Relating communities
Community owners can decide if a community has a relation with another community. In order to do so, the user must be the owner of
Community owners can decide if a community has a relation with another community. In order to do so, the user must be the owner of
Appspace SharePoint Intranet allows community (and stand-alone tools) creators to set up three types of privacy: Public: Everyone can access content, provide feedback (i.e. comment
In some use cases, communities have a limited lifespan. For example a project or an event. In these scenarios community owners can decide to archive
Communities can adapt to a wide variety of corporate use cases by allowing owners to configure the right set of tools, for the right users,
By going to Community Settings > Design, the owner can customize the color of the community, the profile image and the banner image. Since version 4.4.0,
Communities functionality can be easily extended using SharePoint apps. Since Communities are SharePoint sites in the background, community owners can add those apps by accessing
When owners add a SharePoint app to their community they can decide if they want new items created in this app to be posted on
In the community settings, under the Users tab, the community owner is able to add other owners (only option when the community is public), invite
Community owners can manually curate content appearing in their widgets by highlighting them (Documents, Ideas, Blogs, Questions and Wikis). For example, a document can
Wiki functionality is offered as a tool within the context of any community by using the Sharebox or from the community wiki tool. Wikis promote