Before implementing an MRM solution, there are many factors to consider, and not all of them are technical. The following sections describe some of these factors.
Sandbox
To learn about installing, configuring, and maintaining MRM, we recommend that you first set up a test environment (also known as a sandbox installation) . Exchange administrators who are well versed in the details of setting up and configuring MRM in a test environment are in a better position to consult with and make recommendations to other members of the organization about the technical requirements for a successful MRM solution.
Policies and Plans
Another early step we recommend as you implement an MRM solution is to set up a team for the purposes of creating or updating the records management policy of your organization. Among the groups to consider including in the policy creation or review process are:
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Records management professionals
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Legal counsel
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Human resources
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Training
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Senior management
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Information technology (IT) management
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Consultants
The team's task is to create a records management policy that is sufficiently broad in scope to address the organization's current and future needs, but also sufficiently clear and detailed to enable the policy to be implemented by an Exchange administrator as an MRM solution. The process of developing this policy can be lengthy. This is because each team member considers, makes suggestions, and revises the work of the others, balancing legal requirements, budget, complexity, and administrative and human considerations to create a policy from which a manageable MRM implementation can be created.
Concerns for the team to consider, especially in organizations that have a well developed e-mail culture, include:
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User concerns and possible resistance to an MRM solution
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How to monitor and enforce the organization's messaging polices
Keeping Messages Where They Can Be Managed
To manage messages, the managed folder assistant must have access to them. This means that messages must be stored on an Exchange server for effective messaging records management. This has two consequences:
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Users' mailboxes must often be increased in size so that they can hold more items.
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Access to personal folder (.pst) files on users' computers should be limited or eliminated.
Increasing Mailbox Size
Keeping all user messages in mailboxes on the server usually means increasing the size of users' mailboxes, possibly to a gigabyte (GB) or more. The increased performance of Exchange 2007 helps to make these larger mailboxes manageable.
Limiting Access to .pst Files
You can start moving users away from using .pst files by creating a group policy that prevents new items from being added to existing .pst files. Making .pst files read-only gives users access to the .pst files they may already have while encouraging them to keep the messages that they want to keep in their Exchange mailboxes. Eventually, you may want to create a group policy to remove access to .pst files altogether.
Limiting access to .pst files can disrupt the work habits of some users, but it also has a number of advantages.
Keeping user messages on the server and limiting access to .pst files can:
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Significantly increase the effectiveness of MRM by keeping messages where they can be managed and monitored.
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Reduce the risk of losing important data that is stored on individual hard drives rather than on servers that are backed up regularly.
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Help to reduce the loss of the organization's intellectual property when vendors, interns, and employees leave the organization.
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Improve users' access to their data by keeping everything in their mailboxes.
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Make Microsoft Outlook Web Access more effective because all user messages are available anywhere with only a Web connection.
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Reduce the cost of legal discovery during a lawsuit. The process of capturing and discovering information that is stored in .pst files is labor-intensive and expensive because .pst files must first be located on user computers and then the contents must be processed by legal personnel.
To configure users' systems to operate without .pst files in Microsoft Office Outlook 2007
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Create a group policy that sets the following registry subkey to a value of 1. This setting prevents users from adding anything new to .pst files. Users can still create new .pst files but they cannot add anything to them. This setting blocks only Microsoft Outlook .pst files. It allows Microsoft SharePoint .pst files to be connected and updated in a user's Outlook profile. A similar registry key can be used to disable writing to .pst files in Outlook 2003.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Microsoft/Office/12/Outlook/PST/PstDisableGrow
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Create a group policy that sets the following registry subkeys to a value of 0. These settings disable the AutoArchive menu in Outlook and remove the AutoArchive option, which is shown when the user clicks Tools, clicks Options, and then clicks the Other tab.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Policies/Microsoft/Office/12/Outlook/Preferences/ArchiveDelete
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Policies/Microsoft/Office/12/Outlook/Preferences/ArchiveMount
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Policies/Microsoft/Office/12/Outlook/Preferences/ArchiveOld
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Policies/Microsoft/Office/12/Outlook/Preferences/DeleteExpired
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Policies/Microsoft/Office/12/Outlook/Preferences/DoAging
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Policies/Microsoft/Office/12/Outlook/Preferences/PromptForAging
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Create a group policy that sets the following registry subkey to a value of 5575. This setting removes the Outlook Data File option in Outlook, which is shown when the user clicks File, and then points to New.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Policies/Microsoft/Office/12/Outlook/DisableCmdBarItemsList/TCID1
Pilot Program
Starting with a pilot implementation can help you to fine tune your MRM solution and get a sense of end-user satisfaction before an organization-wide implementation. For example, you may discover that users find a six-month retention period for the Inbox too short, and that they are more comfortable with a one-year limit. Or you may discover that additional journaling would result in a need to upgrade your archiving solution.
Members of an MRM planning team may also be good candidates for the first members of an MRM pilot program. Additional members can be recruited from IT personnel and from interested management personnel. When the pilot program is in stable operation, you can recruit additional members of the organization to join. Any user reluctance to adopt managed messaging can sometimes be lessened with the promise of a larger mailbox, automatic e-mail management (including automatic deletion of routine notices and messages that can be placed in a short-retention folder), and training to deal with any questions or concerns.