SharePoint Server SE Super Users
Course Description Overview
After completing this course,
students will be able to:
• Describe features of SharePoint
Server SE
• Create, and structure team
sites, communication sites, hub sites and a home site
• Create rich web pages for
displaying interactive content
• Organize content in lists and libraries utilizing a wealth of features to compliment a wide range of uses
• Automate common business
processes and customize digital forms
• Manage a sites security ensuring
your users have the right access to the right content
• Leverage SharePoint Server SE’s
powerful search capabilities to acquire content quickly
• Set up policies, retention,
records and more to manage content across multiple sites
Before attending this course,
students must be:
• Proficient in navigating web
sites
Module 1: An introduction to
SharePoint
Let’s get started with SharePoint
Server SE by letting you know about its fantastic selection of features. We
will demonstrate popular uses of SharePoint Server SE to manage and share
content, create engaging web pages, automate business processes, and make good
business decisions with Business intelligence. We will also discuss who will be
the typical users of our sites and the role of the site collection administrator.
Site Owners are trusted with functionality that in other business systems would
normally only be available to developers. As a new Site Owner, we are sure that
you will be amazed with the potential that SharePoint Server SE has to offer an
end user.
Lessons
• What is SharePoint?
• Introducing SharePoint Server SE and SharePoint Online
• What is the cloud and what is on-premises?
• Ownership and access
Lab 1: Download content pack
• Download the course content pack
• Extract the zip file
After completing this module,
students will be able to:
• Explain the difference between SharePoint in the cloud and
an on-premises installation of
SharePoint
• Describe the core features of SharePoint
• Explain the range of roles that are required to manage a
series of SharePoint sites from end user
to administration
• Understand who would be best suited for the role of site
owner within a site
Module 2: Creating sites
Whether you are managing existing
sites, or you have not yet started, we will complement your current situation
by discussing site hierarchy and planning your SharePoint sites. This will
allow you to understand existing sites that other people have created as well
as making good decisions when
building new sites. As a site
owner, you will be presented with a selection of site templates. You will use a
variety of popular site templates to develop an enhanced understanding of each
site’s function and appropriate use. Once your site is ready, we will then
change the look and feel of your site. You can even try applying your business
brand to your test site. We will also build our navigation bar, a simple but powerful
way to help users move between websites.
Lessons
• Planning your sites
• Central administration
• Web addresses
Lab 1: Creating a new site
• Create a new team site
• Create a subsite
• Update the top link bar
• Customize the site theme
• Delete and restore a subsite
• Set up a hub site
• Link a site to a hub site
• Update the hub site navigation
After completing this module,
students will be able to:
• Describe what a site collection is and how it can be used
to manage multiple sites
• Explain the purpose of central administration and its role
in provisioning site collections
• Understand the various ways to create sites
• Discuss the legacy role of subsites
• Manage a sites navigation and theme
• Implement hub sites as a modern alternative to subsites
• Align top level sites to a hub
• Describe the role of a home site in the app bar and the
SharePoint mobile phone app
Module 3: Creating and managing
web pages
SharePoint boasts a rich selection
of ways to build web pages. You will learn how to update the home page of your
SharePoint site with text, links, images, videos, and web parts. We will also
show you best practices when creating multiple pages and linking them together.
In most site templates, creating and managing web pages is a simple, fast, and
rewarding way to present essential information and apps. Also covered are
SharePoint spaces, a type of page that supports Virtual Reality. SharePoint can
also be used as an Intranet for internal news. Due to the high visibility of
these web sites, it is common to place more control over the release of new web
pages or updates to existing pages. For this reason, SharePoint has publishing
sites and communication sites.
Lessons
• Introducing pages
• The types of pages found in SharePoint
• Modern SharePoint pages
• Create news and site pages
• Sections
• Web parts
• Save, publish, share, and delete pages
• SharePoint spaces
• Communication sites
• Classic SharePoint pages
• How to use classic team site pages
• Review features of classic publishing sites
Lab 1: Designing web pages
• Create a new news article
• Implement sections and web parts
• Publish and share your news
• Create a communication site
• Add your communications site to your hub site
After completing this module,
students will be able to:
• Qualify the purpose of the different types of modern
SharePoint page
• Describe the purpose of a communication site
• Use a range of web parts to add rich content to a page
• Distribute your pages to others in your organization
• Be aware of classic SharePoint wiki, publishing, and web
part pages
Module 4: Installing,
Upgrading, and Migrating to Windows 7
Apps are required to store information such as events, contacts, and files in a site. SharePoint provides a selection of apps for different scenarios, all with the option to be customized for a specific business requirement. Apps can be broken down into Lists, Libraries and Market Place Apps. SharePoint lists serve as the structure for calendars, discussion boards, contacts, and tasks. This module explains the concept of lists, and then reviews popular options. A document library is a location on a site where you can create, collect, update, and share files including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and PDF. We will show you the benefits of using a library and teach you how best to work with files in a library. An introduction to on premises and SharePoint Marketplace apps is provided to show how to extend site functionality beyond what Microsoft has provided in the SharePoint Server SE platform.
Lessons
• An introduction to apps
Lab 1: Designing lists and
libraries
• Create a new library
• Set up columns
• Adding new views
• Upload content
• Set up an alert
• Use version control for a file
• Create a new list
• Delete and restore an app
After completing this module,
students will be able to:
• Describe when to use a list, library, or an app from the
marketplace
• Configure columns to manage document tagging and item
creation
• Design views to tailor what users see in the list
• Explain the benefits of views over traditional file
management like folders
• Configure an apps setting to best complement your type of
data
• Implement document sets for managing groups of files
• Manage content within an app
• Securely share information from SharePoint apps
• Recover content and understand the duration of the recovery
period
• Benefit from the OneDrive sync tool for working offline or
via file explorer
• Be aware of classic SharePoint lists
Module 5: Building processes
with workflows and forms
Businesses depend on business processes. SharePoint gives users the ability to automate some of those business processes using workflows. Workflows allow you to track items within a list or library, distribute tasks to obtain approval or feedback on an item, or to determine whether an item should be deleted or retained, or to request digital signatures within Microsoft Office files. This module introduces you to workflows - what they are and how they can be used in a business environment. You will learn the types of workflows which are available in a standard SharePoint Server SE implementation, and how to deploy them to lists, libraries and content types. In addition, you will learn how to monitor workflows once they have been started and check the history of current or completed workflows. When working with business processes, often digital forms, rather than documents, are used to capture information. We will look at options for customizing the way data is captured through list forms to ensure it carries the same business logic as the workflow.
Lessons
• What are business processes?
• Design and test an out of the box workflow
• Built in workflows
• Third party solutions
• Creating and configuring custom workflows
• Configuring workflow settings
• Starting a workflow
• Workflow scenarios
• Customizing list forms
• Edit columns
• Edit using JSON
• An introduction to Power Automate
• An introduction to Power Apps
Lab 1: Building processes with
workflow
• Switch on workflows
• Create a new approval workflow
• Testing the workflow
• Customizing a list form
After completing this module,
students will be able to:
• Understand the range of options available for customizing
workflows and forms
• Utilize out of the box features to design automated
business processes
• Test published workflows in a SharePoint site
• Manage a published workflow
• Delete unwanted workflows
• Customize list forms using the built in column editor
• Customize list forms with JSON
• Revert forms back to their basic settings
• Be aware of cloud tools such as Power Automate and Power
Apps
Module 6: Customizing security
Security is an important element of any site. You will see demonstrations of the best practices for adding and removing colleagues from your site and defining their level of access. As a site owner, you can customize permission levels. This means that you can create levels of access that are aligned with the responsibilities of your site’s users. An example of this would be allowing a group of users the ability to upload content but not delete content. Additionally, we will focus on locking down or opening areas within your site to make it more tailored for your needs. You will also see how to use the Share button to quickly share documents with other users.
Lessons
• Managing access to SharePoint
• Setup access requests
• Manage sharing rights
• Share a site
• Share a file or folder
• Remove a user
• Customizing SharePoint security
• Create permission levels and groups
• Security inheritance
• Security best practices
Lab 1: Customizing security
• Share a file with a colleague
• Create new permission levels
• Create a new security group
• Add and remove users
• Modifying inheritance of an app
• Modifying inheritance of a folder
After completing this module,
students will be able to:
• Adhere to best practices when managing security in a
SharePoint site
• Perform day to day management of SharePoint security tasks
such as adding and removing users
• Customize SharePoint security by creating permission levels
and groups
• Modify the inheritance of your site’s security
Module 7: Working in Search
SharePoint provides the ability to
store vast amounts of content in a variety of locations. This module covers a
set of tools which help you to efficiently locate the information you need.
While SharePoint’s search is rich and intelligent, site owners can make
customizations to search to improve its relevance to an organization. We will
show common techniques used by site owners to improve search results by promoting
specific content when a certain keyword is used.
Lessons
• An introduction to SharePoint search
• Search in folders, libraries, lists and sites
• Search results
• Search tips
• Promoting results
Lab 1: Working with search
• Conduct an app search
• Search a site and search all sites
• Optional: Create a promoted result
After completing this module,
students will be able to:
• Understand and describe what content will appear in a
user’s search based on security trimming
• Utilize search filters to reduce a large result down to a
usable number of items
• Know about contextual searches, and how to escalate your
search
• Understand the role of hub sites in search
• Understand of the extend of how keywords are indexed
Module 8: Enterprise Content
Management
Traditionally teams make use of
file templates or manual processes to ensure information is collected and
retained correctly. This may be a choice your team makes or a decision that is
more universal across your organization. In this module, we will help your team
establish reusable file templates and automate document lifecycle management.
An example of this would be removing old unwanted content from your site automatically. To achieve this, you will learn about a variety of SharePoint
features including managed metadata, content types, policies, in-place records
management, and the content organizer.
Lessons
• Managed metadata service
• An introduction to content types
• Create and manage content types
• Deploy content types
• Using content types in apps
• The content type hub
• Information management policies
• The records center
• In-place records management
• The content organizer
• Durable links
Lab 1: Enterprise content management
• Create site columns
• Create a new content type
• Deploy a content type
• Set up in-place records management
After completing this module,
students will be able to:
• Describe the range of features that can be used to manage
content consistently across multiple site collections
• Design and deploy content types
• Implement organization policies to define retention of
business content
• Automatically move business content to areas like the
records center by utilizing the content organizer
• Understand and use in-place records management when a records center is not the right solution
• Describe the purpose of a records center