Microsoft Delve is set to retire in December 2024 - here's everything you need to know on why hasn’t it worked out, what could it have done better, and is there a better way achieve the right outcomes?
This blog covers:
The announcement that Microsoft Delve was going to be deprecated didn’t come as a surprise, Delve – December 2024 retirement.
Conceptually it was grounded in rational thinking. A social engagement tool to learn more about your colleagues, what they are working on, who you and your colleagues engage with, and what content may be relevant to you.
A cross between LinkedIn and Facebook for your organisation. Both very successful tools, whether you agree to like them or not.
So, why hasn’t it worked out, what could it have done better, and is there a better way achieve the right outcomes?
As soon as the concerns of content being shared due to incorrect permissions applied on the source material made its way into every conversation and the flexibility of what information someone could add about themselves, Delve struggled to keep up and clearly define its purpose. Was it an inward or outward facing tool? Was it for you or for others in your organisation?
This article covers its good ideas, weaknesses, the gap left behind and the problem not addressed with a way to do so.
What Microsoft Delve did well
One of the most important aspects of engagement within an organisation is understanding what your colleagues know and do.
Delve never truly addressed the need for managing and presenting expertise.
The introduction of the Microsoft Profile Cards, which leverages the same backend information used by Delve, provided through the SharePoint User Profiles and Entra ID, provides enough capability around find and locating people and details of where they sit within an organisation. The Profile Card is “omnipresent”, in that every MS Office product uses it. Embedded into the “line of business” applications.
However, we believe this still does not address the gap of managing and presenting expertise to “others”.
Noting that for some organisations, the management of expertise may be done within a Human Resources (HR) or Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system. Those often do not include the relationship to content contribution, and in many cases the presentation and accessibility of this information is less than ideal.
Expertise information can be generated in several ways:
Atlas sits within your existing MS 365 tenancy so it can leverage information already available in SharePoint User Profiles and Entra ID, be connected to the content in MS Teams/SharePoint and if required, content from an HR or ERP system.
1) Ensure you have a centrally managed source of ‘up to date’ expertise information that uses your organisations taxonomy, your language about the type of work, the sectors, jurisdictions, service lines, subjects, topics, qualifications, certifications, etc. that are relevant to what you may need to find out about people.
Think about the:
2) Decide what content you want people to be able to add themselves versus what needs to be managed/controlled for consistency.
3 Have an easy process for people to submit their expertise, review and update the source of this information. When people move, then review and update accordingly.
4) Link a person’s expertise page to one or more biographies that they might have about themselves. Including any external profile on the organisation website, LinkedIn, or other professional profile services.
5) Ensure people are added to content as contributors, as the person who added or last modified a document is not always the “best” or most involved person in the creation of the actual content.
6) Tag content with the same taxonomy and language you tag your people expertise with to create relationships across content.
7) Allow people to state their preferences so that they can get to information quickly related to their interests or expertise.
What is the outcome of all of this?