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Welcome to the Jive SBS Tour! Use this tour to get a step-by-step view of some of the things you can do in the community. As you read through the tour, it will point out features and suggest things you can do to start putting the community to work for you and your team. Here are the steps:
Get to know Jive SBS. When you first log into Jive SBS, the home page offers links to places where you can dive in. By default the changed items are listed with the most recent first. Use the document type icons, titles, and change age ("3 hours ago") to decide if there's anything of interest for you here at the top level.
Your community manager might have customized the All Content page to show certain things, so it might look different from what's pictured below. But this is a snapshot of some of the things you might see.
The content type icons are your first clues as to the kinds of content you'll find and create in Jive SBS: including documents, blogs, discussions, videos and more. You'll learn more about the types later in this tour. From the home page you can also get a feel for how you can find content. For example, through the sections on the home page you can browse by place, by content types, by bookmarks, and so on.
Also, notice that menu bar near the top of the page. It's available on all the other pages, too. Use it to:
After you've gotten to know what's inside pretty well, use the Your View link at the top to choose which content you want to appear here.
In the Find Content section of the tour you'll learn how to stay on top by using places, searches, bookmarks, notifications, and something called "feeds."
As you saw on the Jive SBS home page, you've got a number of paths into the content. You can browse by place, content type, bookmarks, and tags; you can also search. (You can even browse for content by other people — just try clicking someone's name.) This section of the tour will introduce you to Jive SBS's content-finding features.
Browse places. Most content in Jive SBS is organized by places. Places include spaces, projects, and groups. In places, you create, find, and organize content. Start by checking out spaces.

The Spaces page shows a hierarchical list of the spaces you can visit.

If you haven't already, take a moment to browse your spaces.
Browse by tags. When you browse by tags, you're using a community-made indexing system. You and other people apply tags like index keywords to new content to make the content more findable. You look for content you want by clicking tag names to see a list of related content. Wherever you go in Jive SBS, you'll see tags that group your content into categories.


Search for content. Search for the content you want, filtering your search to refine the results.


Through browsing and searching Jive SBS you can look for the content you need. But what if you've found something you want to keep your eye on? By bookmarking something, you can get back to it easily. By subscribing to feeds or email notifications, you can get updated on changes to content you care about.
Bookmark your favorite stuff. When you see something you know you'll want to get back to later, you can bookmark it. When you bookmark something, you add a link to that content to your list of bookmarks. It's easy to find the content again by going to your bookmarks page.


Subscribe to feeds. Ever want a way to see what's new or changed on your favorite web sites without having to visit the sites? You can use feeds to get a digest of updates to the stuff you're interested in. When you "subscribe" to a feed (such as an RSS feed) — say, for particular search results or a tag or the content of a space — your feed reader (which might simply be your web browser) does the checking for you. With feeds, you can subscribe to nearly anything in Jive SBS!


If feeds sounds appealing, take a moment to get it set up. Select one of the Jive SBS feeds and subscribe. If you select a reader to use for all feeds, subscribing is as easy as clicking the feed icon where you see it in Jive SBS.
Note: When subscribing to feeds, you might need to associate your community user name and password with the subscription.
Get notified by email. In addition to feeds, you can stay on top of content by also using email notifications. When you sign up to receive email notifications, Jive SBS will send you email whenever the content you're interested in changes.

You'll want to personalize your home page. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of the time you're using Jive SBS.
As you and others use Jive SBS, the amount of content will grow until you want ways to keep it all sorted out. You'll develop a preference for certain people's blogs, for discussions in certain areas. And you'll learn that some areas just rarely have anything you need.


Notice how the page in design mode is divided into a top part and larger bottom part. In the box near the top of the page is a list of widgets. Most widgets are special views on content or people in Jive SBS; a few provide other ways to add other things, such as notes and links to stuff on the web.
Beneath the list of widgets is a design already started for you. This design is an arrangement of widgets for you to change by rearranging it, removing widgets, and adding some you'd rather have.







You'll find the content you need with Jive SBS. But if you use it long enough, there's a pretty good chance that you're going to want to make your own contributions. And that where things really get interesting. As you join others in the community — getting answers to your questions, finding documents you need day to day, reading others' thoughts in a blog — you'll discover ideas you wouldn't otherwise have seen. And you'll want to get them out of your head and into Jive SBS.
Ask a question, get some quick feedback. Discussions are great for those brief questions and comments. It might start with a simple question.



Create a document to preserve team thoughts. Documents and uploaded files give you a way to get content into Jive SBS. With documents, you edit the content right in Jive SBS. You and others can work on the same document and it's searchable. As you'll see later, you can also specify that other people should review or approve the content. By uploading a file, on the other hand, you can add something that was created outside Jive SBS. Uploading the file makes it available to other people; you can tag the uploaded file to make sure it gets found.
A document is for capturing information that others on the team would be interested in (or might just need) — things like agendas, plans, meeting notes, equipment lists, and the like. They're team documents and they tend to be more long-lived than a blog post.





Tip: You can make a document from a discussion. View the discussion in Jive SBS, then click the Convert thread to document link under Actions.
Post your views to your blog. While documents are often authored by the team, blogs are for more individual kinds of content. A blog might be the voice of a department (such as human resources) or of an individual (such as you). A blog is a like a column in a newspaper — it's there when you look for it, now and then offering something new to read. Unlike a newspaper column, though, others can comment on a blog.
If you've got a blog, you might post your views on something you just read that others in the organization might be interested in. Or you could evaluate or summarize something for the team, providing a way for others to give feedback through their comments on your blog.


Upload video. If your community supports it, you can upload video for others in the community to watch. If you have a webcam, you can even record your own video. As


You'll see lots of great, useful content pop up. But have you ever noticed that you keep using content from the same set of people? You can build your own network and never lose touch with the people whose stuff matters the most. The best way to get primed for connecting with people is to get lots of information into your profile. Using your profile and other people's, you can make one-to-one connections to keep up with individuals. And when you share an interest with others, you can join or create a social group to talk about it.
Create a profile. Your profile is a quick way for other members of your team to find out more about you. It can be bare bones or more thorough. If you fill in the optional fields, you can give others a sense of who you are and what you know. It can be very useful in a team to know who to go to when you've got a question or suggestion in mind.
Find people and make connections. You can build your own personal network by using the connection feature. Making connections is a little like adding people to a list of favorites. When you're connected, you can more easily keep track of what they're up to, what they're saying in discussions and blogs.







Join a group. They're out there, you know — your people, that is. Find them and reunite in a social group.


Start your own group. Can't find a group for your favorite subject? Make your own. You can invite anyone you like — even make it super-secret.




Nearly everything you do in Jive SBS is about collaboration. Content you add is almost always visible and searchable by everyone (unless you've expressly indicated that its visibility should be limited to certain people). Other people read your work, you read theirs. You get ideas from someone else's blog, they comment with suggestions on your document.
But Jive SBS provides ways through which you can manage collaboration. For example, you can say that only certain people are collaborating on a document with you. You can say that some of these people can edit the document, while others must approve it before it's visible to everyone.
Add collaborators. When you first create a document, you limit its visibility by setting its collaboration options. When you add people to edit and approve a document, you're giving them special roles in what's called the document's "workflow." In other words, work on the document starts in one place — a draft — and moves through a process — possibly more drafts, review, and approval — until it's ready for publishing.

After you've saved the document, you can come back later to edit these options by clicking the Manage Collaboration link in the Actions list. The people you added to edit and approve the document will be able to get to this document from their Your Stuff menu and from the Your Stuff tab of their own profile.
The document itself will also let approvers know that it's time to approve.

You've got people sharing ideas and contributing content. When specific schedules and goals drive their work, create a project to focus it. In Jive SBS a project is a way to collect tasks and schedules with other kinds of content to collaborate toward a larger goal.


After you've created the project, you'll see the home page. Here, you
can get started creating the tasks and checkpoints that make up the
substance that sets a project apart. You can customize this page just as you
can with your personalized home page or a space overview page. 
You'll use checkpoints to map out your project's milestones, with tasks between the checkpoints.

As you add checkpoints, notice that they're visible on the
Overview page in the Checkpoints list and the Project
Calendar. Hover over a checkpoint in either place to edit or delete
it. 
Start adding specific, smaller-grained tasks that can be assigned to someone for completion between checkpoints.



