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Get ready for Microsoft 365 Copilot with SharePoint Advanced Management (SAM)

Copilot and SharePoint

Your organization is preparing to enable Microsoft 365 Copilot, an AI-driven productivity tool that enhances creativity, productivity, and skills in real-time. As the SharePoint admin, it’s crucial to govern your organization's SharePoint data properly to ensure Copilot's results are appropriate, accurate, and compliant. Understanding the significance of content governance in SharePoint for Copilot begins with knowing how Copilot works through three components:

  • Large language models (LLMs)
  • The Microsoft 365 productivity apps that you use every day, such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, and others.
  • Content in Microsoft Graphs

When a user makes a request to Copilot, it processes the request using large language models (LLMs). It then generates a response with LLMs by leveraging content from Microsoft Graph and web content (optional).

Content in Microsoft Graph includes emails, files, meetings, chats, calendars, and contacts. A significant portion of them is stored as SharePoint files. When you share documents with others, these documents become data stored on SharePoint sites, document libraries and OneDrive. These documents can be: Word document shared by your colleagues, a presentation that you're working with your team, meeting recordings, project notes you created in Loop and OneNote, and more. To ensure assistance provided by Copilot is appropriate, accurate, and compliant, as your organization’s SharePoint admin, it's crucial for you to ensure that your organization’s data in SharePoint is appropriately governed from the following three aspects:

  • Manage content sprawl: Reduce content duplication and ensure well-planned content creation. Ensure all sites and content are well managed governed by site owners.
  • Prevent content oversharing and control content access: Use tools available to SharePoint admins and site owners to prevent users from oversharing content. Limit content access by Copilot with user group settings, and other tools.
  • Manage content lifecycle: Remove inactive and outdated content and sites. Make sure the information Copilot access is accurate and up to date.

Use SharePoint Advanced Management (SAM) to get your organization ready for Copilot

Microsoft SharePoint Premium – SharePoint Advanced Management (SAM) is an essential Microsoft 365 add-on that helps you, as the SharePoint admin to address these three pillars around content governance. To get ready for your organization’s Microsoft 365 Copilot adoption, there are a few highly recommended steps you can take, primarily using SharePoint Advanced Management tools. These steps reduce accidental oversharing, minimize your content governance footprint, improve Copilot response quality, control content access by Copilot, and ensure data safety specifically for business-critical sites. Let's delve into the specific steps you can take:

Step 1: Reduce accidental oversharing with SharePoint sharing settings

To minimize accidental content oversharing via Copilot results, it's crucial to implement the best practice sharing settings. Proactive safeguards are key. To effectively prepare your organization for Copilot, set the appropriate sharing settings for end users at both the organization and site levels:

At the organization level:

  • Update sharing link defaults for your tenant for your tenant from organization-wide sharing to specific people links.
  • Consider hiding broad-scope permissions from your end users to reduce risks around accidental misuse. This example hides "Everyone Except External Users" in the People Picker control so that no end user can use it.

At the site level:

Consider educating site admins on the site-level controls they can use to restrict members from sharing. One key setting here ensures that Site Owners are the recipients of access requests.

Step 2: Clean up unused sites

Identify inactive sites, then take action to reduce your governance footprint and improve Copilot response quality. Inactive sites often contain outdated content, cluttering Copilot’s data source and leading to less accurate responses. Removing these sites helps Copilot focus on current information for better results. Currently, you can identify unused sites by running an inactive site policy and ask site owners to attest if the site is still needed.

  • With less than five minutes you can set up and run an Inactive Site policy in Simulation mode to identify sites that haven't been accessed for an extended (configurable) period of time.
  • Once the report is generated, select the Get AI insights button to get AI insights generated for the report to help you identify issues with the sites and possible actions to address these issues.
  • Once ready, set the policy to Active mode to notify the Site Owner to attest whether the site is still needed.

Step 3: Identify sites with potentially overshared content

Without looking at the actual content, how do you quickly identify sites with potentially overshared content? Usually, if you see there's content on a site that is being shared with one of the following options: “Everyone Except External Users”, “People in your organization” and “Anyone”, there's a bigger chance that the content is overshared. Currently, SAM activity based reports let you quickly identify most actively overshared sites, by running three individual reports:

Sites with these three types of usage are at a greater risk of oversharing compared to those without such usages. Once the report is generated, select the Get AI insights button to get AI insights generated for the report to help you identify issues with the sites and possible actions to address these issues.

Step 4: Control access to content

When you use Microsoft Copilot, the results come from content in Microsoft Graph, based on each individual user’s profile and permissions. In Step 3, you have identified sites with potentially overshared content. Next, you want to ensure Copilot only has access to content when appropriate. Currently, you can initiate a Site Access Review for site owners to confirm overshared content and take remediation steps. Meanwhile, you as the SharePoint admin can use the Restricted Access Control Policy to restrict access to a site with overshared content.

Site access reviews by site owners

  • For any site that is identified with potentially overshared content, Site Access Review is needed. As the SharePoint Admin, you should initiate the Site Access Review.
  • Site Owners receive notification for each site that requires attention. They can use the Site reviews page to track and manage multiple review requests.
  • The site owner reviews access in two main areas: SharePoint groups and individual items to determine whether the broad sharing is appropriate, or it is indeed oversharing and requires remediation.
  • If the site owner determines that the content is indeed overshared, they can take easy remediation actions by using the Access Review dashboard to update permissions.

Restrict access with the Restricted Access Control Policy

Until the Site Access Review is complete, you as the SharePoint Admin may want to take action to mitigate oversharing risks. To restrict access to a site with overshared content, the SharePoint Admin can set up a Restricted Access Control Policy. As a result, all access to the site is restricted to only the group of users specified in the policy. Accordingly, the content from this site is visible in Microsoft 365 Copilot only for this restricted group of users. You can restrict access to individual sites or OneDrive.

Step 5: Take proactive measures on business-critical sites

For business-critical sites, you want to take proactive measures to ensure the content is appropriately shared, and access to content is limited to the minimum level. You can lock down your most important sites with the following measures:

  • Use Restricted Access Control (RAC) to proactively protect against oversharing. Even better: as part of your custom site provisioning process, configure RAC policy on new sites from the get-go and proactively avoid oversharing forever.
  • Consider blocking downloads from selected sites via a block download policy. Or specifically block the download of Teams meeting recordings and transcripts.
  • Finally, consider applying encryption action with "extract rights" enforced on business-critical office documents. Learn more here.

Coming up

Important

The following policies are currently in preview and will soon be generally available. Sign up to participate in the preview by following instructions here.

Use the Site Ownership policy to ensure all sites have valid owners

Site owners are the critical role on point for executing governance tasks at scale. Specifically, you need site owners to:

  • Help attest if inactive sites are still needed in Step 2- cleaning up unused sites.
  • Perform Site Access Reviews to confirm whether potentially overshared content is indeed being overshared and take remediation to address oversharing risks in Step 4 – control access.

It's essential to confirm all sites have valid owners before cleaning up unused sites and asking owners to take care of overshared content. SharePoint Advanced Management's Site Ownership policy helps identify ownerless sites and find the appropriate owners when needed.

  • Coming up, you can run a Site Ownership policy in Simulation mode to identify any sites that don't have a minimum of two owners.
  • Set up the policy in simulation mode to identify owners based on your desired criteria. Then upgrade the policy to Active mode to enable notifications to site owner candidates.

Use the Inactive Sites – Read only and Inactive Sites – Archive policies to clean up unused sites

In Step 2 of this article, we discussed identifying inactive sites. After identifying inactive sites, you'll ask site owners to attest if the sites are still needed. If the site owners confirm the sties aren't needed, you need to put the sites either in read-only mode, or move the sites to Microsoft 365 Archive. Coming soon, you are able to do these at scale, by using the Inactive Sites – Read only and Inactive Sites – Archive capabilities to:

  • Make the site read-only

  • Move the site to Microsoft 365 Archive

Tip

Sites moved to Microsoft 365 Archive are no longer accessible by anyone in the organization outside of Microsoft Purview or admin search. This means Copilot won't include content from these sites when responding to user prompts. If you want to keep the site in case you need to retrieve its content later, use Inactive sites - Archive.

Use the Oversharing Baseline Report for Sites, OneDrives, and Files policy to identify oversharing risks

In Step 3, we discussed how to run three usage reports to identify potentially overshared content. Coming soon, you'll be able to Run a single report to learn where content overexposure risk exists in all sites on your tenant, regardless of site activities.

  • You'll be able to start with running an “Oversharing Baseline Report for Sites, OneDrives and Files” report from the Data Access Governance (DAG) PowerShell commands in SharePoint Online PowerShell module. This report scans all sites in your tenant, and lists sites that share content with more than a specified number of users (you specify the number).

  • You can sort, filter or download the report, and identify the sites with potentially overshared content.

Use the Restricted Content Discoverability policy to further control accidental content discoverability

In Step 4—control access to content, it's advised to begin with the Site Access Review policy to verify if the potentially overshared content identified in Step 3 is truly overshared. Following this, apply the Restricted Access Control policy to limit access to designated user groups. Soon, a new policy, the Restricted Content Discoverability policy, will be available to further control accidental content discoverability.

In addition, in Step 5, to further protect content on your business-critical sites, you can use Restricted Content Discoverability to leave permissions in place, but prevent the content from being available to Microsoft 365 Copilot and Organization-wide search experiences.

The Restricted Content Discoverability policy leaves site access unchanged but prevents the site’s content from being surfaced in Microsoft 365 Copilot or organization-wide Search. The SharePoint Admin can set Restricted Content Discoverability on that site.

Use AI Powered Semantic matching to find similar sites

You discovered a site containing crucial business data that lacks proper protection. Are there more sites like this one that might have similar vulnerabilities? Soon, AI Powered Semantic matching helps you locate these sites using the site you discovered as the example. The AI powered semantic matching tool reads through all the sites you have, including content, files, metadata, and give you a list of similar sites based on your example site.