SharePoint at 25 — Episode 2: That Governance Document on the Shelf Isn’t Governing Anything
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For years, governance in SharePoint has been treated as a document.
We write policies, frameworks, and rules at the start of a project, get them approved, upload them to SharePoint… and then quietly hope they’ll influence how people work. In reality, those documents rarely shape day-to-day behaviour. They sit on shelves while environments drift into inconsistent structures, fragile permissions, duplicated content, and growing frustration.
In this episode of the SharePoint 25th Birthday Series, Liza unpacks why governance documents fail — not because governance doesn’t matter, but because documentation has never been an effective control mechanism.
This episode explores what governance documents are actually good at capturing, what they fundamentally cannot control, and why real governance has to be built into the design of the system itself. From site creation through to document lifecycle and archiving, Liza walks through how governance by design works in practice — and why this approach is no longer optional as organisations move toward AI-enabled work with tools like Microsoft Copilot.
This is also where Fix the Mess™ fits in. Instead of relying on shelfware policies and training-heavy governance, Fix the Mess™ [https://fixthemess.ai/]focuses on designing SharePoint environments that guide behaviour by default. The Studio and courses provide practical, real-world starting points that replace guesswork and good intentions with structure, consistency, and clarity — while still allowing organisations to tailor and evolve their environments over time.
If your governance still lives in a PDF, it isn’t governing anything.
Better SharePoint — and better AI outcomes — start with better system design.