How to Use Metadata in SharePoint

Jan 21, 2021 | How-to, SharePoint

Using metadata in SharePoint is an effective way to keep your content organized and accessible by your team. In this article, we discuss what metadata is, why you should use it, and provide tangible examples and best practices. In addition, we’ll provide specific steps on how you can configure metadata in SharePoint.

What is metadata?
Metadata is defined as “data that provides information about other data”… Metadata “summarizes basic information about data, making finding and working with particular instances of data easier”1

Why you should use metadata in SharePoint 

Metadata is an underused and often misunderstood asset that can help keep content organized. Various content management systems (CMS) allow users to add different types of metadata to their content. SharePoint has a number of standard metadata options: author, file name, creation date, content type, and file type. Users can also create custom metadata. SharePoint users are able to add metadata in the form of columns, descriptions, and tags to their content. Taxonomies create a vocabulary for when you implement metadata.  

 What is a taxonomy?
A taxonomy is a hierarchical classification of terms that are categorized and applied to the content. They form a structure for metadata that consistently classifies documents.

“A taxonomy helps you to organize your content and assets into hierarchical relationships. Classifying content and assets in a taxonomy can make it far easier to search for or browse a Digital Asset Management or Web Content Management System when you aren’t sure exactly what you are looking for.”2

Taxonomies enforce naming standards and categories to add consistency across the platform and support enterprise content management. They enable end-users to locate and discover information quickly, helping solve business problems.

Utilizing metadata and taxonomies in your content management system can be beneficial in improving document search relevancy, maintaining uniformity, and effectively scaling with your business.

NEW VIDEO

Free Hands-on demo: Learn how to configure metadata and columns in SharePoint

 

Metadata examples based on profession

Metadata is completely customizable depending on your role and industry. Here are some examples:

 

Marketing & Sales roles

Your sales folder in SharePoint may contain standard pitch presentations. You may define a taxonomy that describes the ‘industry’ the pitch is focused towards and the ‘product’ it represents. Within ‘industry’, the taxonomy might limit the available options to ‘finance’, ‘healthcare’ and ‘manufacturing’.

 

Professional services roles

A consulting organization may have a folder that contains partner biographies. Creating a column in SharePoint that describes the ‘Permitted use’ of the biographies may be helpful. Within ‘Permitted use’, the available options might be “internal” or “client shareable”.

 

Metadata Best Practices

If you aren’t currently using metadata in SharePoint, you may feel a bit overwhelmed not knowing where to start. We’ve got you covered.

 

Take time to plan before making change

Think through your metadata strategy with your team before laying it out in your slide library. A ‘strategy before software’ approach will save you frustration later on.

As you’re planning, consider your content in terms of: What, when, where, who, how, which, why. Thinking about your content in these ways can help you consider the best metadata to use in the brainstorming process.

 

Consider your most valuable information

Imagine trying to filter or browse by metadata to find your content. What would be the most essential information to you? Browsing by industry, business-specific tags, or customer can accelerate your ability to find the content you’re looking for within your slide library.

 

Examples of custom metadata in SharePoint:
  • Department – i.e. Sales, Marketing, Training, HR
  • Location – i.e. Europe, North America, Asia
  • Quality – i.e. Shareable or Internal
  • Customer – i.e. Cisco, Oracle, IBM
Examples of standard metadata in SharePoint:
  • File name
  • Author
  • Creation date
  • File type
  • Content type
  • Folder

 

Use consistent terminology

A taxonomy allows SharePoint admins to build consistent metadata that is shared across multiple sites and extended to other applications. Further, terms defined in a SharePoint taxonomy can include synonyms and multilingual variants. This allows all users to apply a consistent classification to documents using a defined set of terms. Further, using terms that are likely to be used when searching is beneficial.

 

NEW VIDEO

Free Hands-on demo: Learn how to configure metadata and columns in SharePoint

 

How to use Metadata in SharePoint

In SharePoint, you have the option to create a site level or a list/library level column. List/library level columns are most commonly used, however, you should be aware that any metadata you create at this level stays local to the list/library that it is created in. Site columns are shared on all lists/libraries throughout your entire site, allowing you to define metadata once and then reuse it where you’d like to.

What is a list?
“A list is a collection of data that you can share with your team members and people who you’ve provided access to.”5 SharePoint has many ready-to-use templates or you can create a custom list. Some examples of lists include contact lists and to-do lists.

Let’s dive into the details below.

Note: your screen might look slightly different depending on which version of SharePoint you are using (Modern or Classic). We wrote these instructions based on the Modern view.

Creating a site column in SharePoint

What is a site column?
“A site column is a reusable column definition, or template, that you can assign to multiple lists across multiple SharePoint sites. Site columns decrease re-work and help you ensure consistency of metadata across sites and lists. For example, suppose you define a site column named Customer. Users can add that column to their lists, and reference it in their content types. This ensures that the column has the same attributes, at least to start with, wherever it appears.” (3)

1. In SharePoint Online, navigate to the home page of the site you want to use.

Keep in mind, site columns are hierarchically re-usable, meaning that if a site column is created at the top-level site, the column will be available on all subsites. But if the site column is created in a subsite, the column will only be available to the subsite’s child.

2. Select the settings button on the top menu bar on the right. Select ‘Site settings’.

Note: If you don’t see ‘Site settings’, select ‘Site information’ and then select ‘View all site settings’.

View site information in SharePoint

3. In the ‘Site settings’ page, click ‘Site columns’.

View site columns in SharePoint

4. In the ‘Site columns’ page, click ‘Create’ at the top.

Create site columns in SharePoint

5. Enter the column name that you desire.

Create site column name in SharePoint

6. Select the type of information you want to store in the column. To learn more about the type of information you can store, click here.

7. In the next section, Group, select the existing group in which you want to store the new site column. Alternatively, you can also choose to create a new group.

8. In the next section, Additional column settings, you can further customize the column. The options in this section will vary based on the type of information you selected earlier.

 

Site column settings in SharePoint

9. On the bottom right, Select ‘Ok

Now that the column has been created, we need to assign it to a list/library:

1. Navigate to the list/library you want the column applied to

Note: If the name of your list/library does not appear on a page, navigate to settings > Site contents, and select the name of your list/library.

2. Under Settings, click ‘List settings’ or ‘Library settings’.

Library settings in SharePoint

3. Scroll down to the ‘Columns’ section.Select ‘Add from existing site columns’.

Adding existing site columns in SharePoint

4. On the page, in the ‘Select columns’ section, select the group of site columns to choose from in the dropdown menu.

Click the site columns you want to add and select ‘Add’. This will move the column you’re adding to the ‘Columns to add’ list box.

steps to add columns from site columns in SharePoint

5. Select the checkbox ‘Add to default view’. This will allow people on your site to automatically see the column when they first open a list or library.

Note: depending on the type of list or library, there may be additional settings available in the ‘Options’ section.

6. Click ‘Ok’ to save.

Creating a list or library column in SharePoint

How does a list/library column differ?
List columns are created at the list/library level and won’t be available outside that list/library. So you’ll have to manage them separately.”4

1. Navigate to the list or library you want to create the column in.

2. On the far right, next to the last column name, select ‘ + Add column

create a library column in SharePoint

3. Within the dropdown, select the type of column you want to create.

Types of columns in SharePoint

4. Enter a title or column heading under ‘Name’ along with any other required information.

column setting options in SharePoint

 

5. Click ‘Save

View a file’s metadata

1. Navigate to the file you’d like to view information on.

2. There are a few ways to view the metadata of a file. Click the checkmark to the left of the file and a pane on the right side will display the file metadata.

View a file's metadata in SharePoint

Alternatively, hover your mouse over the file name. Click the 3 dots that appear to the right of the file name. Click ‘View details’ and the pane will open on the right side.

Ways to view a file's metadata in SharePoint

If desired, the metadata field selections can also be modified within the pane by clicking on a field selection.

Edit column value in SharePoint

As repositories rapidly grow, documents are often not consistently classified or organized, making it difficult to sort through search results within SharePoint or any other content management system. This can result in significant productivity loss as finding content takes too long and, at times, users may even recreate content. By applying metadata, users are able to search for terms or apply filters to quickly locate specific documents.

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Sources

  1. Opendatasoft- https://www.opendatasoft.com/blog/2016/08/25/what-is-metadata-and-why-is-it-important-data  
  2. DPCI- https://www.dpci.com/insights/taxonomy-vs-metadata
  3. Microsoft- https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/office/developer/sharepoint-2010/ms450825(v%3Doffice.14)
  4. Veronica Geek- https://veronicageek.com/sharepoint/sharepoint-2013/list-columns-or-site-columns-in-sharepoint/2018/04/
  5. Microsoft- https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/introduction-to-lists-0a1c3ace-def0-44af-b225-cfa8d92c52d7

NEW VIDEO

Free Hands-on demo: Learn how to configure metadata and columns in SharePoint

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