Overview
Choosing between a Microsoft 365 Group, a Team, or a SharePoint site depends on whether you need a full chat-based workspace, structured document management, or simply a shared mailbox and calendar. These entities are tightly integrated; creating a Team automatically creates a Group and a SharePoint site, whereas creating a SharePoint team site does not automatically create a Team.
Key Considerations
When to Choose Microsoft Teams (Group + SharePoint + Chat)
Choose this option if your primary goal is real-time collaboration, chat-based conversations, and agile project management.
- Best for: Active projects, daily team communication, and immediate document sharing.
- What you get: A persistent chat interface, shared SharePoint document library, Planner (tasks), and OneNote.
- Considerations:
- Structure: Each channel in Teams gets a folder in the SharePoint site.
- Visibility: Team conversations are designed for immediate interaction.
- Lifecycle: If the team is temporary, ensure you have a plan to archive it.
When to Choose a SharePoint Team Site (Group + SharePoint)
Choose this if you need a structured place for document management, lists, and pages, but do not need real-time chat.
- Best for: Storing formal documents, tracking structured data in lists, and collaborating with a smaller group, or when "social" tools are not required.
- What you get: A modern SharePoint site, shared Outlook inbox/calendar, and Planner.
- Considerations:
- Structure: Offers better document organization (metadata, content types) than Teams' file storage.
- Permissions: Easily managed via the associated Group, but SharePoint allows for more granular control if needed (e.g., read-only visitors).
- Flexibility: You can add Microsoft Teams to this site later if the collaboration needs change.
When to Choose Just an M365 Group (Email + Calendar)
Choose this for lightweight, email-centric collaboration without a dedicated document repository or team chat.
- Best for: Distribution lists, shared scheduling (calendar), and simple, low-overhead communication.
- What you get: A shared inbox and a shared calendar.
- Considerations:
- Simplicity: Best when you don't need SharePoint libraries or chat.
- Upgradability: Can be converted to a Team later.
When to Choose a SharePoint Communication Site
Choose this if you need to broadcast information to a large audience.
- Best for: Intranet homepages, HR policies, company news, or public-facing content.
- What you get: A visually engaging site, but generally without the backend group, inbox, or team chat capabilities.
Summary Checklist for Decision Making
| Feature |
Microsoft Team |
Group-Connected Site |
Standalone SharePoint |
| Primary Need |
Real-time chat & files |
Document management |
Broadcasting news |
| Included Apps |
Chat, Files, Planner, OneNote |
Files, Mailbox, Calendar |
Pages, Files |
| File Storage |
SharePoint |
SharePoint |
SharePoint |
| Conversations |
Persistent chat |
Outlook Inbox |
None (or Yammer) |
| Members |
Group-based |
Group-based |
SharePoint Groups |
Key Takeaway
If you are unsure, create a Team. It provides the most comprehensive, modern workspace (Groups + SharePoint + Chat). If you need something with less clutter that focuses strictly on document management, use a SharePoint Team Site.
