Plan an intelligent SharePoint intranet - SharePoint in Microsoft 365 (2024)

  • Article

Microsoft SharePoint offers a wide variety of options and tools to create intranet sites for your organization. Moving your intranet to SharePoint in Microsoft 365 might take a while, particularly if you already have extensive intranet content. In this article, we look at how to plan a new SharePoint intranet with a focus on quickly bringing sites online and getting a return on your investment.

We cover how to:

  • Understand your key organizational priorities
  • Understand your audience
  • Plan for governance
  • Review your current intranet
  • Identify and prioritize your business initiatives
  • Identify one key scenario to prototype and pilot
  • Launch the pilot and engage with your users

With SharePoint, any user can create highly functional intranet pages quickly without the need for writing code or other difficult customizations. These sites look great on any device or screen and provide deeply engaging experiences for your users.

If you're currently using SharePoint Server for your intranet, you'll find SharePoint in Microsoft 365 to be easier to work with. Responsive, dynamic pages are easy for anyone to create, and the requirements for IT to build and maintain custom solutions are much less.

As a first step, to see examples of what's possible with SharePoint, we recommend that you review the SharePoint look book. The look book provides various examples about how to include news, events, resources, and personalized content in SharePoint sites that anyone can create and maintain.

For an understanding about how the different component parts work together, review the Guide to the Modern experience in SharePoint.

For inspirations and demonstrations on adopting the intelligent intranet, visit the The intelligent intranet - Microsoft Adoption.

In the following sections, we look at how to find the best starting point for your SharePoint intranet and how to prioritize the different intranet solutions that you may need for your organization. Keep these references handy as you work with your stakeholders - they can help you get the most value and best time to value for your intranet solutions.

Understand current business goals and key stakeholders

The most successful intranets don’t just look good, they're primarily focused on helping people get work done and often on promoting engagement. The look book can help inspire you to think about how your content might appear, but your business outcome goals are important to understand what content and functionality are most important for your users and your organization.

All organizations have important strategic goals that drive behavior and investments. If you want to be sure that your intranet is successful – and gets the right level of funding – you need to ensure that it's aligned with these goals. You can also use these goals to help prioritize your intranet initiatives. Unlike many technology projects, an intranet project is never 'done' because your organization priorities and interests will change over time. But, at any given time, you want to focus on the intranet initiatives that are most closely aligned with your organizational priorities and key business stakeholders.

In addition, take a look at recent employee satisfaction survey data. A good way to become more informed about the information and tools that your employees need are to look at the pain points identified in these surveys.

Understand your audience

A good place to start thinking about your new intranet is what it is like when the intranet is in place. What will people be able to accomplish? How will they start their day? What will people say about the intranet? One potentially helpful exercise to frame the overall objectives for the intranet is to engage your key intranet stakeholders in a cover story exercise. This is an exercise in imagination. The purpose is to think broadly about an ideal future state by imagining a magazine cover story about the new intranet, including the key headlines, sidebars, and quotes from users.

With the end in mind, it can also be helpful to create personas for your key users. A persona is a fictional but realistic description of a typical intranet user (for example, new starter/new employee, knowledge worker, field worker, sales rep, people manager, or content author). You’ll want to do some research to engage with people who represent these different personas to understand their information requirements. You can’t build an intranet without an understanding of the people for whom you are building it. Site owners alone aren't enough – their perspective is what they want to publish. That is often not the same thing as what their users want to consume.

Think about governance

If your users complain that search isn't successful because too much irrelevant content is discovered, this can indicate a governance problem. Before you think about your new intranet project, think about how you'll govern the architecture and the content. These are decisions that are a lot easier to make and enforce if they're decided early in your intranet project. For example, you'll want to think about:

  • Who can provision new sites and when they're provisioned, what is the process to ensure that sites are discovered in navigation or as key bookmarks in search?
  • Do you want all sites to follow a similar pattern so that users can easily find key content as they move from site to site?
  • Who is accountable and responsible for the content on sites? How often does content need to be reviewed?
  • Is content management for intranet sites in the performance goals or job descriptions for people with edit or owner permissions?
  • Does intranet content need to be retained based on your retention policies or classified based on its sensitivity?

You don't need to make every governance decision up front, but if you don’t have a plan for how you'll govern your new, intelligent intranet, it can quickly become a wasteland of information that fails to achieve your critical business goals.

Review your existing intranet

Your current intranet may be composed of sites from different business groups, such as HR, IT, Facilities, Engineering, and others. As a first step to planning your new SharePoint intranet, we recommend taking an inventory of your existing sites and meeting with the owners of each to determine their business outcome goals for new sites. Take stock of where your content is located and how much content you would need to move when creating a new intranet site. Look at your current content to understand if it's current or needs to be updated prior to moving to a new site. It’s not unusual to find a migration strategy where existing content is left behind. You don’t have to migrate anything – you may find that it's more effective to create new content that is optimized for the modern SharePoint experience rather than migrate existing, out-of-date content to the new location.

As part of these meetings, you can identify the business needs that are addressed by each existing site as well as any requirements you might have for new sites.

In addition to meeting with current site owners, you may also want to convene a focus group of new employees. New employees are a key audience for the intranet and people who have joined the organization in the past two to three months can provide some valuable insights about what is missing or hard to learn in your current intranet, or resources they wish they had when they first started. They may also provide you with some valuable ideas from the organizations where they previously worked to help you think about new and important capabilities to incorporate.

Think of this step as an opportunity to learn. You're learning about what is important to your users and to the business. You'll use this information to identify initiatives for your intranet.

Identify initiatives

Using the information you gathered during your research, work with your key intranet stakeholders to identify initiatives that reflect your organizational priorities – and any barriers that might exist when you're implementing them.

While you may ultimately implement solutions to address all of the identified initiatives, prioritizing which project to do first will help you achieve early success and user engagement as efficiently as possible.

Review each initiative you have identified for the following criteria:

  • Does it solve a real problem?
  • How many people will use it?
  • Can it be built in a reasonable time frame?
  • What's the return on investment?

Analyze each initiative for its positive impact on your users with respect to the ease of implementation. A high impact initiative that can be built with a minimum of customization can be an ideal first project.

Consider plotting your business initiatives on a grid, like the following, and review with your intranet stakeholders and IT department to choose the best option to start with.

Plan an intelligent SharePoint intranet - SharePoint in Microsoft 365 (1)

To help decide which initiative to address first, work with the business leaders for that area to work out the objectives for the solution, who will be responsible for driving success in this area, and the metrics that you'll use to measure success. Don’t just focus on system metrics. Think about actual business impact. For example:

InitiativeKey contentBusiness ownerSystem success metricBusiness success metric
Educate employees about benefits (Benefits site)- Announcements
- Training videos
HR- News post views
- Training video views
Help requests are reduced by x%
Weekly news post by a senior leader- Streaming events
- Formal training
Engineering- Training content produced for all aspects of coding excellence
- Monthly streaming events
Training completed successfully by x% of engineering staff
Foster positive employee agreement about company strategy (Executive Leadership Viva Engage Community)News posts
- Streaming events
- Viva Engage conversations
HROngoing monthly activity posts by leadership and comments by employees- Viva Engage conversations show positive sentiment
- Comments addressed within 24 hours – "no question/comment left behind"
- x% increase in employee satisfaction scores for executive communications
Improve timeliness consistency in proposal development (Marketing site)- Company business value slides
- Proposal templates
Marketing- Slide downloads
- Sales team alignment
x% reduction in the time to create proposals

Choose pilot scenarios

Work with the owner of each scenario to determine what an ideal solution would look like to them:

  • Who are your visitors?
  • What do the visitors to the site want to accomplish or learn?
  • What tools or technology do they use today?
  • What information do you want to promote?
  • What tools or technology do you want visitors to use to accomplish their key tasks?
  • Who are the champions who will help them transition to the new site or solution?
  • How will you know if your solution is successful?

For example, create a table like the following to list business scenarios that you want to address with intranet sites across your organization:

As an...I need to...So that...I know this is successful when...
EmployeeUnderstand and be able to update my benefitsI can take advantage of a key lifecycle benefitHelp requests are reduced
EmployeeLearn about how to use the self-service benefits portalMake updates on my ownHelp requests are reduced
HR employeePromote the use of the self-service benefits portalI can spend more time working with employees on unique benefits questions and scenariosAll of my employee interactions are about individual critical scenarios

From the high priority scenarios, identify which ones meet these three key criteria:

  • Can you build a prototype quickly (a few days)?
  • Is there a committed sponsor?
  • Is there enough up-to-date content to demonstrate key capabilities?
  • Is there a specific audience for a pilot?

After you have compiled this information, create a design brief to help map out the user journey about how you want the site to operate. For example:

User journey componentDescription
ScenarioLeadership site: One-stop site for employees to hear from company leadership, learn the company's goals, and hear the latest news from customer meetings and industry events.
UsersAll company employees.
ValueIncrease employee awareness and alignment with company strategy and business initiatives.
User journey- News post is sent to the company announcing a leadership Q&A meeting
- Allan goes to the leadership portal to watch the event live
- Allan uses Viva Engage to ask a question at the meeting
- Allan shares the recording link with coworkers.
Metrics- Live event views
- Event recording views
- Viva Engage engagement
Stretch goals- Continued Viva Engage engagement
- Improving employee sentiment (survey)

Choose solution components

SharePoint offers various building blocks that you can use to create an intranet:

  • Communication sites - Use communication sites to share news, reports, statuses, and other information through various templates and web parts.
  • Home site - A home site is a communication site that you set as the intranet landing page for your organization.
  • Hub sites - Use hub sites to organize related sites and teams and centralize news, search, and content management.
  • SharePoint news - Use the news web part to post important or interesting stories, announcements, people news, status updates, and more that can include graphics and rich formatting.
  • Viva Engage - Use Viva Engage to connect with people across your organization beyond the boundaries of projects, functions, and departments.
  • Dynamics 365 Customer Voice - Use Dynamics 365 Customer Voice to create custom quizzes, surveys, questionnaires, registrations, and more.
  • Stream - Use Stream to deliver live and on-demand meetings, events, and training.

For the scenario that you've decided to build, choose the components that you'll need to use to meet the site's business objectives. We recommend creating a rapid prototype, and granting access to your key stakeholders. This provides a substantive framework for further discussions and revisions of the design.

At this stage, we recommend that you involve your help desk so that they're prepared to answer questions after the site rolls out to a larger audience.

For best practices for launching an intranet site, review Creating and launching a healthy SharePoint portal.

Roll out the pilot

When the prototype has evolved to a point where you want to share it more broadly, you can roll it out to a pilot group, or even to the whole organization. User adoption is a critical part of success for a new intranet site. To drive site usage, we recommend that you use down both a top and bottom up approach:

  • Recruit executive sponsors who can ensure that the intranet project is funded, and can help message the importance of the new site to others in the organization.
  • Empower champions throughout the organization to promote the new site on a grass roots level.

Other things you can do to drive success include:

  • Have launch events and communications campaigns.
  • Provide formal training.
  • Hold regular office hours where users can ask questions.

As the site rolls out and more users engage, watch your success metrics and make adjustments as needed to drive more engagement and user satisfaction.

When the site is on its way to success, take stock of any lessons learned in the process and proceed on to the next intranet project that you want to undertake.

Related articles

SharePoint look book

Plan an intelligent SharePoint intranet - SharePoint in Microsoft 365 (2024)

FAQs

Can you build an intranet with SharePoint? ›

With SharePoint, any user can create highly functional intranet pages quickly without the need for writing code or other difficult customizations. These sites look great on any device or screen and provide deeply engaging experiences for your users.

How to configure SharePoint in Office 365? ›

Create a site in SharePoint
  1. Select + Create site on the SharePoint start page.
  2. In the wizard: Select whether you'd like to create a Team site or a Communication site. Enter the name (and a description, if you want) for the site. You can select Edit. ...
  3. In the next pane, enter the owners and members.
  4. Select Finish.

How does SharePoint integrate with Office 365? ›

If you're using Microsoft 365, you can create a site from the SharePoint start page, and it automatically creates a Microsoft 365 group. If you create a Microsoft 365 group in Outlook or People, you automatically get a team site in SharePoint in Microsoft 365.

What is the difference between SharePoint and SharePoint 365? ›

Microsoft 365 is the consolidation of several applications, including SharePoint, while SharePoint is an individual platform that allows you to manage and share your files with members of your company, and create an internal intranet.

Why not use SharePoint for intranet? ›

It is not optimized for the cloud.

One issue, apparently, is that customizing it in the cloud is limited and expensive. “There is little scope for local customization,” says Computerworld. If you're looking for a cloud-hosted intranet, then SharePoint is probably not for you.

What is the alternative to SharePoint intranet? ›

Potential alternatives to SharePoint include ClickUp, Glasscubes, Huddle, Samepage, Liferay, Nuxeo, Confluence, Source by IC Thrive, Jostle, G Suite, ClearPoint, Redbooth, and Slack. Each of these applications provide similar capabilities to SharePoint while providing some more unique features.

Why is SharePoint not available in Office 365? ›

This probably means that the license of your company is not enough for showing this option. It might also be that your Office version is insufficient. You should get in contact with the SharePoint administrator and ask for a solution.

Where is SharePoint Designer in Office 365? ›

Sharepoint Designer can be accessed directly from Office 365. To do so, simply log into your Office 365 account and select the “Sharepoint Designer” tile from the main page. This will bring you to the Sharepoint Designer page, where you can click the “Get Started” button to begin building your website.

How to make SharePoint look like a website? ›

Customizing Color Scheme and Logo in SharePoint
  1. Click the Gear Icon in the top-right corner of your SharePoint Site. Then click 'Change the Look'.
  2. Choose 'Choose a Theme' and preview various templates. Save your favorite.
  3. Click 'Change the Logo' to add a new banner.

Does MS 365 include SharePoint? ›

Microsoft 365, formerly Office 365, is a cloud-based subscription service that gives users access to several tools to improve productivity. It includes apps such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook; and other services such as OneDrive, SharePoint, and Microsoft Teams.

How do I create a SharePoint app in Office 365? ›

Add an app to a full page
  1. From the home page of your site, click New and then click Page.
  2. Click the Apps tab. ...
  3. Select the app you want to use. ...
  4. Click Create page.
  5. In the App page details pane on the right, enter a name for your page.

What are the cons of Microsoft SharePoint? ›

There are many things, but these are some of the most common SharePoint drawbacks.
  • Complicated Setup and Maintenance. I've alluded to this, but let's talk about it in detail. ...
  • Expensive to License and Host. ...
  • Requires Employee Training. ...
  • Poor Search Capabilities. ...
  • SharePoint Always Turns Into a Mess. ...
  • SharePoint Is Slow to Adapt.
Apr 16, 2024

What are the two types of SharePoint? ›

Foundationally, SharePoint has two different types of sites in the modern experience - communication sites and team sites. Each type of site has it's own set of templates that contain pre-populated content, pages, and web parts that can be customized to fit the needs of your organization.

Why SharePoint is better than OneDrive? ›

SharePoint has more advanced tools for managing and administering content and users compared to OneDrive. SharePoint allows administrators to set up permissions, control access to content, and track activity. It also allows for customization of sites and integration with other systems and tools.

How much does it cost to build a SharePoint intranet? ›

To be safe, we recommend adding a buffer of 30% to the cost estimates given to you by your contractor. This brings the total for an average custom-built SharePoint intranet with 10 customizations to $40,000 (plus 4,000 per any additional medium complexity customization).

Can you use SharePoint as a virtual data room? ›

You can use Microsoft's SharePoint to create a data room for sharing and managing confidential information. SharePoint provides a secure environment for managing documents with features like access controls, permissions, versioning, and auditing.

What is the difference between intranet and Internet in SharePoint? ›

An intranet is a local, private network that only people within an organization can access. It's a restricted network mainly used to share files and information securely within an organization. The internet is a global collection of computer networks known as the World Wide Web. This network is accessible to anyone.

Is SharePoint an intranet or extranet? ›

SharePoint Online is one of the most popular intranets for businesses out there today and is widely adopted by businesses large and small because it's one of the many applications with your Office 365 subscription.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Wyatt Volkman LLD

Last Updated:

Views: 6027

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (46 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Wyatt Volkman LLD

Birthday: 1992-02-16

Address: Suite 851 78549 Lubowitz Well, Wardside, TX 98080-8615

Phone: +67618977178100

Job: Manufacturing Director

Hobby: Running, Mountaineering, Inline skating, Writing, Baton twirling, Computer programming, Stone skipping

Introduction: My name is Wyatt Volkman LLD, I am a handsome, rich, comfortable, lively, zealous, graceful, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.