Your SharePoint Is a Mess.
That’s Okay. Here’s How to Fix It.
Let’s be honest: your SharePoint environment is probably a disaster. I’m not saying that to be harsh — I’m saying it because after 25 years working inside real organisations, I’ve seen it everywhere. SharePoint chaos is practically universal. Whether you inherited a system, watched it grow without any structure, or simply never had the time to sort it out properly, you’re in very good company.
The good news? You don’t need a full overhaul to see real improvement. You need a plan, a starting point, and the right tools for the job.
Why SharePoint Gets Messy (It’s Not Your Fault)
Most SharePoint environments weren’t designed — they evolved. Someone created a site for a project, someone else added a library, IT turned on a feature nobody asked for, and before long you have folders inside folders, duplicate files everywhere, and nobody knows which version is current.
On top of that, nobody told most users how SharePoint actually works. There’s no onboarding. No clear rules. No structure. People do what makes sense to them — and that’s usually folders, because folders are familiar.
Here’s the thing about Copilot: Microsoft’s AI assistant is only as good as the SharePoint it sits on. Messy structure, broken permissions, and poor metadata don’t just make your life harder — they’ll actively undermine Copilot when it goes live in your organisation. Fixing the mess isn’t just housekeeping. It’s future-proofing.
Where to Start: Two Ways In
When it comes to cleaning up SharePoint, there’s no single right answer — it depends on where you are and how much of a mess you’re dealing with. In the Simply SharePoint Hub, there are two dedicated resources for exactly this situation.
Cleanup Checklist
The 5-step process to identify owners, remove duplicates, archive old content, and apply structure — with a 30-day plan and communication templates included.
$27 — Get it here →
The File Sanity Kit
Audit, restructure, and future-proof your SharePoint using the Container Method. Includes a PDF guide, PowerPoint deck, workbook, and Excel worksheets.
$27 — Get it here →
The Cleanup Checklist is the right starting point if you need to triage what’s there — identify who owns what, get rid of the obvious clutter, and apply some basic structure without losing anything important. It’s light, fast, and gives you a 30-day plan you can actually follow.
The File Sanity Kit goes a level deeper. If the issue isn’t just clutter but structure — if files are saved in the wrong places, folders are nested five levels deep, and nobody agrees on where anything lives — the File Sanity Kit gives you a full audit and rebuild process using the Container Method. It comes with worksheets you can fill in as you go.
What the Container Method Actually Does
I use the Container Method as the foundation for almost every SharePoint restructure I work on. The idea is simple: everything in SharePoint has a container — sites contain libraries, libraries contain folders (used sparingly), and folders contain files. When you understand those relationships clearly, building a logical structure becomes much easier.
The Container Method teaches you to stop thinking about where to save a file and start thinking about what kind of content it is and who needs it. That shift alone fixes most of the chaos.
What You’re Actually Working Towards
The Cleanup Checklist and the File Sanity Kit aren’t just standalone fixes — they’re the first steps in a bigger system. Once your content is structured and cleaned up, everything else gets easier:
- Governance becomes manageable when you know what you have
- Metadata makes sense once your library structure is logical
- Permissions work properly when content is in the right place
- Copilot can actually find and use your content instead of surfacing the wrong version from three years ago
The Simply SharePoint Hub is built around a clear path — from free M365 basics all the way through to full Copilot readiness. The cleanup resources are Step 2 on that path, and they’re the ones most people need first.
Not sure where you sit? Start with the free M365 Map at hub.simplysharepoint.com — it explains OneDrive vs SharePoint vs Teams in plain English, and takes about five minutes. Once you know what you’re working with, the cleanup resources will make much more sense.
The Bigger Picture
I’ve been doing this for 25 years, and the thing I keep coming back to is this: SharePoint doesn’t have to be complicated. Most of the pain people experience with it comes from a structure that was never properly set up in the first place — not from SharePoint itself being difficult.
When the structure is right, SharePoint just works. Files are findable. Permissions make sense. New team members can figure out where things live without asking. And when Copilot arrives, it has something sensible to work with.
Your SharePoint doesn’t have to stay a mess. You just need the right starting point — and it doesn’t have to take long.
Ready to Fix the Mess?
Start with the Cleanup Checklist or the File Sanity Kit — both are in the Simply SharePoint Hub, along with everything else you need to go from chaotic SharePoint to Copilot-ready.
Browse the Hub →
Hi, I’m Liza 👋
Microsoft MVP (SharePoint) • Information Architecture Specialist
I’ve been working with SharePoint for nearly two decades, across consulting and in-house roles, helping organisations design, clean up, and scale their Microsoft 365 environments.
My focus is information architecture — the layer that determines whether search works, governance sticks, and tools like Copilot actually deliver value… or quietly make things worse.
Through Simply SharePoint, I share practical, real-world guidance on structuring libraries, designing metadata, managing permissions, and fixing the issues that policies and “best practice” slides never really solve.
Everything here is based on how SharePoint is actually used — not how we wish it was used — with a strong emphasis on foundations that scale and hold up in the AI era.
