Module 12: OneDrive, SharePoint, Files, and Work Data
Lesson 12.1: Why Files and Permissions Matter
Lesson Promise
Understand how file access, sharing, and permissions shape what Copilot can find, summarize, and reason over.
Real-World Scenario
A small team wants Copilot to summarize a project, but the folder contains old drafts, private budget files, duplicate plans, and broad sharing links.
Core Concept
Microsoft guidance emphasizes that Copilot honors existing Microsoft 365 permissions and controls. That is powerful, but it also means messy access can produce risky or confusing answers.
Work grounding is only as useful as the content Copilot is allowed to see. A project folder with stale, sensitive, or overshared files can undermine answer quality and trust.
Treat file hygiene as prompt engineering for the whole organization: clear names, current sources, correct permissions, and explicit references make Copilot more reliable.
Step-By-Step Workflow
- Identify the project, audience, and decisions Copilot should support.
- Inventory files, folders, links, owners, and sensitivity levels.
- Remove stale, duplicate, irrelevant, and private files from shared working areas.
- Check who has access and whether editing, external sharing, or broad links are appropriate.
- Create a source map for must-use files.
- Ask Copilot to answer only from specified files when precision matters.
Prompt Lab
Bad Prompt
Find everything about this project.
Better Prompt
Using only the project brief, latest timeline, and approved risk log, summarize project status, decisions, risks, and missing information.
Expert Prompt
Act as a work-data readiness reviewer. Audit this project file set for Copilot use. Identify must-use files, stale files, duplicates, sensitive content, overshared links, missing owners, unclear file names, permission risks, and prompts the team should use to get source-grounded answers.
Hands-On Exercise
Create a safe mock project folder inventory and mark each file keep, archive, restrict, rename, or verify.
Deliverable
A file and permission readiness audit with source map, risks, and cleanup actions.
Work Data Review Checklist
Common Mistakes
- Assuming Copilot can only find files you personally meant to share instead of files your permissions allow.
- Leaving old, duplicated, ownerless, or overshared files in project folders and expecting Copilot to ignore them.
- Using broad SharePoint sites or folders as context when a few specific files would be safer and clearer.
- Referencing unsupported, local-only, too-large, or overly complex files without converting or simplifying them.
- Sharing Copilot-ready folders externally without reviewing links, edit permissions, block-download settings, and sensitive content.
Quiz / Checkpoint
Why do permissions matter for Copilot?
Because Copilot can work with content the user has permission to access, so poor sharing hygiene can affect both answer quality and exposure risk.
Official Sources To Verify
- Microsoft 365 Copilot privacy
- Microsoft 365 Copilot data and compliance readiness
- Configure a secure and governed foundation for Microsoft 365 Copilot
- Secure and govern Copilot
- Refer to specific files and more in Microsoft 365 Copilot
- File formats supported by Microsoft 365 Copilot
- Share files and folders in Microsoft OneDrive
- External or guest sharing in OneDrive, SharePoint, and Lists
- Manage sharing settings for SharePoint and OneDrive
- Frequently asked questions about Copilot in OneDrive
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