Archive
#Project #MVP Award #ProjectOnline #ProjectServer #MVPBuzz #Microsoft
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
Some good news, I’m very pleased to announce that my Project MVP award was renewed for the fourth time after first being awarded in April 2013. I am really grateful for the recognition, especially as I still enjoy helping out the Project and Project Server / Project Online community so much. It is kind of a hobby of mine I guess, or maybe just an obsession!
#PowerBI Gantt visualization #PPM #ProjectOnline #PMO #BI
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
A quick post to highlight a cool new custom visual for Power BI that was released a few weeks ago, the Gantt visualization. This can be downloaded from the link below:
Once added to Power BI Desktop this visual can be used in your Power BI reports. Below is a simple example that uses the Project Online Odata API to pull in the Project Name, Project Start Date, Project Duration and % complete:
In the example above I have also included some other project level custom fields, one to filter the data with a slicer and one to control the colour of the project bars. There are tooltips on the project / task bars to show details:
It also includes a “Today” line by default:
The Gantt visualization has some configurable settings that can be found on the visualizations pane:
You can control many formatting settings such as the date type:
Download and take a look to build some cool project center / project detail schedule type views in Power BI! For other Power BI posts for Project Online / Microsoft PPM, see the link below:
#SharePoint and #ProjectServer 2016 RTM is OUT
You can refer to my last blog to follow step by step to stand up SharePoint 2016 farm: http://bit.ly/1MzUHxn
Microsoft has also announced that Project Server/SharePoint 2016 will be generally available in Microsoft Volume Licensing Service Center in early May 2016.
Project Server 2016 RTM to download: http://bit.ly/1LEd1KU
Language Pack for SharePoint 2016: http://bit.ly/1MzUHxp
Project Server 2016 tech-net documentation: http://bit.ly/1hhobqk
SharePoint Server 2016 tech-net documentation: http://bit.ly/1KmWs3m
Whats new for Admins in SharePoint 2016: http://bit.ly/1LEd3T9
Enjoy.
via All about Enterprise Project Management (EPM) http://bit.ly/1MzUJFq
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The author of the blog has an extensive experience of working as an EPM Consultant. Currently he is located in Dubai, UAE and working for Microsoft partner organization as Project Server specialist. He has a thorough experience of providing Project Management technical/functional consultancy to all sort of organizations. He is a certified PMP, a Project Server MCITP, and also received a MS community contributor award 2011.
This article has been cross posted from khurramjamshed.blogspot.com/ (original article) |
#ProjectServer 2016 is RTM #SharePoint #PS2016 #SP2016 #Office2016 #PPM
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
A quick post to highlight some great news this week, Project Server 2016 RTM has been released, the announcement is here:
To view what is new for Project Server 2016 see the MSDN link below:
Some great reasons there for those clients still using the on-premise software to upgrade from earlier versions of Project Server.
To view what has been deprecated or removed in Project Server 2016 see the link below:
To find all of the Project Sever 2016 documentation start here:
#ProjectServer and #SharePoint 2010 / 2013 / 2016 March 2016 Cumulative Update #PS2010 #SP2010 #PS2013 #SP2013 #MSProject
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
The Office 2016 March 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project 2016 March 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1LQUomF
The Office 2013 March 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project Server 2013 March 2016 CU Server Roll up package:
http://bit.ly/1XcfFrP
Project Server 2013 March 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1LQUomH
Project 2013 March 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1XcfI6R
Also worth noting, if you haven’t done so already, install Service Pack 1 http://bit.ly/1uorn2C first if installing the March 2016 CU.
The Office 2010 March 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project Server 2010 March 2016 CU Server Roll up package:
http://bit.ly/1XcfFrR
Project Server 2010 March 2016 update:
<no update this month>
Project 2010 March 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1LQUnPB
SP2 is a pre-requisite for the Office 2010 March 2016 updates.
As always, fully test these updates on a replica test environment before deploying to production
#ProjectOnline Resource Engagements now include #email reminders #PPM #Office365
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
The recently released (September / October 2015) Resource Engagement feature in Project Online now has email reminder capability for pending resource requests. If you missed the posts on the Resource Engagement feature they can be found here:
This post highlights the new email reminder capability. Recently Microsoft also enabled email alerts and notifications in Project Online, the Resource Engagements email alerts can now be included. See the steps below.
Once the Notification Email Settings is enabled on the PWA site collection as seen below (PWA Settings > Additional Server Settings):
In the resource centre you will then see a new button:
There are 3 options on this button:
To add resources for email reminders, select them in the resource centre grid then click Request Reminders > Subscribe to selected resources. An alert will pop up to advise you the subscriptions have been updated:
Now the resources have been added you need to enable the email alerts and the frequency. Navigate to PWA Settings > Manage My Resources’ Alerts and Reminders > My Resource Requests:
Check the check box and choose the frequency:
That’s it, you will now get email reminders for pending resource requests.
#ProjectServer and #SharePoint 2010 / 2013 / 2016 February 2016 Cumulative Update #PS2010 #SP2010 #PS2013 #SP2013 #MSProject
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
The Office 2016 February 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project 2016 February 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1o3Cwdt
The Office 2013 February 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project Server 2013 February 2016 CU Server Roll up package:
http://bit.ly/1o7DR3D
Project Server 2013 February 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1o3CwtK
Project 2013 February 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1o7DSnX
Also worth noting, if you haven’t done so already, install Service Pack 1 http://bit.ly/1uorn2C first if installing the February 2016 CU.
The Office 2010 February 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project Server 2010 February 2016 CU Server Roll up package:
http://bit.ly/1o7DSnZ
Project Server 2010 February 2016 update:
<no update this month>
Project 2010 February 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1o3Cy4X
SP2 is a pre-requisite for the Office 2010 February 2016 updates.
For details, see the post below: http://bit.ly/1o7DRjU
As always, fully test these updates on a replica test environment before deploying to production
Getting started with #ProjectOnline #Workflow Part 1 #PS2013 #Office365 #Project #PPM #PMOT
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
Following on from a very popular series of posts on getting started with Project Online, Microsoft’s Office 365 PPM cloud offering, round up found here. I started a mini series towards the end of last year where I covered getting started with the Portfolio Analysis functionality, part 1 here and part 2 here. I mentioned here that I would also do the same for workflow. I have finally got around to creating the workflow version – sorry for the delay, it has been a busy few months.
In this series of posts I will touch on some of the workflow capabilities that are available for Project Online and show you how to getting started.
For the purpose of this post I have already configured a project ideas type list in my PWA site collection, the portfolio strategy / analysis piece, some enterprise project types and have some custom fields.
The first post in this series will look at creating a project from the project ideas list. The workflow will assign a task to a SharePoint group for the approval, once approved a project will be created in Project Online using the correct Enterprise Project Type.
The project ideas list on my test environment looks like this:
Very simple, with a couple of SharePoint fields. I have mapped these fields to Project Online custom fields:
This is so that the metadata captured from the idea is copied over to custom field when the project is created.
I have also created some new Enterprise Project Types in this test environment:
Some of these will be used in later posts for this getting started series.
We will now look at creating an approval workflow for this ProjectIdeas list. Launch SharePoint Designer 2013 and open the target PWA site.
Click Workflow from Navigation pane:
Click List Workflow then choose the list:
Complete the details as required:
Click OK.
Now you can start creating the workflow in the designer. For this example I will firstly insert two more stages using the Stage button:
Then rename the stages:
Starting with the Initiated stage, click where is states “Start typing…” and more options will be enabled in the ribbon:
Click the Action button and scroll down to the “Assign a task” action and click:
Now click this user:
In the dialog box that appears complete the details, for the Participant I selected the Administrators group:
For the task title I used the string builder and added the following with a lookup to the item:
For the description I used the string builder to create the following:
Once the details are completed:
Click OK.
Now click in the transition to stage section:
Using the condition ribbon menu button, select if any value equals value:
Now click the first value:
Then click the fx button:
In the box that appears set the following:
Click OK.
Click the second value and choose Approved:
Now select the Insert go-to under the If and select Go to a stage on the Action menu:
Click a stage and select Approved:
Do the same for Else but select the Rejected stage:
In the Approved stage I will insert a parallel block:
In this parallel block I will insert four If conditions:
The If conditions are then configured like below:
The action for each If will be “Create Project from Current Item”:
Then you can choose the Enterprise Project Type:
Set this up to match to correct EPTs:
I then added two further actions:
To send ad email and to set a field on the list.
The email was configured as below:
The workflow then set the Approval Date field to Today:
The transition to stage was then update to end the workflow:
The final stage to configure is the Reject stage, in this stage we just send and email to the user that created the item then end the workflow:
Once completed, save the workflow and check for any errors.
Using the navigation bar, click the workflow name:
Then set the start options for the workflow:
Once you are happy with it publish the workflow to the list.
Back in SharePoint, if we look at the Workflow settings for the list we should see the workflow name:
Now if I create a new item on the list the workflow will fire and create a task for one of the administrators to approve, the item shows as in the initiated stage:
As a PWA administrator I would receive a email notifying me that I had a task assigned, I could then approve that item or reject it. In this example I will approve it:
When the workflow fires the item will update to Approved, a project will get created in Project Online, an email will be sent to the user who created the idea and the Approval Date will be set on the list item.
The updated project idea item can be seen below:
The project can be seen below in the project center with the correct Enterprise Project Type:
The data from the Project Ideas list has been copied to the correct Project Custom fields:
That’s it for the simple project ideas list workflow – there is lots more that can be done but hopefully that gives you a good idea on how to get started. Next up we will take a look at getting started with the project life cycle workflow and progress a project through various stages and phases.
#ProjectOnline CSOM DLL now available in #SharePoint NuGet package
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
Quick post to highlight that the Project Online CSOM DLL ‘Microsoft.ProjectServer.Client.dll’ is now available via the NuGet package for SharePoint, see the blog post below for details:
Direct link to the package: http://bit.ly/1SO8x4X
#ProjectServer and #SharePoint 2010 / 2013 / 2016 January 2016 Cumulative Update #PS2010 #SP2010 #PS2013 #SP2013 #MSProject
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I am a Project Server and SharePoint consultant but my main focus currently is around Project Server.
I have been working with Project Server for nearly five years since 2007 for a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner in the UK, I have also been awared with the Microsoft Community Contributor Award 2011. I am also a certified Prince2 Practitioner. This article has been cross posted from pwmather.wordpress.com (original article) |
The Office 2016 January 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project 2016 January 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1JIOjrw
The Office 2013 January 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project Server 2013 January 2016 CU Server Roll up package:
http://bit.ly/1KbV685
Project Server 2013 January 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1JIOjry
Project 2013 January 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1KbV7IW
Also worth noting, if you haven’t done so already, install Service Pack 1 http://bit.ly/1uorn2C first if installing the January 2016 CU.
The Office 2010 January 2016 updates and cumulative updates are now available, please see the links below:
Project Server 2010 January 2016 CU Server Roll up package:
http://bit.ly/1KbV7IY
Project Server 2010 January 2016 update:
http://bit.ly/1JIOjHO
Project 2010 January 2016 update:
<no update this month>
SP2 is a pre-requisite for the Office 2010 January 2016 updates.
As always, fully test these updates on a replica test environment before deploying to production.






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