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My 5-Minute Fix for a Cluttered SharePoint Library

Liza

15 Oct 2025 — 3 min read
Cluttered document library
clutteredlibrary

If your SharePoint library feels like a digital dumping ground, you’re not alone. Over time, content piles up, drafts multiply and it becomes harder to find anything useful. The good news? You don’t need a full-scale cleanup project to make a big impact. In just five minutes, you can restore order, improve visibility and get your content back on track — all while laying the groundwork for smoother collaboration and better Copilot results.

Let’s walk through my simple, real-world 5-minute fix that aligns perfectly with the Fix the Mess™ framework.

Step 1: Sort by ‘Modified’ and remove duplicates or outdated drafts

Start by switching your view to the ‘Modified’ column and sort it by newest to oldest. You’ll instantly see which files haven’t been touched in years and which are still active. Delete duplicates, outdated drafts, or any versions you no longer need. You don’t need to review every single file — just clear enough to make a dent.

This quick sort helps you separate the living content from the digital clutter, giving you a clearer picture of what’s still in play.

Step 2: Create a view that hides old content (anything older than 12 months)

Next, create a filtered view that only shows documents modified within the past 12 months. This instantly declutters your screen, focuses your team on what matters now, and hides older files without deleting them.

If you have compliance requirements, leave the older documents where they are — they’re still stored, just not cluttering your day-to-day work. This approach works especially well when teams are struggling with information overload or when Copilot is surfacing irrelevant results.

Step 3: Add a ‘Status’ column (Draft, Final, Archived)

Now it’s time to add some structure. Create a new choice column called “Status” and add three simple options: Draft, Final and Archived. Go through your key files and tag them appropriately.

Metadata like this transforms a messy library into a usable one. It allows for filtering, grouping and sorting based on lifecycle stage. Plus, when Copilot crawls your content, it can better understand which files are authoritative versus in-progress.

Step 4: Save the view and share it with your team

Once your filters and columns are set up, save your view — and give it a name that makes sense to your team, such as “Current Documents” or “Active Work.” Then, share it with everyone who uses that library. Encourage them to use it as their default view.

This single action helps bring consistency to how your team sees, finds, and works with content. Over time, this small setup step will save hours of searching and reduce the “where is that file?” conversations we all know too well.

Why this works

This method works because it focuses on quick, visible wins. You’re not reorganising entire folder structures or running governance workshops — you’re just cleaning enough to improve daily usability. It’s practical, it’s repeatable and it gives your team immediate relief from the chaos.

When you repeat this process across your key libraries, you’ll start to see patterns: files that could be merged, metadata that needs refining, or sites that have outlived their purpose. That’s when it’s time to move from cleanup to planning.

And that’s where the real magic happens — when your SharePoint libraries are structured intentionally from the start.

Ready to Fix the Mess for Good?

A 5-minute cleanup is a great start — but true organisation comes from planning your SharePoint structure the right way. My Container Method™ – SharePoint Site Planning Guide walks you through how to design libraries, metadata, and navigation that scale with your organisation — not against it.

Get the Site Planning Guide

Wrap-up: Small cleanup, big impact

In just five minutes, you’ve reduced clutter, improved visibility and made your content more usable — both for your team and for Copilot. It’s a small step that delivers an immediate productivity boost. But the bigger opportunity lies ahead — building a library that’s planned, structured, and scalable.

Start small, stay consistent, and when you’re ready, take the next step toward truly fixing the mess.

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