Can anyone provide a link or advice on when to store a document on SharePoint. It seems as if I have several choices where I work
LAN File Server SharePoint MS Outlook OneNote The LAN vs SharePoint is where I would like some guidance if possible.
Storing a document in SharePoint will give you many benefits such as having the document go into process (such as workflows) which aren't available on file servers, outlook or any other tool, you can have document versions, checkout & check-in and other document management capabilities, these all are available only in SharePoint.
However, if the file size is big and the file isn't expected to change much later on, there's no need to store it in SharePoint, use file servers for that. Also if you want to store backups, for example database backups, there's is no point of storing them in SharePoint libraries.
Also one recommended use of file server is static files that won't be changed anymore, such as archiving files which won't be used by users anymore, these can be put into file servers as well to reduce SharePoint's load on DB.
Use SharePoint if you want to:
These days of "everything is a social", its better to go with SharePoint.
My organization that has 100,000+ employees has chosen SharePoint for building intranet and same SharePoint for our public facing site!
One more important point for pro sharepoint:
If you want to collaborate/work with colleagues on docs and share them on a simple way SharePoint is the way to go!
It has much more advantages. I would suggest that you try to get a deeper look into the features of SharePoint to get a better understanding of what it offers.
When to use...
...SharePoint: If you want colaboration features (see post of Erik) and need additional functionality or workflows for your business case
...OneNote: You can use OneNote, if you want collaboration features and don't have SharePoint ;-) It's a good and quick solution for sharing files, but if you have SharePoint I would prefer that.
...Outlook: Simply don't! Outlook is an E-Mail client and not suitable for document management.
...local/LAN storage: Actually there are not many reasons to store files just on a disk somewhere:
I would suggest you check to see if your company has a data policy as to where certain documents should be stored.
Here are some things which I tell my customers:
Requires also well-thought-out SharePoint structue: