Site icon Joanne C Klein

A SharePoint Information Architecture recipe

Reading Time: 5 minutes

Blog post: 5 minute read

I recently received a request to prepare an Information Architecture(IA) plan for an organization. This organization plans to migrate from a legacy version of SharePoint, SharePoint Server 2010, to the newest version of the on-premises software, SharePoint Server 2016, and decided a prudent first move would be to redefine their IA for the new environment. Smart!

I suspect there are other organizations out there in the same position who may be dissatisfied with the way their current SharePoint environment is functioning for one reason or another and want to do a course correction. Perhaps there was no IA plan prior to implementing SharePoint in the first place and over the years it has organically grown into an ineffective environment. Perhaps even if there was an IA defined it may have outgrown its effectiveness over time due to re-orgs and acquisitions, or just plain lack of attention to the original IA plan. I believe these are common scenarios for many organizations having deployed SharePoint. Without experienced and knowledgeable SharePoint staff being involved right from the beginning, many organizations don’t often realize what they’re “getting into” and neglect to lay the necessary groundwork to leverage the platform over the long haul.

Fast forward several years and organizations like this may find themselves at a cross-roads. Should they take a “lift and shift” approach and migrate the mess from the old to the new platform (rhetorical question, please don’t do this) OR should they take the time to rethink the underlying information architecture, take stock of their current environment, do some housekeeping and start new? Yes!

I call this a golden opportunity – the chance to learn from past mistakes and improve on the things you’ve done right. IA is a critical and necessary step in the planning and preparation phase of any SharePoint implementation whether you’re moving to an on-premises or online environment. Some things can be difficult to change after-the-fact so it’s best to do IA planning up-front prior to any content being added.

To be clear, the need for Information Architecture is particularly important in more structured and controlled areas of SharePoint such as corporate portals and divisional areas. It’s of lesser/little importance in the collaboration areas of team sites and Office 365 Groups although it still applies in some aspects.

How should you tackle IA for your SharePoint environment? First and foremost you must understand the organization’s content and how people within the organization will interact with it. This may include things like:

Once you have a solid understanding of the organization’s content needs, you can start to think about how you might design this within SharePoint via an IA plan. What are the steps to prepare the plan? Glad you asked… I have a recipe. 🙂

This recipe is for both building and executing on a SharePoint IA plan. It follows the same methodology you would use for a recipe you prepare in your kitchen. There are 3 parts:

  1. The ingredients
  2. The tools, techniques, and steps to build it
  3. The X factor

1. The Ingredients:

“SharePoint Information Architecture Building Blocks”

The following building blocks are important components you will need to identify for your organization.


2. The Tools/Techniques/Steps:

“SharePoint Information Architecture Features”

Organizations should consider how/if they will use the features below to work in tandem with the SharePoint building blocks above.


3. The X Factor:

“Experience”

Like any good chef/baker knows, there are things you can’t teach from words on a page. You need to have quality ingredients, excellent technique and use your experience to know how to turn an “average” recipe into a blue ribbon winner. In the SharePoint world, an effective execution of an IA plan comes from having worked with the product, having lived first-hand through both good and bad decisions and knowing when and how much to use of any one ingredient or feature in any given situation at any given time.

Examples of this are:

This adept touch can only come with experience.


Parting thoughts…

Although Information Architecture is not the most exciting aspect of SharePoint, it is a necessary step. My recipe is of course only one way of approaching the preparation of an IA plan. No matter which technique you use, at the end of the day the most important thing is to actually build one for your environment. Doing this up-front planning lays important groundwork for SharePoint and will definitely pay dividends in the long run.

Thanks for reading.

-JCK

Exit mobile version