Forum Discussion
Stephen Bell
Feb 27, 2017Iron Contributor
Replacing Dropbox with Sharepoint. Looking for guidance.
Hello all -- I am admittedly not very familiar with Sharepoint - but from what I can see, it can pretty much do *anything*. That being said - in my organization we are exploring replacing our imp...
Feb 27, 2017
What you'd be wanting to do is to look at Office 365 Groups to be set up for each of the different teams/departments. That will allow you to apply group-level permissions.
Also with the latest OneDrive for Business sync client users can sync the files and shared locations they have access to, onto their local computer or mobile device.
Groups is a good way to start if you don't have much experience with SharePoint.https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Learn-about-Office-365-groups-b565caa1-5c40-40ef-9915-60fdb2d97fa2
- Stephen BellFeb 28, 2017Iron ContributorUnless something has changed, I thought that anyone that was a member of the group has "admin" permissions on the files in a group?
I know this stuff is moving fast these days.. Is this not the case?- Feb 28, 2017No, members of the Group will have contributor rights effectively - however to the contents that is realistically the ability to do whatever they want, just not change permissions.
But because it is a document library you can go more granular on the permissions, workflows, publishing permissions, etc.- Feb 28, 2017You can absolutely mirror this dropbox structure to a SharePoint one where each dropbox folder could be a site and each site will be managed by a department since you are working with departments.... you can do the same with a Group and subsites, but I would not use a Group for each department since a Group itself is an independent information container