☕ SharePoint Tip #26 — Building your 6-month SharePoint roadmap
Good morning! Here is your 15-minute SharePoint tip for today.
Day 26 | Week 4 — Product Owner Mastery
Building Your 6-Month SharePoint Roadmap
A roadmap communicates where the product is going, why, and when. As a new Product Owner, building your first SharePoint roadmap is one of the most visible and impactful things you can do.
Roadmap structure: three horizons
Horizon 1 — Now (months 1–2): Stabilise
Fix what’s broken, establish governance, close critical security gaps, set baselines.
Examples:
- Audit all sites and assign owners
- Enable version history on all libraries
- Set default sharing link to "Specific people"
- Document naming conventions and publish governance policy
Horizon 2 — Next (months 3–4): Improve
Drive adoption, improve the user experience, automate manual processes.
Examples:
- Deploy SharePoint Champions programme
- Build approval flow for top 3 manual approval processes
- Launch department intranet pages on Communication sites
- Improve search schema and metadata on primary libraries
Horizon 3 — Later (months 5–6): Transform
Strategic capabilities, AI readiness, new features.
Examples:
- Pilot Microsoft Syntex for invoice processing
- Copilot readiness audit and remediation
- Hub site redesign with improved navigation
- Power BI dashboard surfacing SharePoint adoption metrics
Roadmap presentation tips
Keep it visual — use a simple swimlane by quarter. Executives don’t read backlog lists.
Show business outcomes, not features:
- Not: "Enable sensitivity labels on Finance site"
- Better: "Protect financial documents from accidental external sharing"
Include success metrics for each initiative — how will you know it worked?
Try it today (5 minutes)
Using the three horizons above, write 2 initiatives per horizon for your specific organisation. 6 initiatives total. That is the skeleton of your first SharePoint roadmap. You can build the visual version in PowerPoint or on a SharePoint page itself — which makes a great demonstration of the platform’s capability.
As a Product Owner
Your roadmap is a communication tool first and a planning tool second. Share it with stakeholders monthly. Update it when priorities shift. A roadmap that stakeholders never see is just a document. A roadmap they review together every month is a product strategy.
See you tomorrow at 6:00 AM with Tip #27 — Common SharePoint pain points and how to fix them!