Good morning everyone! I thought of sharing some information about building a Case Management System within your SharePoint Intranet Portal. Don’t believe us? This blog showcases the features of a Case Management System we have developed on top of Dock SharePoint Intranet Portal.
Case Management has never been a straightforward feature in the realm of information governance. Collaboration systems like SharePoint have provided some tools on how best to tackle this ubiquitous issue, but knowing how to utilize them properly never been understandable. Microsoft SharePoint is a great tool, and understanding all facets of it is difficult. Here is where we can help.
Features
You will need to have 3 important interfaces to build a perfect Case Management System:
This is the landing page where a Dashboard of Cases are listed with due date, assigned manager and case status.
It also shows the total number of assigned cases, open cases, delivered cases and cases closed prior to completion.
What is the best part? It comes with a beautiful timeline (Gantt Chart) that helps users to add Case Items with the proposed timeline.
Okay now this is getting more interesting. You click on one of the case items and you get to the Case Screen/Case Details Pane.
The below information is captured for each case:
Here, the Case Investigator checks his/her dashboard for the Case Status like Due Date, Case Manager and task progress.
Again, a timeline is setup for the Investigators to easily manage the timeframe of the tasks.
You can also add News and Announcements, Discussion Area and a Document Center for a better user experience.
Thanks to SharePoint’s default user permissions, you can assign the Admin to have read/write access to all the features of this portal.
The Case Investigator will have only access to the cases that are assigned to him/her. This can be achieved using the people lookup feature along with some custom workflows.
Nothing is complete without a perfect User Interface, with Dock SharePoint Intranet, custom user interfaces are built to provide users with seamless experience and productivity.
The Case Management System in Dock has been designed for the purposes of access, findability and security. SharePoint with Dock makes that rather easy to tackle. If the Case Management System has been intended to facilitate retention, a purely Records Management concern like default SharePoint, it will struggle.
As mentioned earlier SharePoint excels at the management of Case Files. Users can generate cases easily and assign it to their team members. The user feedback was so overwhelming where you can save lot of time on case management activities compared to manual interventions.