Book Image

SharePoint Architect's Planning Guide

By : Patrick Tucker
Book Image

SharePoint Architect's Planning Guide

By: Patrick Tucker

Overview of this book

After opening a toolbox full of tools, it can initially be hard to know which is the right one for the job – which tool works best and when. Showing you how to create an informed and purposeful plan for SharePoint Online in the context of the Microsoft 365 suite of tools is what this book is all about. SharePoint Architect's Planning Guide will help you understand all you can do with SharePoint. Whether the tools are new to you or you’ve used the older versions in the past, your journey will start by learning about the building blocks. This book is not a step-by-step guide; there are tons of online resources to give you that and to help you better keep up with the pace of change. This book is a planning guide, helping you with the context, capabilities, and considerations for implementing SharePoint Online in the most successful way possible. Whether you need to plan a new intranet, migrate files to a modern platform, or take advantage of tools such as Power Platform, Teams, and Planner, this guide will help you get to grips with the technology, ask the right questions to build your plan, and successfully implement it from the technical and user adoption perspectives. By the end of this Microsoft book, you’ll be able to perceive the toolbox as a whole and efficiently prepare a planning and governance document for use in your organization.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Part 1:From Farm to Cloud
5
Part 2:From Lone Wolf to Pack Leader – SPO Integrations with M365
9
Part 3:From Tall to Flat – SPO Information Architecture
13
Part 4:From Current to Change

Summary and planning document

In this chapter, we’ve explored the concept and implementation details of hub sites in SharePoint Online. We compared their flexible association with the more structured approach of subsites. The shared navigation, search, color theme, and rollup of news and events provide the true benefits of this approach. It is more than just creating a site hierarchy. It’s a way of connecting sources of data that may exist in multiple locations, owned by multiple people, and presenting them as a unified site or product that can follow the expectations and user experience of the organization. We also explored how hubs can provide global navigation to a home site and the SharePoint app bar, which forms the foundation for connecting our intranet to Microsoft Teams as an app through Viva Connections.

Here are some items to consider when planning for hubs as part of your SharePoint Online architecture:

  • How many subsites exist in your tenant today...