MOSS 2007 has the capability of creating KPI lists however you need the Enterprise version in order to use this functionality.
The basic functionality within the SharePoint interface is limiting when it comes to presenting graphical information. In a set of live online, upcoming workshops, we will present ways to display information with charts, graphs, and through animations, all without recourse to the server.
This is yet another blog post on comparing dates in XSL in a data view web part.
Although implementing a KPI dashboard like this one might look complicated it is not. By using the Data View Web Part you can create your own dashboards plus extras. The solution does not do anything special (only displays colorful icons) but your managers will love it.
With Mark Miller as the host, Laura Rogers will demonstrate just how flexible and useful the Out-of-the-Box Web Parts are in MOSS. She will take a detailed look at the Filter, KPI, Excel Web Access, Outlook Web Access, Business Data Catalog, and Data View Web Parts. She will then look at how to customize some of these web parts using SharePoint Designer while still adhering to the Industry Best Practices. All of this is done without using any code. This session in itself is a best practice, because it is best to learn what SharePoint can do out-of-the-box, before writing any code.
The script below, combined with such a list view, will plot a Google Chart showing those totals dynamically. The chart scale is automatically adjusted with the maximum value to be charted so it fits the designated size in the script. Once implemented, you can hide the list view web part so only the chart will render on the page. You can also play around with chart parameters within the script, to change chart type, style, size, colors or even build more complex charts. Take a look at the Google Chart API page for reference.
The EWA web part allows you to incorporate the charts and tables from Excel that are driving your business into a dashboard page in SharePoint. Perhaps on one page you would like to display one chart with product sales YTD and another chart with revenue dollars per Sales Representative. Using the EWA web part you would be able to do this; the charts could be located in the same spreadsheet or in separate spreadsheets.
Planning and organizing SharePoint lab in a virtual environment. Organizing a “SharePoint team”
Planning your sites with Mind Manager. Simple, easy, effective use cases and scenarios you could deploy to your intranet site. Creating KPIs on top of Windows SharePoint Services
Using simple web parts and scripts to change SharePoint UI: collapse quick launch, adjust a web part size automatically, add menu items, create preview panes and much more
There are so many things as an end user you can do with Excel Services however it can be hard to get started. There are not a lot of resources out there for end users to begin using Excel Services, so I aim to fix that. Over the next few months, I will be writing a blog series on how to best utilize Excel Services. This first post will cover the basics, what is it and what you need to do to get started. After that we will move on to more complex stuff like parameters, promoting pivot tables, connecting filters to your charts and tables.
Christophe at Path to SharePoint is at it again. This guy’s got some really cool stuff going on. In addition to making EndUserSharePoint.com look good, the functionality he is able to produce out of the box is something that deserves a deepdive.