It's been a super busy time since Ignite 2017 for Content Services in Office 365. Let’s recap some of the highlights:
Product updates
Office 365 has over 120 million active users every month. And SharePoint continues to see massive growth online, with usage growing at 90% annually and storage growing at 300%.
To help manage content at scale in Office 365, we delivered predictive indexing and queries to allow users to work with the full 30 million item capacity of a document library without throttling large queries.
We also rolled out attention views that allow users to identify sets of documents in a library that require additional work, such as updating missing metadata. Combined with support for bulk metadata updates (rolled out in January) this means you can upload millions of documents and manage metadata and policy in bulk without needing to update each document individually.
Want to see all of this in action? Take a look at our walkthrough with Microsoft Mechanics:
Major happenings
Ignite
At Ignite 2017, we announced our vision and delivery plan for Content Services. Our presentation is available online.
Gartner Content Services Magic Quadrant Leader
In October, we were excited to announce Microsoft’s placement as a Leader in Gartner’s Magic Quadrant for Content Services. This makes Microsoft the only company to be a leader for both Content Services Platforms (ECM) and Content Collaboration Platforms (File Sync and Share). Additionally, we're ranked #1 on Ability to Execute, alone among all other vendors.
New articles and documents on content services
We launched or updated lots of new content about content (“metacontent”?) recently, including our new white paper & Sway presentation. All of these are now available through the Content Services Resource Center here on the Tech Community, with blog posts, analyst reports, case studies and more.
But wait there’s more…
There's even more activity coming up in the New Year.
New capabilities
This week, we’re starting the rollout of file move -- giving customers the ability to move content among OneDrive and SharePoint and back -- with full fidelity for version history and metadata. This enables important scenarios for managing information architecture in Office 365.
To move a file in OneDrive or SharePoint, select a file, and the command bar shows the Move to command.
You can then select the destination for the file. The list of destinations is powered by Microsoft Graph, to show you the destinations that are most relevant to you, or you can browse to find the exact location in your OneDrive or SharePoint sites.
We’ve already heard from you about this enhancement. To learn more, we’ll be answering your most frequent questions in the original January 2018 announcement.
In addition, in early 2018, look for:
- Word SharePoint Properties Panel: We’ll be launching a new panel for Word 2016 to allow users to directly edit metadata column values inside Word for custom library metadata.
- New support for Flow to automate document approval and publishing, and to enable simple review and signoff among members of a group.
- A new setting in the document library web part will be available soon to allow users to configure the part to optionally limit the view to a specific folder within a library.
AIIM Conference 2018
This is the prime event for global information management, records, and content services. AIIM is a leading industry think tank, and Microsoft sponsors its research as part of the Enterprise Leadership Council. We’ll be a platinum sponsor at this year’s conference, April 10-13 in San Antonio, Texas, with over 1000 attendees expected.
Many thanks to all our customers for a fantastic 2017. Looking ahead, we know there will be many more announcements and developments culminating at the SharePoint Conference (NA) in May 2018. See you there!
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