
Most SharePoint rollouts don’t fail because the platform is broken.
They often fail because organizations treat it like any other software install—push it out, plug it in, and hope for the best. Six months later, adoption is low, and budgets have ballooned.
Microsoft SharePoint is one of the most robust cloud collaboration platforms available—but configuring it correctly is a different challenge altogether.
Common mistakes include:
* Treating rollout as a technical deployment instead of a business transformation
* Ignoring governance and allowing uncontrolled site creation
* Over-customising too early without a stable foundation
* Skipping structured training and relying on self-discovery
* Migrating messy legacy data without cleanup or planning
These mistakes are costing companies thousands. Sometimes hundreds of thousands.
Here’s what most companies get wrong…
Key Takeaways
- Why SharePoint Implementations Fail So Often
- The Most Expensive Implementation Mistakes
- How To Avoid Costly Rollout Errors
- When To Bring In Outside Help
Here’s a stat that should worry every CIO…
One survey reported that 40% of Microsoft SharePoint deployments are viewed as failures by their organisations. ouch.
With around 80% of Fortune 500 companies using SharePoint as part of their cloud collaboration stack, the stakes are huge—potentially billions of dollars in productivity.
But the issue is rarely SharePoint itself.
Failures usually come down to how it’s deployed. Many organizations invest in SharePoint expecting it to solve every collaboration problem, without the structure, governance, and user adoption strategy needed to make it work effectively.
They skip planning, skip training, skip governance, then scratch their heads wondering why no one uses it six months later.
That’s when teams typically enlist outside SharePoint consulting services to tidy things up. By that point… it’s already too late.
Let’s look at the specific mistakes that cause it…
This is the big one.
Businesses dive into construction sites, libraries and permissions without knowing what they want.
Here’s why this becomes a problem:
Discovery skipped is the #1 reason SharePoint projects overrun budget. 83% of data migrations fail, go over budget or overrun schedule, says Gartner. SharePoint migrations are included in that statistic.
Spend the time upfront. It saves a fortune later.
Many groups believe SharePoint migration involves moving files.
It’s not.
Dumping files from a network share directly into SharePoint is like moving into someone else’s house without cleaning up first. Old folders, duplicates, and broken permissions all come along—and users quickly lose patience with the mess.
Before migration begins, data should be properly prepared through:
* Cleanup to remove unnecessary files
* Rationalisation to organise what belongs where
* Metadata mapping to ensure proper tagging
* Permission review to confirm who needs access
This work is dull. It’s monotonous. It’s also the difference between an adopted implementation and one that dies.
Organizations often spend months building the ideal culture, but on day one of rollout, little actually changes. People default to their old habits.
This happens because they haven’t been trained, the “why” hasn’t been clearly communicated, and the new way hasn’t been made easier than the old one.
Without adoption you get:
Cloud collaboration tools only deliver value when people actually use them.
Governance sounds like a buzzword. But ignoring it is brutally expensive.
When governance is skipped, things quickly get messy:
Within a year, the SharePoint environment looks like a digital landfill.
Strong governance covers:
Lock this in before launch — not after.
Training is the first thing that gets cut when budgets tighten.
Training is often the most time-consuming part of a SharePoint rollout. Without proper onboarding, organizations risk low adoption, shadow IT, and user frustration.
Effective training should be:
When you skip this step, you wind up paying for SharePoint but think you’re using Google Drive.
This one is sneaky.
Many organizations see SharePoint as a blank canvas, adding custom workflows, branding, integrations, and code to fit their needs.
The downside is that extensive customization can make updates difficult. Since Microsoft continuously updates SharePoint Online, heavily customized environments are more likely to experience compatibility issues with each release.
Start simple. Customise only where there’s real business value.
So how do companies dodge these mistakes?
SharePoint adoption requires thinking of SharePoint as a business transformation effort first and foremost — and not just an IT implementation. Because the real destination is Collaboration.
A solid rollout follows this order:
Skipping any of these steps is where the thousands in wasted spend come from.
Sometimes the smartest move is admitting the team can’t do it alone.
Subject matter experts have witnessed every failure imaginable.
They are aware of where the explosives are buried. They understand what effective leadership looks like. They know how to encourage adoption from the start.
Outside help is most useful when:
Just avoiding ONE item on this list will pay for hiring a good consultant.
SharePoint implementation mistakes are expensive — but every single one is preventable.
Organizations that succeed treat the rollout like a project. They plan. They budget for training. They formalize governance. And they phase the rollout.
The biggest mistakes to avoid:
Do these right, and SharePoint is one of your best investments in cloud collaboration tools. Do them wrong, and the bill just keeps mounting.