Why Intranet Governance?

2nd April, 2009 - Posted by Dan Kneeshaw - 1 Comment

Dan Kneeshaw

Dan Kneeshaw

The issue of “Governance” seems to always be one of the popular topics at Intranet Portal conferences. It is also a frequent point of discussion within the Intranet professionals group of which I am a member. As an introduction to the concept of Governance I simply want to focus on providing a little clarity around the specific benefits and what it can do for your intranet. I will talk more about specific governance models and processes in future posts, but for now I want to focus on the benefits

To start I have to define what I mean when I say “Governance.” In a nutshell, “Governance” is the staffing, policies, standards, tools and incentive systems that help sustain and promote consistency for your intranet. Governance enables “the machine” to work effectively. In my professional experience I have found that governance has to become a priority and that managing the intranet is about much more than just the “technology.”

A strong governance plan and framework will:

  • Clarify roles and responsibilities and help to reinforce authority
  • Establish and promote a single, unified vision for the intranet
  • Ensure consistent decision making to support the long term vision
  • Establish criteria for the prioritization of activities
  • Mitigate conflict
  • Establish and propagate standards
  • Leverage resources — both human and capital
  • Coordinate procurement of resources and technology
  • Remove roadblocks and reduce development time
  • Encourage sharing of best practices

These benefits alone help to justify the time investment in setting up a governance plan. At a minimum it will minimize inefficiencies by pulling together resources, propagating standards, and sharing best practices across the organization to promote consistency and quality.

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1 Comment

Sean R. Nicholson

April 3rd, 2009 at 7:19 pm    


Governance is especially important for organizations that are just growing to the size of needing an Intranet. Often, an Intranet can grow into a series of disjointed internal Web sites that don’t have any common look and feel, navigation, or search functionality. Basically, a lot of puzzle pieces that form no logical picture.

The key is to balance the governance of the direction and growth of the Intranet with the need for content contribution. One great way to accomplish that is with workflow. Let anyone contribute content, but allow it to be reviewed before being posted.

It’s a tough balance, but when you combine strong governance with enterprise content contribution, your Intranet can grow at a staggering rate.

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