If You’re Not Thinking AI‑First Right Now, You’re Falling Behind

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Let’s get something out of the way early:
AI is no longer “coming”. It’s already here. And if you’re still treating it like a side project, an experiment, or something to “look at later”, you’re already behind.

Not because everyone else is smarter than you.
Not because you’ve failed.
But because the way work gets done has fundamentally changed — and most organisations are still trying to bolt AI onto old habits instead of redesigning how work actually flows.

That’s where AI‑first thinking comes in. And for most businesses, that means Microsoft 365 Copilot.

AI‑First Isn’t About Tools. It’s About Decisions.

Most conversations I hear about AI start with tools:

  • “Which AI should we use?”

  • “Should we trial ChatGPT?”

  • “Is Copilot worth it yet?”

Those are the wrong questions.

AI‑first thinking starts with a different mindset:

“If AI can help with this, why would we still do it the old way?”

That question changes everything.

Drafting emails.
Summarising meetings.
Creating reports.
Reviewing documents.
Preparing proposals.

If your default approach is still “I’ll do it manually and see if AI can help later”, you’re already inefficient — whether you realise it or not.

Why Microsoft 365 Copilot Wins (Especially for SMBs)

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: most businesses don’t need more AI tools. They need less context‑switching and better use of the tools they already pay for.

That’s why Copilot matters.

Microsoft 365 Copilot isn’t just “AI bolted on”. It’s AI embedded directly into where work already happens:

  • Word

  • Excel

  • Outlook

  • Teams

  • PowerPoint

  • SharePoint

That integration is the real advantage.

Instead of asking AI to work in isolation, Copilot works with your actual business data, permissions, and workflows. That means:

  • Answers grounded in your documents and emails

  • Summaries that reflect real meetings, not guesses

  • Content created inside governed, secured environments

For SMBs especially, that’s critical. Security, compliance, and data leakage aren’t optional extras — they’re table stakes.

The Real Gap: Adoption, Not Availability

Here’s what I see repeatedly with MSPs and their customers:

  • Copilot is licensed ✅

  • Copilot is enabled ✅

  • Copilot is barely used ❌

Why?

Because nobody changed how work is done.

People were given AI and told, “Go figure it out.”

That doesn’t work.

AI‑first organisations redesign workflows:

  • Meetings are shorter because summaries are assumed

  • First drafts are expected to be AI‑assisted

  • “Blank page syndrome” disappears

  • Decision‑makers ask better questions, faster

Copilot becomes a thinking partner, not a novelty.

AI‑First Is a Leadership Choice

This isn’t an IT problem.
It’s a leadership decision.

The organisations pulling ahead aren’t the ones with the most licences — they’re the ones that expect AI to be used and support people in using it properly.

That means:

  • Training focused on real work, not features

  • Clear expectations around when Copilot should be used

  • Permission to experiment without fear of “doing it wrong”

MSPs who get this will thrive. Those who don’t will spend the next few years firefighting margin pressure and explaining why clients feel slower than they used to.

The Bottom Line

AI‑first doesn’t mean “replace people”.
It means remove friction.

Microsoft 365 Copilot isn’t magic. It still needs good prompts, good data, and good judgement. But used properly, it changes how quickly work moves — and how much mental energy people waste on low‑value tasks.

If you’re not actively helping your business or your clients think AI‑first right now, someone else is.

And they’re already pulling ahead.

Build Content That Attracts the Right Clients (and Scares Off the Wrong Ones)

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Most MSPs don’t have a content problem.

They have a courage problem.

They post safe, beige, “me too” content that tries to appeal to everyone — and ends up resonating with no one. If you want content that actually drives leads, conversations, and demand, you need to stop thinking like a marketer and start thinking like a signal flare.

Here’s how.


1. Nail your positioning (before you post a single word)

Content isn’t about volume. It’s about signal.

Your job isn’t to attract more people. It’s to attract the right people — and actively repel the ones who will never value what you do anyway.

That means finding ownable ideas. Topics you can talk about consistently, confidently, and with a point of view. Not “cybersecurity is important” — everyone says that. Instead:

  • “Security outcomes matter more than tools”

  • “Most MSP pricing models are broken”

  • “Compliance theatre is killing real security”

If you’re not willing to make some people uncomfortable, you’re not positioned. You’re just posting noise.

Strong positioning acts like a filter. The right people lean in. The wrong people scroll past or quietly unfollow. That’s a feature, not a bug.

If your content doesn’t cost you anything — lost followers, disagreement, friction — it probably isn’t doing anything useful.


2. Dial in your packaging (make it impossible to ignore)

Great ideas die every day because they’re badly packaged.

Your content doesn’t compete with other MSPs. It competes with everything else in the feed — outrage, memes, hot takes, AI hype, and doomscrolling.

That’s why you need what I call thought grenades.

Short, sharp posts that:

  1. Hook fast – a line that stops the scroll

  2. Build tension – challenge a belief they’re comfortable with

  3. Explode – a payoff that reframes the problem

  4. Point forward – a next step (comment, DM, click, think)

These aren’t fluffy posts. They’re spot on.

“Most MSPs don’t have a sales problem. They have a thinking problem.” “Buying another security tool won’t fix your risk.” “Being ‘nice’ in your content is costing you revenue.”

You’re not posting to inform. You’re posting to move people — emotionally and intellectually — closer to you.

If every post looks like documentation, nobody will read it. If every post sounds like marketing copy, nobody will trust it.


3. Streamline the process (so content becomes automatic)

The goal isn’t to “do content”.

The goal is to remove friction so content becomes a reflex.

When your positioning is clear and your packaging is repeatable, content ideas start showing up everywhere. A client call. A Teams message. A dumb vendor pitch. A security incident. A pricing conversation.

You just see something… and say something.

That’s how you build momentum — and eventually, a cult‑like following. Not because you’re louder, but because you’re clearer.

Stop over‑editing. Stop waiting for perfect. Stop turning every post into a project. Capture the thought while it’s fresh. Polish later if needed.

Consistency doesn’t come from discipline. It comes from simplicity.


The real payoff

This isn’t about likes.

It’s about becoming the obvious choice for the people you want to work with — before they ever talk to you.

Strong positioning attracts. Sharp packaging converts attention. A frictionless process compounds everything.

Do this well, and your content won’t just get seen.

It will pre‑sell, pre‑qualify, and pre‑frame every conversation that follows.

And that’s when content stops being “marketing” and starts becoming leverage.

Excel Power Tips for SMB Finances

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Stop doing manual maths—let Excel handle it.

If you’re still manually adding columns, copying formulas down rows, or eyeballing numbers to see if “that looks about right”, you’re not doing finance work — you’re doing busy work.

Excel has been quietly automating this stuff for years. The problem isn’t that Excel is too complex. It’s that most SMBs only ever use about 10% of what it can do.

You don’t need to become a spreadsheet wizard. You just need to stop treating Excel like a digital notepad and start letting it do the heavy lifting.

Here are five Excel features that, once you use them properly, will permanently reduce the time and effort you spend on budgets, cash flow, and financial reporting.


1. Flash Fill: Stop Re‑typing the Obvious

Flash Fill is one of those features that feels like magic the first time you use it.

Have a column with full names and you want first names only? Or account codes buried inside text strings? Start typing the pattern you want and Excel will work it out for you.

For finance teams, Flash Fill is perfect for:

  • Splitting supplier names from reference numbers

  • Cleaning up bank exports

  • Extracting dates, IDs, or categories from messy data

No formulas. No VBA. Just start typing and let Excel do the pattern recognition.

If you’re still manually reformatting data from your bank or accounting system, you’re wasting time.


2. XLOOKUP: VLOOKUP’s Smarter Replacement

If you’re still using VLOOKUP, it’s time to move on.

XLOOKUP does everything VLOOKUP does — and fixes most of the things people hated about it.

You can:

  • Look left or right

  • Avoid broken formulas when columns move

  • Return exact matches by default

  • Combine it cleanly with other formulas

In SMB finance spreadsheets, XLOOKUP is ideal for pulling:

  • Budget categories

  • Cost centres

  • Pricing or rates

  • Supplier details

Once you switch, you won’t go back. More importantly, your spreadsheets become easier to understand and far harder to break.


3. Conditional Formatting: Let Problems Highlight Themselves

If your budget spreadsheet doesn’t visually tell you when something is wrong, it’s not doing its job.

Conditional formatting lets Excel flag issues automatically:

  • Expenses over budget

  • Negative cash flow

  • Late payments

  • Variances outside tolerance

Instead of hunting for problems, you see them instantly.

This is especially powerful for SMB owners who don’t live in spreadsheets every day. Red, amber, and green tell the story faster than rows of numbers ever will.

If your spreadsheet needs explaining every time you open it, you’ve already lost.


4. Pivot Tables: Stop Rebuilding Reports Every Month

Pivot tables exist so you don’t have to create new reports every time someone asks a different question.

They’re perfect for:

  • Monthly expense summaries

  • Revenue by category or client

  • Year‑to‑date comparisons

  • Department or project reporting

Once your data is structured properly, a pivot table lets you slice and dice it without touching the raw numbers.

This is how you turn one spreadsheet into ten reports — without copying or re‑calculating anything.


5. Dynamic Arrays: One Formula, Many Results

Dynamic arrays are one of Excel’s most underrated upgrades.

Instead of copying formulas down hundreds of rows, you write one formula and Excel spills the results automatically.

They’re brilliant for:

  • Automatically expanding budgets

  • Filtered lists

  • Rolling calculations

  • Scenario modelling

Less copying means fewer errors. Fewer errors mean more confidence in the numbers you’re using to make decisions.


Tips Round‑Up

If Excel feels painful, it’s usually because you’re doing work it was designed to do for you.

You don’t need new software. You don’t need another system. You just need to use the tools you already have — properly.

Try one tip on your budget spreadsheet this week and comment on the result.
Even one small improvement compounds fast.

And if you’re an MSP, this is exactly the kind of practical productivity win your clients actually value — not another dashboard they’ll never open.

Excel isn’t old. It’s underused.

When Success Becomes Something Worth Losing

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Most entrepreneurs don’t fail.

They win.

They build something that works. Something profitable. Something with staff, customers, reputation, and recurring revenue. And that’s the moment the real shift happens.

Because once you’ve got something worth losing, the game changes.

You stop building.
You start protecting.

At first, it feels sensible. Responsible, even. You’ve got people relying on you. Clients paying you monthly. A brand you’ve spent years earning. So you add controls. You add policies. You add process. You add caution.

Then slowly—often without noticing—you add fear.

Fear of breaking what works.
Fear of upsetting customers.
Fear of making the wrong bet.
Fear of losing the thing you finally fought so hard to get.

And that’s when the money starts owning you.


The Invisible Pivot Most MSPs Don’t Notice

In the early days of an MSP, everything is upside. You experiment because you have to. You try new offers. You say yes to strange opportunities. You build systems fast and fix them later. Progress is the goal.

Then revenue stabilises.

You hit a comfortable number. Enough to pay wages. Enough to pay yourself. Enough to breathe.

And suddenly the questions change.

  • What if this scares clients?
  • What if this upsets Microsoft?
  • What if this breaks our MRR?
  • What if this fails publicly?

Those are not bad questions—but they’re defensive ones.

They signal a shift from creation to preservation.

From “What could this become?”
To “How do I not lose what I’ve got?”

That’s a dangerous place for an MSP to live.


When Risk Aversion Becomes a Growth Ceiling

MSPs love to talk about risk—especially when it comes to customers.

Security risk. Compliance risk. Business risk.

But we’re often blind to the biggest risk of all: playing not to lose.

When protection becomes the primary strategy, a few things tend to happen:

  • You keep selling the same services, even as they commoditise

  • You underinvest in new capability because it might not pay off immediately

  • You follow vendor narratives instead of forming your own point of view

  • You avoid strong positioning because it might alienate “some” prospects

You end up optimising for stability instead of relevance.

And stability feels good—right up until it doesn’t.


Money Is a Tool—Until It Becomes a Cage

There’s a brutal irony here.

The very thing you were trying to achieve—financial security—can quietly become the thing that limits you most.

Once your lifestyle, staff, and identity are tied to a specific revenue level, you become highly motivated to defend it. You choose predictability over possibility. You choose safe clients over interesting ones. You choose incremental improvement over meaningful change.

Your calendar fills with maintenance work.

Your thinking narrows.

Your business stops being a vehicle for ideas and starts being a machine you’re afraid to turn off.

That’s when money stops being a tool and starts being a constraint.


Builders Keep Building (Even When It’s Uncomfortable)

The MSPs that continue to grow—really grow—tend to do something different.

They never fully switch into protection mode.

Yes, they secure the basics. Yes, they run a tight operation. But they keep placing intelligent bets:

  • New offers that don’t have perfect pricing yet

  • Clear, opinionated positioning that repels the wrong clients

  • Content that challenges assumptions instead of soothing them

  • Investments in capability before demand is obvious

They stay builders first, operators second.

And importantly, they accept that some risk is the cost of staying alive.


The Real Question to Ask Yourself

This isn’t about being reckless. MSPs deal with real responsibility. Clients trust us with their businesses. Teams rely on us for income.

But it is about awareness.

So here’s the uncomfortable question worth sitting with:

At what point did I stop building and start protecting?

And just as importantly:

What am I no longer doing because I’m afraid of losing what I’ve built?

If the honest answers make you uneasy, that’s probably a good sign.

Because entrepreneurs don’t stagnate due to lack of skill or opportunity.

They stagnate when success gives them something worth losing—and they let that fear quietly take control.

The goal isn’t to avoid protection.

The goal is to never let protection replace ambition.

Your 15‑Minute Daily M365 Power Routine

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“Transform your day in 15 minutes.”

Most people don’t have a productivity problem.
They have a starting problem.

The day kicks off reactively. Emails, Teams pings, half‑finished tasks from yesterday, and suddenly it’s 11am and you’re already behind. Not because you’re lazy or disorganised, but because you never took control of the day before it took control of you.

That’s where this comes in.

This is a simple, repeatable 15‑minute Microsoft 365 power routine you can run every morning. No new tools. No fancy systems. Just using what you already have – properly.

Do this consistently and you’ll stop feeling busy and start feeling deliberate.


The Rule

Before you touch email properly.
Before you open your tenth Teams chat.
Before you let someone else’s urgency define your priorities.

You run the routine.

Every. Single. Morning.


Minute 1–3: Outlook “My Day” – Reality Check

Open Outlook and bring up My Day.

This is where most people already go wrong. They either ignore their calendar completely or treat it as a suggestion rather than a commitment.

Look at:

  • Today’s meetings

  • Gaps between meetings

  • The real amount of time you actually have available

This isn’t about optimism. It’s about honesty.

If your calendar says you’ve got back‑to‑back meetings until 3pm, pretending you’ll “get some deep work done” before lunch is a lie you’ve told yourself too many times.

My Day shows you the truth. Accept it.


Minute 4–7: Microsoft To Do – Decide What Actually Matters

Now jump into Microsoft To Do.

Not your entire backlog.
Not your wish list.
Just today.

Ask one simple question:

“If I only got three things done today, what would move the needle?”

Flag or prioritise no more than three tasks. If everything is important, nothing is.

This is where most people sabotage themselves. They create a list that’s really just a guilt inventory. Don’t do that. Your job isn’t to remember everything. Your job is to progress the right things.

Everything else can wait.


Minute 8–10: Teams Check‑In – Reduce Noise Before It Starts

Send a short Teams check‑in.

This can be to:

  • Your team channel

  • A project chat

  • A key stakeholder

Something as simple as:

“Top priority today is X. I’ll be focused until lunch – ping me if urgent.”

This does two things:

  1. It sets expectations (which reduces interruptions)

  2. It forces clarity on your priorities

Most interruptions aren’t malicious. They’re caused by silence. A 60‑second message now can save you 20 distractions later.


Minute 11–15: Viva Insights – Protect Focus Time

Finally, open Viva Insights and block focus time.

Not “when I get a chance”.
Not “if the day allows”.

You schedule focus like you schedule meetings, because that’s what it is – an appointment with your most valuable asset: attention.

Even one 60–90 minute focus block changes the shape of the day. Without it, your time fragments. With it, work actually finishes.

If you don’t defend this time, nobody else will.


The Checklist (Save This)

Every morning:

  1. Review Outlook My Day

  2. Pick 3 priorities in To Do

  3. Send a Teams check‑in

  4. Block focus time with Viva Insights

That’s it.

No hacks. No dopamine tricks. Just discipline and consistency.


The Challenge

Follow this routine every morning for a week.

Not when you remember.
Not when it feels convenient.
Every morning.

Then ask yourself:

  • Did I feel more in control?

  • Did less work spill into the evening?

  • Did I stop reacting and start deciding?

If the answer is yes, you’ve just built a habit that scales better than any productivity app ever will.

If the answer is no, at least you’re now honest about how you’re starting your day.

Either way, you win.

Everyone Starts With a Tiny Audience. Interesting Thinking Is What Makes It Grow.

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If you’re an MSP staring at your blog stats, LinkedIn impressions, or newsletter subscriber count and thinking “What’s the point? No one’s listening anyway”, here’s the uncomfortable truth:

Everyone starts with a tiny audience.

Every voice you admire. Every “industry thought leader”. Every MSP you think has cracked content marketing. At some point, they were talking into the void just like you are now.

The difference isn’t timing, algorithms, or luck.
It’s whether they had something worth thinking about.

Small Audiences Aren’t the Problem. Boring Content Is.

Most MSPs quit content creation way too early. Not because it doesn’t work — but because it doesn’t work instantly.

They write three posts that say:

  • “Here are 5 Microsoft 365 security tips”

  • “Why cybersecurity matters more than ever”

  • “Why your business should move to the cloud”

And when nothing happens, they decide content “doesn’t work for MSPs”.

The reality? That content doesn’t work for anyone.

It’s safe. It’s generic. It’s been said a thousand times before — often better, louder, and by Microsoft themselves.

People don’t follow MSPs for recycled documentation.
They follow voices.

People Follow Thinking, Not Topics

This is where most MSP content goes wrong.

They focus obsessively on topics:

  • Microsoft 365

  • Security

  • Copilot

  • Backups

  • Compliance

But topics don’t build audiences.
Thinking does.

Two MSPs can write about the same tool. One gets ignored. The other gets shared. The difference isn’t technical accuracy — it’s perspective.

Interesting content answers at least one of these questions:

  • “Why does this matter now?”

  • “What’s wrong with how everyone else thinks about this?”

  • “What should I stop doing?”

  • “What am I over‑engineering?”

  • “What outcome am I actually chasing?”

When you give people something to think about, you earn attention. When you give them another checklist, you don’t.

Your First 100 Followers Don’t Need Perfection

Another trap MSPs fall into is waiting until their content is “good enough”.

They want:

  • Perfect graphics

  • Perfect SEO

  • Perfect posting cadence

  • Perfect confidence

That’s backwards.

Your first audience isn’t judging you. They’re forgiving you.
They’re early because they’re curious, not because they expect polish.

Your job early on isn’t to impress — it’s to experiment.

Try ideas. Try opinions. Try analogies. Try saying the thing you usually only say on a call with a client after the third coffee.

The worst thing you can do is sound like a vendor brochure while waiting for permission to be interesting.

Consistency Builds Trust. Ideas Build Growth.

Posting once a quarter with “high quality content” is a great way to stay invisible.

Consistency does two important things:

  1. It teaches the algorithm you exist.

  2. It teaches humans what your voice sounds like.

But consistency alone won’t grow your audience.
Ideas do.

You don’t need to post daily. You need to post deliberately.

One strong idea a week — clearly stated, confidently owned, and consistently reinforced — will outperform daily noise every time.

Growth doesn’t come from volume. It comes from recognition:

“Oh, that’s the MSP who always challenges how we think about security.”

“That’s the one who explains AI in plain English.”

“That’s the guy who focuses on outcomes, not tools.”

That’s how audiences compound.

Stop Trying to Sound Big. Start Sounding Honest.

Early‑stage MSP content fails because it tries to sound important instead of useful.

Big audiences don’t follow certainty.
They follow clarity.

Say what you’ve learned the hard way. Say what you’d do differently. Say what you think MSPs are getting wrong. Say what clients actually care about — not what vendors want you to repeat.

You don’t need to be the loudest voice in the room.
You need to be the clearest.

The Point Isn’t Going Viral. It’s Being Remembered.

Most MSPs don’t need millions of views. They need:

  • The right prospects

  • The right conversations

  • The right reputation

That doesn’t come from chasing virality.
It comes from building a body of work that makes people think “These people get it.”

Everyone starts with a tiny audience.

The MSPs who grow it aren’t louder.
They’re more interesting.

And interesting doesn’t mean controversial for the sake of it — it means thoughtful, opinionated, and anchored in real experience.

If you give people something worth thinking about, they’ll come back for more.

Automate Daily Microsoft 365 & Copilot Updates

Video URL = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=knhtpCvfpko

Engaging Description:

In this video, I reveal my personal process for staying ahead of every change in Microsoft 365 and Copilot. Watch as I walk you through step-by-step how I use Copilot’s scheduling features to automate daily research, create custom briefings, and deliver updates straight to my inbox. I share insider tips on crafting powerful prompts, leveraging the Prompt Coach, and maximizing Co work for unlimited scheduled tasks. Whether you want daily newsletters, email briefings, or Teams posts, I show you how to set it all up for seamless, hands-free updates. If you’re ready to supercharge your productivity and never miss a Microsoft 365 or Copilot update again, this video is for you!

The Ultimate Teams Channel Guide for SMBs

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Is your Teams a mess? Fix it with these channel strategies.

Let’s be honest.
Most Microsoft Teams environments don’t fail because Teams is bad. They fail because no one ever decided how it should be used.

What starts as “we’ll just spin up a Team” quickly turns into channel sprawl, random tabs, duplicated files, and conversations scattered everywhere. Before long, people stop trusting Teams and fall back to email, private chats, or worse – asking, “Where’s that document again?”

The good news? You don’t need to rebuild everything. You just need a clear channel strategy.

This guide shows you how to structure channels, tabs, naming conventions, and integrated Planner/OneNote so Teams actually supports work instead of slowing it down.


First principle: Channels are for workstreams, not people

If your channels are named after people (“Bob”, “Accounts – Jane”) or vague concepts (“General 2”, “Random”, “Stuff”), you’ve already lost.

Channels should represent ongoing workstreams that have a shared outcome.

Good channel examples:

  • Sales Pipeline

  • Invoicing & Finance

  • Projects – Client A

  • Operations

  • Marketing Campaigns

Bad channel examples:

  • Bob

  • Misc

  • Old Stuff

  • Testing 123

A simple rule:
If the work would still exist if someone left the business, it deserves a channel.


Keep General boring (that’s a feature)

The General channel should not be a dumping ground.

Use it for:

  • Announcements

  • High-level updates

  • Links to key resources

  • Onboarding info

Do not use it for day-to-day work.
When everything happens in General, nothing stands out.


Naming conventions reduce friction (and arguments)

Consistency matters more than creativity.

Pick a naming pattern and stick to it:

  • Projects – Client Name

  • Projects – Internal

  • Admin – Finance

  • Admin – HR

This helps users instantly understand:

  • What type of work lives here

  • Whether the channel is operational, administrative, or project-based

You shouldn’t need training to find the right channel.


Tabs turn channels into workspaces

Most Teams are underpowered because channels are treated like chat rooms instead of workspaces.

Every active channel should have, at minimum:

  • Files – where the work lives

  • Planner – what needs to be done

  • OneNote – how things are done
Planner: make work visible

Add a Planner tab for:

  • Tasks

  • Ownership

  • Due dates

If it’s not in Planner, it’s not real work – it’s just a conversation.

OneNote: stop answering the same questions

Use OneNote tabs for:

  • Meeting notes

  • Process documentation

  • Decision logs

  • “How we do this” guides

This is how you reduce repeat questions and tribal knowledge.


Fewer channels, better behaviour

More channels do not mean better organisation.

As a rule of thumb:

  • 5–12 channels per Team is usually plenty

  • Archive or delete channels that are no longer active

  • Spin up a new Team when work becomes unrelated, not just “big”

If users are confused about where to post, you have too many options.


Guide + Checklist: fix one Team this week

Don’t boil the ocean. Start small.

Checklist:

  • Rename unclear channels

  • Move active work out of General

  • Add Planner and OneNote tabs to key channels

  • Remove unused tabs and channels

  • Agree on a simple naming convention

You’ll be surprised how quickly behaviour improves once structure exists.


Final challenge

Reorganise one Team this week and share a before/after screenshot.

Not for vanity.
For clarity.

Because Teams doesn’t need more features.
It needs better decisions.

If you want Teams to work, design it like a workspace – not a chat app.