TL;DR - Overview
A successful Microsoft 365 knowledge hub depends on more than architecture; it requires clear ownership, governance and content quality to remain trusted over time. As Copilot and AI agents become part of everyday work, organisations need to treat knowledge architecture as AI architecture, ensuring both people and AI can rely on accurate, well-governed information.
Introduction
The operating model behind a Microsoft 365 knowledge hub: ownership, quality frameworks, and why knowledge architecture is now AI architecture.
In Part 1, we talked about how Microsoft 365 knowledge hub is only as good as the knowledge inside it — and that content quality, not architecture, is where most hubs quietly fail. Architecture and governance set the foundation, but they do not keep knowledge current, owned, and trusted on their own.
This second part is the practical side: how to start, how to scale, and how to keep a knowledge hub alive once the launch buzz fades.
Small and mid-sized organisations should start practical
Not every organisation needs a complex federated knowledge architecture from day one. For smaller and mid-sized organisations, the best starting point is often a simple, practical foundation:
- Define a central SharePoint communication site for core organisational knowledge
- Create structured areas for policies, templates, procedures, FAQs, and onboarding
- Configure Microsoft Search bookmarks and acronyms
- Use metadata for business unit, content type, audience, owner, and review date
- Create lightweight approval and publishing processes
- Use Power Apps or Lists for structured knowledge capture, such as lessons learned or skills registers
- Establish clear ownership for each knowledge area
At this stage, the goal is not perfection. It is to move knowledge out of people’s heads, email trails, shared drives, and Teams chats into a trusted, usable foundation. Once that baseline is in place, the organization can mature into more advanced patterns over time.
Large enterprises need a federated model
For larger organisations, a single central knowledge site rarely scales well. Different business units often have distinct processes, audiences, security requirements, and terminology, and forcing all knowledge into one place usually creates bottlenecks and weak adoption.
A hub-and-spoke model is typically more effective. In this approach, the central knowledge hub provides shared standards, navigation, governance, taxonomy, and enterprise-wide content, while business units maintain their own connected knowledge areas using the same metadata, publishing, and review model.
This federated model keeps knowledge close to the people who understand it, while still operating within a consistent enterprise framework. A typical division of responsibilities might look like this:
Area | Responsibility |
Central governance team | Defines taxonomy, templates, lifecycle, compliance, search standards, and quality model |
Business unit knowledge owners | Maintain local procedures, FAQs, templates, and business-specific guidance |
Content reviewers | Validate accuracy and approve updates |
Knowledge managers | Monitor quality, duplication, search behaviour, and user feedback |
IT / M365 admins | Configure SharePoint, search, Syntex, Purview, permissions, and lifecycle controls |
This model is also more resilient because knowledge is never static. Organisations restructure, processes change, employees leave, systems are replaced, and regulations evolve. A knowledge hub therefore needs to be designed for change from the beginning.
This is where tools like Microsoft Syntex can add real value.
Syntex can support high-volume content processing, extract metadata, classify documents, and apply content understanding across SharePoint. Microsoft describes it as using AI and machine teaching to automate content processing and transform content into knowledge.
That is especially useful for organisations managing large volumes of documents that need classification, tagging, or extraction. Even so, Syntex should not be treated as a substitute for governance. It can assist with tasks such as:
- AI can help classify content.
- AI can suggest metadata.
- AI can extract values.
- AI can support document processing.
However, humans still need to define what “good” means. Someone still needs to decide:
- Which content types matter?
- Which metadata fields are mandatory?
- What qualifies as an authoritative source?
- What should be archived?
- What needs approval?
- What content can Copilot use?
- Which business area owns the knowledge?
- How often should it be reviewed?
This is why the future of knowledge management is best seen as a partnership between architecture, automation, and human accountability.
For organisations starting this journey, a simple quality framework is often the best place to begin before migrating or creating too much content. A practical framework can be built around five core elements.
Define knowledge categories
Not all content should be governed in the same way. A useful starting point is to group content into categories such as:
Category | Example |
Official policy | HR policies, security policies, compliance rules |
Process guidance | How-to guides, operational procedures |
Templates | Project templates, forms, client-facing documents |
Reference material | Glossaries, acronyms, system guides |
Lessons learned | Delivery retrospectives, project insights |
Community knowledge | Tips, FAQs, informal guidance |
Structured records | Registers, controlled lists, system-generated information |
Each category should have its own rules for ownership, approval, review and retention.
Create content templates
Consistency improves both human usability and AI retrieval. For example, a process guide should always include:
- Purpose
- Audience
- When to use it
- Prerequisites
- Step-by-step instructions
- Related systems
- Related documents
- Owner
- Last reviewed date
- Next review date
- Escalation contact
This may sound basic, but it can dramatically improve the quality and usability of documented knowledge.
Apply metadata intentionally
Metadata should not be added for its own sake. It should support search, filtering, governance, lifecycle, and reporting. Metadata architecture is one of the core elements of SharePoint information architecture because it supports browsing, search, compliance, and retention outcomes. Useful metadata might include:
- Business unit
- Process area
- Content type
- Audience
- Owner
- Review date
- Sensitivity
- Status
- Source of truth
- Related system
- Region
- Applicable role
Define lifecycle rules
Every knowledge item should have a lifecycle, backed where appropriate by Microsoft Purview retention and lifecycle controls. For example:
Stage | Description |
Draft | Content is being created |
In review | Content is awaiting validation |
Published | Content is approved and available |
Under review | Content has reached its review date |
Deprecated | Content is no longer current but retained temporarily |
Archived | Content is removed from active knowledge experiences |
Without lifecycle rules, knowledge hubs become digital museums: everything remains available, but nobody knows what is still true.
Measure quality over time
Knowledge quality should be measurable. Useful metrics include:
- Percentage of content with an owner
- Percentage of content reviewed within the required timeframe
- Number of duplicate or near-duplicate documents
- Search queries with no useful result
- Most viewed knowledge pages
- Least used content
- Content with missing metadata
- Content flagged as outdated
- User feedback score
- Copilot or search-related failure themes
This is where governance becomes operational rather than theoretical.
Knowledge managers matter
One of the biggest mistakes organisations make is assuming knowledge management can be solved entirely through platforms. It cannot.
A good knowledge hub needs human roles. This does not always mean hiring a dedicated knowledge manager immediately, although larger enterprises may require that over time. It does, however, mean assigning accountability.
At minimum, each knowledge area should have:
- A business owner
- A content owner
- A reviewer or approver
- A technical owner for the platform configuration
- A governance owner for standards and lifecycle
Without named ownership, the hub will decay. The first version may look polished, the launch may be successful and people may use it for a time. But if nobody owns quality, review, and continuous improvement, the same old problem will return, only this time inside SharePoint.
My take: knowledge architecture is now AI architecture
This is the shift organisations now need to understand.
In the past, knowledge management was often framed as an intranet, document management, or employee experience problem. Now, with Copilot and AI agents becoming embedded across Microsoft 365 and Power Platform, knowledge architecture is increasingly part of AI architecture.
The quality of your SharePoint sites, metadata, permissions, content ownership, and lifecycle management directly affects how confidently AI can support your employees. If your knowledge is fragmented, duplicated, outdated, overshared, or undocumented, your AI experience will inherit those weaknesses.
The question is no longer just, “Where should we store our documents?” A better question is how to create a trusted knowledge foundation that both people and AI can rely on safely. That is a much more strategic conversation.
Final thoughts
I appreciated Marcel Broschk’s framing of the knowledge hub problem because it reflects a reality many organisations are facing: knowledge is everywhere, but it is not always usable. Microsoft 365 provides the building blocks to address this through SharePoint, hub sites, Microsoft Search, Syntex, Purview, Copilot, and Power Platform.
But technology is only one side of the answer. The real success factor is the operating model around it.
A good knowledge hub needs:
- Clear architecture
- Strong governance
- Content ownership
- Quality standards
- Metadata discipline
- Review cycles
- Search optimisation
- Human accountability
- Continuous improvement
At the end of the day, a knowledge hub is not valuable simply because it contains content. It is valuable because people trust what they find there, and in the age of Copilot, that trust matters more than ever.
Happy Reading!
Singing out,
Delaram