it is on the cloud or on-premises.
When you start using the solution, there are many things you might have to connect with and want to connect to.
It is a good solution. It gives you a lot of flexibility in having a few items for basic knowledge management. It's scalable, and there are a lot of new things that can be added. The good part is, when the organization is all on SharePoint, having this really helps you to integrate better.
If your whole organization is into SharePoint, when you're creating a knowledge management platform along with this, it really helps you to integrate better. The search feature works better since everything is on SharePoint.
Overall, I would rate the solution eight out of ten.