Yup. I find ALL raw files need sharpening. Sharpening er......... makes the photograph sharper. Sorry but thats about it really. Open Photoshop, browse in Bridge, select your RAW file. Make the changes you want, select clarity, and slide that slightly to the right and you should see some improvement in the clarity of the image. Adjust whatever you feel you need to in Camera RAW like white balance, contrast hue and saturation, until you have the picture looking like what you expected. Select "open image" which will then bring you into photoshop with the image open. Now you can select sharpen from the filters menu and sharpen it.
You can save it as a Tiff file with a file name you will recognise it from, and then select unsharp mask also from the filters menu and apply the settings I suggested.
This should give you a better image and much more like what you expect from the camera. RAW files are exactly what it says on the tin, no sharpening, no adjustments to saturation, hue, sharpness, nothing. The only thing you will get is the "As shot" setting in white balance. You can select a number of presets like daylight, cloudy, incandesant bulb etc, but you can alter that as you need/ want to.
Pick an image and have a play with it, it's a good way to find out what you can do.
Hope that helps you a little
