Big Deal by Angus Kidman

Industry veteran Angus Kidman casts his cynical eye over what passes for news in the world of ICT. He exposes the deep disconnect between what vendors claim is the next big thing and what IT managers are really looking for to help them do their job. This often bitter and twisted rant comes to you courtesy of ZDNet Australia and any venue game enough to host Kidman during his extensive travels.

Office no place for power users

Posted by Angus Kidman @ 10:14 7 comments

While elements of Microsoft's Office suite have been in use for more than 20 years, the company now appears unpleasantly convinced that nobody really has any idea how to use the product.

I spent yesterday at a technical media preview for Office 2007 (due in November for enterprise customers and early next year for the mass market), and what really struck me about the latest version is what little regard Microsoft seems to have for its existing user base.

In the core Office document creation applications -- Word, Excel and PowerPoint -- the traditional Windows application arrangement of a top-of-screen menu followed by a toolbar has been replaced with the "ribbon", a super-expanded toolbar which allows you to click on what Microsoft says are the most commonly used features. There's no menu bar at all, and no option to switch back to the "classic" view (unlike, say, Windows Vista, which does give you the choice of ignoring its nice-to-look-at-doesn't-add-much Aero interface).

Microsoft argues that this arrangement makes it easier for users to discover features in the product they might have otherwise missed, which seems vaguely reasonable (the company claims the first version of Word offered less than 100 commands, while the new one has more than 1,000). However, this comes at the cost of making life very difficult for users (like me) who are familiar with the existing menu structure and use it for access to keyboard shortcuts. Some of these are supported "invisibly" (if you use the shortcuts, they'll work, but there's no on-screen cues), while others have disappeared altogether.

The new approach also restricts the ability of individuals or companies to customise Word (or Excel or whatever) for easy access to their own favourite features. You can customise the quick access toolbar which appears below the ribbon, but not the ribbon itself, and some of its features can't be added to the toolbar in any case.

Such a major interface change is likely to prove expensive for enterprises which have developed detailed documentation on performing particular tasks in the Office environment. While every Office upgrade has tended to require tweaking those documents, there's not been a change as big as ditching the menu structure altogether since the individual Office applications shifted from DOS to Windows.

Microsoft officials concede that the company's own research shows that "power users" are going to have the most trouble adapting to the new interface. That seems insane to me when the central Office marketing message -- that Office applications can be combined and integrated for access to a wide range of customised business collaboration processes -- depends on power users being willing to spend time with the product to make that grandiose vision a reality.

Indeed, there's an amusing contradiction involved. Office 2003 was promoted around the notion that already everyone knew how to use those applications, so it made sense to make them the front-end for other tasks like business intelligence and content management. Office 2007 is being promoted with the notion that most of Office's features are so hard to find that a complete revamp is required so that people can use the products. Which version does Microsoft really believe?

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Talkback 7 comments

    What MS believes in Anonymous -- 23/06/06 (in reply to #120136466)

    Microsoft believes in the version that makes money for it. So whichever version users believe, MS will be laughing its way to the bank.

    What MS believes in Anonymous -- 23/06/06

    Microsoft believes in the version that makes money for it. So whichever version users believe, MS will be laughing its way to the bank.

    MS Word Anonymous -- 02/07/06

    I'd be happy if MS Word stop trying to second-guess me all the time. I would say its IQ is around 85. I am considerably brighter.

    I also wish it would stop imposing US spelling on me. I say "recognise" and it says "recognize".

    And it won't accept my dictionary choice.

    Bill should put his excess funds into refining his products.

    spelling jim wheeler -- 10/07/06 (in reply to #120137030)

    Well, you could always do the easy thing, and alter the programme to English/ Austrlian English.

    Will be using OpenOffice instead Andrew T -- 03/07/06

    Thankfully we’ll be missing out on all the Office 2007 problems. Our company of 120 users has been trialling OpenOffice 2.x for the past year with some groups. The remarkable thing is those groups now insist on only using OpenOffice and don’t want to use MS Office anymore. I thought there would be some user resentment and difficulty, but only 2 people made any negative comments in the anonymous suggestion box. This change is progressing far better than expected and should be complete within the next three months. The change has been brought about based purely on concerns over vendor lock-in and of course cost. We’re guessing we’ll save approx. $30,000-40,000 – that’s not small change for us.

    I really like these forums. Big thanks.

    MS Office Anonymous -- 06/07/06

    I operate a small business training SOHO users in software applications. In order to keep ahead of the game I instaled a beta of MSO 2007 and went to work on it. Allowing for the usual beta problems with responsiveness, hangs and features not working as advertised, the thing is still confusing at best for any current user.

    However! When I tried it on someone returning to the workforce, who had never seen MS Office in it's current form, she found the human interface quite intuitive!

    Does anyone else remember the shock of changing from DOS based "Wordstar" to the first Windows version of MS Word? I know I stuck with a sort-of-Windows version of Wordstar 'cause I couldn't handle MS Word!

    The change this time is many magnitudes greater because of feature bloat, but I suspect MS Office "virgins" won't have too much trouble! The current user base may.

    I personally use OOo2.x.x and I suspect a few current users will migrate that way to keep a somewhat familliar interface.

    Change for all users Anonymous -- 06/07/06

    So 20% of users that actually use 80% of office are complaining. I'm a power user and all my stuff still works. I can tell if a keyboard shortcut works...

    if it was so good before, why did 80% of request for new functionality in Word 2007 already exist in Word 2003?

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Angus Kidman

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