SharePoint training that delivers real value is practical in design and built around the roles and responsibilities of the people taking part. It gives users a clear sense of how the platform fits into their working day, which is what produces genuine confidence rather than a surface-level familiarity with features that may never feel relevant.
The training that gets results does not attempt to cover the platform in full. It is selective and purposeful, focusing on what actually matters to the people attending. Showing users how SharePoint supports the specific tasks they handle each day is a more effective route to confident adoption than any general product demonstration. When the best SharePoint training mirrors people’s actual work, adoption naturally improves, and digital workplace projects are so much more likely to succeed.
Microsoft SharePoint has become a significant part of how many organisations approach their digital workplace. Investment in the platform is substantial and continues to grow. Despite this, turning that investment into consistent, meaningful use across a workforce is rarely automatic. Users who are not sure what SharePoint is for, or who cannot see how it applies to their role, will not make it part of how they work, regardless of how capable the platform is beneath the surface.
The evidence from across the industry is consistent on this point. Role-specific, practical training outperforms generic training in both engagement and long-term adoption. When training speaks directly to the daily routines and real responsibilities of the people receiving it, those people engage more fully and are more likely to use what they have learned. Designing training as though one approach serves all users equally, without accounting for the different ways people work and the different demands of their roles, is an approach that rarely delivers what organisations need.
So, what do the best SharePoint training programmes have in common?
- Clear relevance: They link SharePoint features directly to the tasks people do every day.
- Hands-on learning: Sessions use familiar content and real business examples, so it all feels meaningful.
- Progressive delivery: Instead of just one-off sessions, training is spread out, allowing people to build their skills over time.
- User confidence as a goal: The aim isn’t just to show off features. It’s about making sure users feel comfortable and capable.
When organisations take this approach, they often notice better collaboration, less dependence on email and shared drives, and more consistent information management across teams.
Take Adepteq, for example. They’re a Microsoft Solutions Partner based in the UK. They work closely with organisations to support structured SharePoint adoption and help users get the most out of the platform. By focusing on real-life usage, they turn SharePoint from just another tool into something staff genuinely rely on every day.
As Phil Cave, Adepteq’s Digital Transformation Director, puts it: “Training works best when users understand how SharePoint helps them do their job better, not when they’re simply shown what the platform can do. That shift in focus makes a measurable difference to adoption and long-term value.”
With digital workplace platforms constantly evolving, the organisations that treat training as an ongoing journey are the ones who truly unlock the full benefits of their Microsoft 365 investment.
About Adepteq
Adepteq is a UK‑based Microsoft Solutions Partner specialising in SharePoint, Microsoft 365, and digital workplace enablement with a strong presence in London and the Southeast, Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Manchester, Plymouth, and Portsmouth. With over 1,000 successful migrations, Adepteq supports organisations with strategy, implementation, and user adoption to help technology deliver meaningful business outcomes.









