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Sydney Sharepoint User Group: Taxonomies & Sharepoint (Tuesday 18 August)

August 19, 2009 · 3 Comments

Here are the slides & notes for a presentation I gave last night to the Sydney Sharepoint User Group on the topic of Sharepoint & Taxonomies. The presso is basically in 3 sections.

Slides 2-14: Introduction to Taxonomies

I started off by asking the audience how they might group wine together (or classify it) – the answers included colour, variety, vintage, region, bottle shape, sweetness. Then we had a look the way a wine shop orders them. The point here (apart from giving Brendan a bit of a plug) is that there are many ways to group things – and some of the most useful ones for users/consumers are not necessarily obvious from the object itself. Hierarchies & facets were then discussed via the systems of Dewey* (Dewey Decimal) and Ranganathan (Colon Classification) and some real-world examples.

The “we don’t need structure, we just need search” comment also got a mention – which resonated with a few people in the audience. The answer(s) to this include: i. taxonomies & metadata can make search better & ii. taxonomies & informtion mapping are about more than just findability. We ended that segment with Patrick’s taxonomy map.

Slides 15-25: Taxonomies in Organisations

This section could be represented by a 3 x 3 matrix – who is involved in taxonomies vs what they are doing. I split the “who” into 3 broad groups:

  • Experts – and here I mostly mean taxonomy experts but it could also be subject matter experts.
  • Machines – language processing / semantic software (but this could also include process automation software as well).
  • Users – general people who just do, y’know, stuff.

You need to involve all 3 groups but each has their strengthens & weaknesses. And then I tackle 3 broad activities:

  • Building a taxonomy (or folksonomy or ontology).
  • Applying terms to documents.
  • Consuming – which in this situation means doing things with documents based on their metadata. This could as simple as someone searching & finding something or some fancy processing based on an ontology.

Slides 26-37: Sharepoint

Sharepoint’s basic methods of managing metadata are:

This is a good start but Sharepoint has three main deficits:

  • It doesn’t handle hierarchical relationships between terms in lists well – it treats each list as though it is independent.
  • Metadata can easily get caught in site “islands”.
  • It doesn’t do any of the fancy machine classification.

A range of third-party vendors have arisen to meet these needs – each offering very different functionality at varying costs.

*I don’t know whether to be offended or impressed by Dewey’s classification of Australia with extra-terrestrial worlds.

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