APAN uses two platforms. Communities are created based off requirements group owners and teams may have.
Verint Groups are virtual spaces created for a specific organization, team or topic where members may collaborate and share information with each other. All Groups are made up of Group Owners and Members.
Within a Group, you may use various applications such as blogs, forums, wikis, media galleries, and calendars with event registration.
Groups are Verint based.
SharePoint Sites are virtual spaces created for a specific organization, team or topic, where members may collaborate and share information with each other. All Sites are made up of Site Owners and Members.
It is recommended to use APAN Sites if you would like to create a more formalized information-sharing environment with robust options for content management, or if you need to utilize custom lists with predefined data fields.
Sites are SharePoint based.
Once you have decided that an APAN Community is the right tool for your collaboration, follow this process to get started:
Verint groups have 5 different options for privacy:
Private Unlisted means only users approved by the group Owners can enter the group, read, and interact with the content. Unlisted groups cannot be found on an APAN search. Owners must manually add or invite any users they wish to become Members.
Private Listed means only users approved by the group Owners can enter the group, read, and interact with the content. Listed groups can be found on an APAN search. APAN users can log in and conduct a search of all listed groups on APAN. Owners can manually add or invite any users they wish to become Members, and any APAN user can find the group and request access. Owners still need to approve or deny access requests. Listed groups cannot be found on an internet search using a search engine like Google, Bing, Duck-Duck Go, or any others. A user must have an APAN account and be logged in to search for a group.
Public Closed means the content in the group is published to the internet for anyone to view. The content is READ ONLY to any person on the internet. The "Closed" part of this term refers to the membership of the group. The Members’ list is still controlled by the Owners. Members can interact with the content where non-members, anyone on the internet, can only read the content. Members can make Forum posts, Blog posts, comments, edit the wiki, etc. APAN users can find the group on an APAN search and request membership.
Public Open is only allowed for use on APAN under certain circumstances. The group's content is Public, so it is viewable to any person on the internet. The "open" part of this term refers to the membership of the group. The Members’ list is not controlled by the Owners. Any APAN user can make themselves a Member of a Public Open group. Owners have no control over the members list. That means that anyone who wants to can make an APAN account, make themselves a member of a Public Open group, and interact with the content. This setting is only allowed under certain circumstances when the Owners of the group are watching the content and membership 24/7 to monitor activity. Groups who do not meet these requirements are not allowed to use the Public Open setting.
Joinless means the Members list is removed from the group. Only Owners can interact with the content. The content is published publicly to the internet. Interactive features are not allowed on Joinless groups. Blogs, Forums, and Wikis are removed from any Joinless group.
These settings and more are covered in the Required APAN Owner Training sessions held every Tuesday from 12:00noon - 1:30pm US Eastern time. See the APAN University page https://community.apan.org/support/p/apanu for more training information. If you would like a live review of this content, please submit a ticket HERE (ServiceNow (apan.org)) and request a custom training session.
Group Types
View Only
APAN Registration Required
Community Membership Approval Required
Only Approved Members Can Read Content
Membership is NOT Vetted
Group Name Publicly Searchable within APAN and 3rd party search engines
Content Not Searchable, within APAN or 3rd party search engines
Must Review All Content Regularly to Ensure OPSEC
Joinless
X
Public Open
DO NOT USE
Public Closed
Private Listed
Private Unlisted
A community requestor will have at least two distinct opportunities to consult one-on-one with the APAN staff that is building the community. First, when the Requirements Form is submitted, the APAN staff member will contact the requestor to clarify requirements. Second, the APAN staff member will contact the requestor when the community is ready. When the new community owner takes control of the group, the APAN Help Desk is then available 24/7 for assistance.
The APAN staff will send the requestor a training document and a Community Owner Agreement form to sign and return. The requestor must sign, scan and email or fax back the signed form to the APAN staff before control of the community is transferred to the requestor.
Once the new community owner is granted control of their community, they can manage the community's look and feel, add and delete applications, change privacy settings, manage membership, and more. The owner can customize the community to the extent the tools will allow.
APAN provides many sources to train new owners: Weekly live webinars, Knowledge Base articles, Community Owner’s Blog, demo groups, and the 24/7 Help Desk Support Hotline.
APAN staff will build the basic shell of your group. The shell will include a home page, shared document library, and the applications recommended to you by the APAN Knowledge Manager helping you set up your site. You will then add your logo, description, welcome message, and initial content. You will have the power to add pages, additional applications, tabs, and customize the tools on the community for exactly what your audience needs.
Community owners are responsible for ensuring that only unclassified information is posted to their communities. If a classified information spillage occurs, it is the owner’s responsibility to immediately report the incident to the APAN staff and assist in cleanup.
Manage Members
Owners are responsible for publicizing their new community to their target audience. If the community is closed, Owners must then monitor and respond to membership requests. It is the owner’s responsibility to ensure that only authorized users have access to the content under their control.
Communities need continual attention to increase membership and provide fresh content. Owners need to ensure that members are engaged in conversation and appropriate content is provided. If your group becomes inactive, it is the owner’s responsibility to either revive it or notify the APAN staff that it should be archived.
APAN is for unclassified sharing only.
Keep in mind the following when launching your new community:
There are primarily two types of group permissions.
For more on group membership, please identify the membership and permissions content.
The APAN application service provider removes obsolete data from the system in an effort to conserve server resources. APAN is not an official records management system. The normal content retention practice for DOD information systems is to retain operationally relevant information for no more than 3 years. The APAN platform has many applications and features for communities to utilize such as chat, maps, virtual meeting rooms, a variety of widgets and web parts, and other tools. Determination of dated content that deems a community as “inactive” is performed by system administrators who manually review the community usage of the various applications on a quarterly basis.
It is the community owner's responsibility to understand APAN's Community Maintenance Policy which reflects the following:
Inactive for > 2 years = Communities with no new content or files uploaded within the last 2 years will be deleted with no advance notification.
Caveats to the community retention policy may include major HADR events and large-scale operational exercises supported by APAN staff
Groups
Sites
As a member, learn about…
Navigation
Profile and settings
How to access a group
How to access a site
How to find colleagues
Connecting between members
SharePoint applications
Group applications
As an owner, learn more about…
Group settings & Configuration
Updating look & feel of site
Page content and Layouts
Editing pages
Permissions
Managing and configuring widgets
Managing and configuring webparts
Subgroup creation
Sub-site creation
Learn more with live training
Participate in APAN University!
Locate samples of other successful APAN communities
Check out our APAN homepage to see what other APAN community builders have done!
Discover more resources
Explore APAN Resources. You will find numerous briefs and brochures for your guidance.
(Last updated 18 Nov 2024)