Delivering great user experiences and well managed content with Microsoft Teams

Microsoft Teams is increasingly the go to application for day-to-day work and yet documents are often scattered and difficult to find.

While we all strive to make best use of Microsoft 365, it can quickly become confusing and messy. Sometimes it may seem that nothing has improved since the days of network drives - filled with an endless labyrinth of uncontrolled and unmanaged directories, folders and files. It doesn’t have to be like this.

Here are our top tips to deliver a great user experience and with well managed content:

Set out a structure

Define an overall structure for Microsoft Teams in your organisation and control the creation of Teams and Channels. Channels matter as they provide context for work and a set of top-level folders for documents in an associated SharePoint site. In the case of private and shared channels, more sites are created that require managing. 

Establish rules

Publish a simple set of rules for your content such as what goes where and naming conventions. Translate these rules into retention policies and labels so that Microsoft 365 helps manage your documents. Some documents may be locked as records if this feature is supported by your type of licence. 

Leverage SharePoint

Use document libraries, content types and columns in SharePoint to deliver more advanced requirements:

  • Separate current work from legacy content migrated from network drives

  • Show important documents on the departmental hub or corporate intranet

  • Filter and sort documents in the Files tab of Channels

  • Use templates and automation to ensure consistency - applying appropriate configuration to the sites, lists and libraries surfaced within Teams.

Embrace integrations

Incorporate integrations such as the SharePoint App to make SharePoint site pages and document libraries available within Teams. Invest time in page design - making the most useful information, resources, and links immediately available to your users.

Implement straightforward permissions

Adopt a simple permissions model to control access to your content - ideally using the Team’s owners, members, and guests in conjunction with Active Directory Groups applied to libraries and folders in the SharePoint site to share documents more widely.

A picture is worth a thousand words.

These principles are shown in the graphic below (click the image to view it full size).

Contact Deltascheme

While Microsoft 365, Teams and SharePoint can seem like a jungle at times, we have both the experience and the skills to help you navigate through it.

Get in touch - we look forward to working with you.

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