Entry point

In the late ’90s, the Internet changed the way we do business so rapidly that a new set of buzzwords was developed to describe the way it worked.

Fortunately, most of them were based on concepts we were already familiar with. Take the word portal, for example. Online, it represents a Web-based application that aggregates information from a variety of sources. Like a port of entry for a shipping company, a portal is a single, secure gate where information can be accessed easily.

The most famous portal was also one of the earliest. Yahoo.com collects weather, news, sports information and e-mail from separate sources to be delivered at a single point. Yahoo! doesn’t own all of the applications or all of the data displayed on the site, but it does own the technology used to pull the data together, and that’s what made it one of the fastest-growing companies of the late 1990s.

 

Internet vs. enterprise portals

Yahoo! is a powerful example of how portals have been used in the mass market. They’ve been a vital tool for business-to-consumer communications (B2C) and have become an important way for companies to communicate with their employees, their business partners and their customers.

Most businesses have set up intranets within their companies that operate under the same principles as the World Wide Web. These intranets are populated by mini-sites used by employees to access the information they need to do their jobs. The entire intranet is usually protected by a firewall that acts as a shield to keep proprietary information from unauthorized visitors. Extranets extend this intranet access out over the Internet to friendly external parties.

Portals can be used to simplify navigation through intranets and extranets by giving the end-user a personalized point of entry. Just as on B2C portals such as Yahoo!, business portals allow content to be displayed according to the end-user’s preferences.

As an example, imagine a territory manager who has a number of named accounts and customers and is also responsible for marketing and signing up new accounts. This individual would best be served with an enterprise portal that offers a quick link to his or her top 10 customers, detailed information on the last five support calls made by customers, a calendar of daily appointments and the most current version of the company’s marketing collateral.

Like a dashboard on a car, the portal gives the manager a quick view of the information her or she needs to drive business.

 

Communicate and collaborate

More and more workers today are geographically dispersed. To manage a diverse and dispersed work force, businesses must more effectively communicate, more rapidly change business processes and quickly react to changing market conditions, customer demands and threats from competition. Portals can help employees work more closely together and business partners to act as part of a cohesive team.

Portals are built in a format most people are familiar with, mimicking the usability of their favorite Web pages. The portal concept is a natural evolution for internal communications, conveniently and securely delivering applications and data to those who need it most.

Real-time access to the right kind of information makes key decision-makers more effective and brings down operating costs by reducing data re-entry, support phone calls, paper-based reports and errors made due to faulty, incomplete or stale information.

As simple as it is to navigate information once a portal is in place, it’s not always as easy to navigate the myriad options available when you decide to install a portal. A number of vendors offer portal systems and frameworks. When evaluating your options, rely on your IT staff’s experience in developing and deploying Web-based applications, and look for a vendor with extensive experience creating portals that not only meet your technical specifications but also address key business challenges.

After all, a portal will be most effective when it helps your employees meet the business challenges they face. Burr Sutter ([email protected]) is chief technologist at BravePoint, a supplier of e-business and enterprise IT solutions. Reach him at (770) 449-9696.