I’m curious to know what industry you work in, what version of SharePoint you are using, and how many users are in your network?
I work in higher education. Our internet is on SP 2010 and we will be launching our Intranet in August using SP 2013. We have 38,000 faculty, staff and students.
A single farm with a web application for each school. We can only launch with Intranet access to faculty, staff, and student workers. No students until we get the licensing issues resolved. Which brought up the question of how to restrict students but not student workers. Please offer your suggestions at my discussion here: http://sharepoint-community.net/forum/topics/differentiating-students-in-the-ad
The past few years, I worked for 2 MNCs, both in the manufacturing industry. As I was working in/for the region Asia Pacific, my user base was smaller, I think around 600 / 2000 users respectively. Versions were 2007 and 2010
I just joined a consultancy, though, focussing mostly on Office 365, but of course still with the occasional on-premises SharePoint.
I work for a consulting company that does IT for other companies in our city (so not just SharePoint). We have some clients on O365 and some that have in-house 2007-2010 installs (though I think all may be Foundation). I am taking the reins to be our SharePoint expert and see what I can do to make it work better for our clients.
Our company has about 35 employees. We use O365 and our SharePoint is pretty much used to store documents and announcements.
I laughed that 400 employees could be considered small. The company I last worked for had 150 or so and was pretty good size to me. My current employer is about 35 people. 🙂
I work at a small financial services company, we only have about 400 employees. We are using SharePoint 2010 Enterprise on premises. We also have our customer extranet built in SharePoint same version, it has a few thousand users I believe.