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EPC Group

Enterprise Microsoft consulting with 29 years serving Fortune 500 companies.

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About EPC Group

EPC Group is a Microsoft consulting firm founded in 1997 (originally Enterprise Project Consulting, renamed EPC Group in 2005). 29 years of enterprise Microsoft consulting experience. EPC Group historically held the distinction of being the oldest continuous Microsoft Gold Partner in North America from 2016 until the program's retirement. Because Microsoft officially deprecated the Gold/Silver tiering framework, EPC Group transitioned to the modern Microsoft Solutions Partner ecosystem and currently holds the core Microsoft Solutions Partner designations.

Headquartered at 4900 Woodway Drive, Suite 830, Houston, TX 77056. Public clients include NASA, FBI, Federal Reserve, Pentagon, United Airlines, PepsiCo, Nike, and Northrop Grumman. 6,500+ SharePoint implementations, 1,500+ Power BI deployments, 500+ Microsoft Fabric implementations, 70+ Fortune 500 organizations served, 11,000+ enterprise engagements, 200+ Microsoft Power BI and Microsoft 365 consultants on staff.

About Errin O'Connor

Errin O'Connor is the Founder, CEO, and Chief AI Architect of EPC Group. Microsoft MVP multiple years, first awarded 2003. 4× Microsoft Press bestselling author of Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 Inside Out (MS Press 2007), Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 Inside Out (MS Press 2011), SharePoint 2013 Field Guide (Sams/Pearson 2014), and Microsoft Power BI Dashboards Step by Step (MS Press 2018).

Original SharePoint Beta Team member (Project Tahoe). Original Power BI Beta Team member (Project Crescent). FedRAMP framework contributor. Worked with U.S. CIO Vivek Kundra on the Obama administration's 25-Point Plan to reform federal IT, and with NASA CIO Chris Kemp as Lead Architect on the NASA Nebula Cloud project. Speaker at Microsoft Ignite, SharePoint Conference, KMWorld, and DATAVERSITY.

© 2026 EPC Group. All rights reserved. Microsoft, SharePoint, Power BI, Azure, Microsoft 365, Microsoft Copilot, Microsoft Fabric, and Microsoft Dynamics 365 are trademarks of the Microsoft group of companies.

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Home / Blog / SharePoint Intranet Redesign: Classic to Modern
Sharepoint Intranet Redesign Classic to Modern 2026 | EPC Group - EPC Group enterprise consulting

Sharepoint Intranet Redesign Classic to Modern 2026 | EPC Group

Enterprise Microsoft consulting insights from EPC Group — 29 years serving Fortune 500.

SharePoint Intranet Redesign: From Classic to Modern in 2026

By Errin O'Connor|April 15, 2026|15 min read

Classic SharePoint intranets are a dead end. Microsoft has deprecated classic sites, and every month they fall further behind modern SharePoint's capabilities. Here is EPC Group's battle-tested approach to redesigning enterprise intranets — from 29 years of SharePoint consulting across Fortune 500 organizations.

Why classic SharePoint intranets need to go

If your organization is still running a classic SharePoint intranet — whether it is SharePoint 2013, 2016, 2019, or even SharePoint Online classic sites — you are living on borrowed time. The problems compound every year:

  • No mobile experience: Classic SharePoint pages do not render properly on phones or tablets. In 2026, with hybrid and mobile workforces, an intranet that only works on desktop is an intranet that 40% of your employees never use.
  • No Copilot integration: Microsoft 365 Copilot indexes and surfaces content from modern SharePoint sites. Classic sites are second-class citizens in the AI-powered workplace — employees using Copilot cannot find or reference classic intranet content as effectively.
  • No Viva Connections: Viva Connections, which surfaces your intranet inside Teams, requires a modern SharePoint home site. Classic sites cannot serve as the Viva Connections root, leaving your Teams-first employees disconnected from company communications.
  • Deprecated features: Microsoft has stopped investing in classic pages, web parts, and workflows. InfoPath forms are end-of-life. SharePoint Designer workflows were retired in favor of Power Automate. Classic master pages and page layouts have no modern equivalent — they are a dead-end technology.
  • Security and compliance gaps: Modern SharePoint integrates with Microsoft Purview for DLP, sensitivity labels, and retention policies. Classic sites have limited Purview integration, creating compliance blindspots.

Step 1: Classic site assessment

Before designing the new intranet, you need to understand what exists. EPC Group's assessment covers:

  • Site inventory: Every site collection, subsite, and page in the classic intranet — cataloged with owner, last modified date, page views (from SharePoint usage reports), and content type. This reveals which sites are active, which are abandoned, and which contain content that should migrate.
  • Customization audit: Classic intranets often have master page customizations, custom CSS, InfoPath forms, SharePoint Designer workflows, and script editor web parts with inline JavaScript. All of these must be replaced with modern equivalents (SPFx, Power Automate, Power Apps). The customization inventory drives the development effort estimate.
  • Content audit: Page-level analysis of content relevance. We categorize every page as current (migrate), outdated (archive or retire), or redundant (consolidate). Most classic intranets have 40-60% outdated content that should not migrate — migrating it would just recreate the mess in a modern wrapper.
  • Analytics review: SharePoint usage reports and Google Analytics (if implemented) reveal which intranet sections employees actually use. Pages with zero visits in 6 months are candidates for retirement. High-traffic pages get priority attention in the redesign.
  • Stakeholder interviews: We interview department heads, HR, communications, IT, and a sample of end users to understand what the intranet should do (not just what it currently does). Common themes: better search, mobile access, fewer clicks to find policies, and integration with Teams.

Step 2: Viva Connections hub architecture

The modern SharePoint intranet is built on a hub site architecture with Viva Connections as the front door:

  • Home site: A single communication site designated as the organization's home site. This is the root of Viva Connections and appears as the default landing page in the SharePoint mobile app and Teams. It contains company news, leadership communications, key links, and a search scope that covers the entire intranet.
  • Hub sites: Departmental or functional hub sites (HR Hub, IT Hub, Finance Hub, Operations Hub) that aggregate content from their connected sites. Hub sites share navigation, theme, and search scope with their child sites, creating a coherent experience within each department while maintaining a unified intranet through the home site.
  • Communication sites: Individual sites for specific content areas — company news, policies, benefits, onboarding, office locations, events. Communication sites are designed for broadcasting content to a broad audience with rich page layouts, hero web parts, and news posts.
  • Team sites: Connected to Microsoft 365 groups for collaborative workspaces — project teams, departments, committees. Team sites are where work happens; communication sites are where results are shared. This distinction is critical for a clean information architecture.

The hub architecture replaces the classic subsite hierarchy. Instead of a single site collection with 50 subsites nested 4 levels deep, you have a flat collection of purpose-built sites connected through hub associations. This is easier to manage, easier to govern, and scales without the subsite permission inheritance problems that plagued classic SharePoint.

Step 3: Communication sites vs. team sites

Choosing the wrong site type is one of the most common intranet design mistakes. EPC Group applies this framework:

Use CaseSite TypeWhy
Company news and announcementsCommunicationBroadcast to all employees, rich page layouts, news web parts
HR policies and benefitsCommunicationRead-only for most users, authoritative content, structured navigation
Department workspaceTeamCollaborative editing, document libraries, Planner integration, Teams channel
Project workspaceTeamShared files, task management, conversations, limited membership
Leadership communicationsCommunicationCEO updates, town hall recordings, strategic priorities — broadcast, not collaboration
Office locations / facilitiesCommunicationFloor plans, room booking links, building info — reference content
IT service deskCommunicationKnowledge base, how-to guides, ticket submission — self-service portal

Step 4: Navigation architecture

Navigation is the backbone of intranet usability. If employees cannot find what they need in 3 clicks, they will use Google or email their colleague instead. EPC Group designs navigation using these principles:

  • Global navigation (Viva Connections): A persistent navigation bar visible across all sites via the SharePoint app bar. Contains 5-7 top-level categories (News, People, Policies, IT Help, HR, Office Info) that cover 80% of employee needs. This replaces the classic "mega menu" that tried to expose every page in the intranet.
  • Hub navigation: Each hub site has its own navigation covering its child sites. The HR hub navigation includes Benefits, Policies, Onboarding, Performance, Learning. This navigation is shared across all sites associated with the hub.
  • Site navigation: Local navigation within each communication site. Kept to 5-8 items maximum. If a site needs more than 8 navigation items, it should be split into multiple sites connected via a hub.
  • Search-first design: Modern SharePoint search is excellent when properly configured. EPC Group configures search verticals, promoted results (for common queries like "expense report" or "PTO policy"), custom result types, and acronym definitions. For many employees, search becomes the primary navigation method — faster than clicking through any menu structure.

Step 5: Branding with SharePoint Framework (SPFx)

Modern SharePoint's built-in branding capabilities cover 70% of enterprise needs: theme colors, logo, site header style, and footer. For the remaining 30%, SPFx development fills the gaps:

  • Custom mega menu: SPFx Application Customizer that renders a branded mega menu in the site header, supporting multi-level navigation, icons, and featured content cards. The built-in SharePoint navigation is functional but limited in visual richness.
  • Branded hero banner: Custom SPFx web part that replaces the standard Hero web part with a version matching your brand guidelines — custom animations, video backgrounds, call-to-action buttons, and responsive breakpoints.
  • People directory: SPFx web part that surfaces the Azure AD people directory with custom card layouts showing photo, name, title, department, and office. Replaces the classic Delve people experience with a branded, faster alternative.
  • KPI dashboard cards: SPFx web parts that pull data from Power BI or Microsoft Lists to display key metrics (headcount, open positions, support ticket SLA, project milestones) on the intranet home page.
  • Custom footer: SPFx Application Customizer for a branded footer with copyright, legal links, social media icons, and a feedback button that creates a Microsoft Forms submission.

EPC Group follows a full ALM (Application Lifecycle Management) process for SPFx development: source control in Azure DevOps, automated builds and deployments, staging tenant for testing, and production deployment with rollback capability. No more "someone uploaded a script file to the site assets library and now the intranet is broken."

Step 6: Content migration strategy

Content migration from classic to modern is the most time-consuming phase. EPC Group uses a tiered approach:

  • Automated page transformation: Microsoft's SharePoint Page Transformation framework converts classic wiki pages and web part pages to modern pages. The output requires manual refinement — modern web parts do not map 1:1 to classic web parts — but it handles the bulk conversion and preserves content.
  • Manual rebuild: High-visibility pages (home page, department landing pages, executive communications) are rebuilt from scratch using modern page layouts, optimized images, and updated content. These pages are the face of the intranet — automated conversion quality is not sufficient.
  • Content owners: Each department designates a content owner responsible for reviewing migrated pages, updating stale content, and approving the final version for the new intranet. This distributes the migration workload and ensures content accuracy.
  • Redirect mapping: Every classic page URL gets a redirect to its modern equivalent. This prevents broken bookmarks, search results pointing to dead pages, and user confusion during the transition period.

Step 7: User adoption and change management

A beautiful new intranet that no one uses is a failed project. EPC Group builds adoption into the redesign from day one:

  • Executive sponsorship: A visible executive champion (typically CHRO or COO) who communicates why the redesign matters, participates in the launch, and holds departments accountable for migration timelines.
  • Champion network: 1-2 designated champions per department who receive early access, advanced training, and serve as local support during rollout. Champions are the first escalation point before IT gets involved.
  • Phased rollout: Pilot with 2-3 departments, incorporate feedback, then roll out organization-wide. The pilot group's success stories become the marketing material for the broader rollout.
  • Training program: Role-based training covering end-user basics (navigation, search, mobile app), content owner skills (page creation, news publishing, metadata management), and site owner administration (permissions, analytics, governance).
  • Feedback loop: A visible feedback mechanism (Microsoft Forms or a dedicated Teams channel) where employees can report issues, request features, and share what is working. EPC Group reviews feedback weekly during the first 90 days and implements quick wins to build momentum.
  • Usage analytics: Power BI dashboards tracking intranet usage: page views, unique visitors, search queries, mobile vs. desktop, and time spent. These metrics justify the investment and identify adoption gaps that need targeted intervention.

Governance framework for the modern intranet

Without governance, the new intranet will devolve into the same unmanaged mess as the classic one. EPC Group implements:

  • Site provisioning process: New sites are created through a request workflow (Power Automate + Microsoft Forms) that enforces naming conventions, requires a business justification, assigns an owner, and applies the correct hub association and template. No more self-service site sprawl.
  • Content lifecycle: Quarterly content reviews where site owners verify their content is current. Pages not updated in 12 months get flagged for review. Pages confirmed as stale are archived or retired.
  • Permission reviews: Semi-annual review of site permissions to ensure access is appropriate. Automated reports flag sites with external sharing enabled, sites with more than 100 unique permissions, and sites owned by departed employees.
  • Compliance integration: Purview sensitivity labels, DLP policies, and retention policies applied to intranet content — ensuring that the intranet meets the same compliance standards as the rest of the Microsoft 365 environment.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a SharePoint intranet redesign typically take?

A standard enterprise intranet redesign runs 12-20 weeks: 2-3 weeks for discovery and stakeholder interviews, 2-3 weeks for information architecture and navigation design, 3-4 weeks for design and branding (SPFx web parts, page templates, theme configuration), 2-4 weeks for content migration and page creation, and 2-3 weeks for UAT, pilot rollout, and organization-wide launch. Timeline scales with the number of sites being modernized, content volume, and custom SPFx development requirements.

Do we need to migrate content from classic sites or can we start fresh?

It depends on the content. EPC Group audits every classic site to classify content as migrate (active, still relevant), archive (keep for compliance but remove from active intranet), or retire (outdated, no compliance requirement). Typically 40-60% of classic intranet content is stale and should not migrate. For content that does migrate, we use the SharePoint Page Transformation framework to convert classic wiki pages and web part pages to modern pages, then manually refine the result. Starting fresh on certain sections (company news, HR policies, leadership communications) is often more efficient than migrating outdated content.

What is Viva Connections and do we need it for the intranet?

Viva Connections is Microsoft's employee experience layer that surfaces your SharePoint intranet inside Teams. It includes a dashboard (cards showing personalized tasks, news, approvals), a feed (aggregated company news from SharePoint communication sites), and resources (curated links and apps). If your organization uses Teams as the primary collaboration hub, Viva Connections ensures the intranet reaches employees where they already work — without requiring them to open a browser and navigate to SharePoint. EPC Group recommends Viva Connections for organizations where Teams adoption exceeds 70%.

How do we brand the modern SharePoint intranet to match our corporate identity?

Modern SharePoint supports three branding layers: (1) Theme configuration — colors, fonts, and site chrome applied globally via the SharePoint admin center or PowerShell, mapped to your brand palette. (2) Custom headers and footers — SPFx Application Customizers that inject branded navigation bars, mega menus, and footer content across all sites. (3) Custom web parts — SPFx web parts for branded content displays (hero banners, people directories, event calendars, KPI dashboards) that go beyond the built-in web parts. EPC Group designs branding in Figma first, gets stakeholder approval, then implements via SPFx with full ALM (development, staging, production).

What is the cost of a SharePoint intranet redesign?

EPC Group's intranet redesign engagements range from $50K for a focused modernization (hub site, 5-10 communication sites, theme, navigation, Viva Connections configuration) to $150K-$300K for a full enterprise intranet build (custom SPFx web parts, multi-language support, complex navigation, content migration from multiple classic sites, integrations with HRIS and ServiceNow, Viva Connections dashboard, and user adoption program). We offer a fixed-fee 2-week Intranet Assessment that delivers wireframes, architecture recommendations, and a budget estimate before committing to the full build.

Modernize your SharePoint intranet

EPC Group's 2-week Intranet Assessment delivers wireframes, information architecture, navigation design, and a fixed-fee implementation roadmap. No commitment beyond the assessment. Call (888) 381-9725 or request an assessment below.

Request an Intranet Assessment

Enterprise Sharepoint Intranet Redesign Classic to Modern from EPC Group

This deep-dive on Sharepoint Intranet Redesign Classic to Modern reflects EPC Group's 29 years of Microsoft-exclusive consulting and the field experience of senior architects who have shipped enterprise environments for Fortune 500 customers across regulated industries. The patterns and trade-offs here come from production work, not vendor decks.

EPC Group publishes practitioner-grade content because the buying audience for enterprise Microsoft consulting evaluates depth, not adjectives. Every guide pairs the technical position with how a senior architect would execute it, including the compliance, governance, and adoption considerations that determine whether the implementation survives audit and adoption.

Manufacturing and energy

For multi-plant manufacturers and energy operators, EPC Group integrates Microsoft 365 with operational technology, protects intellectual property through Purview labels and Endpoint DLP, and provisions frontline workers with F1 and F3 licensing patterns. Multi-region rollouts include data residency planning and offline-capable Power Platform apps for shop-floor environments.

How EPC Group engages

Six-phase methodology applied to every engagement, compressed for fixed-fee accelerators and extended for full programs.

  1. Discovery — two-week assessment of the current estate, gap analysis, risk register, target architecture, costed remediation roadmap.
  2. Design — senior architect produces the target topology, identity framework, Conditional Access, Purview, governance model, and security posture, reviewed by client leads.
  3. Pilot — 25 to 100 user pilot in a real business unit. Migrate, apply baselines, test integrations, capture feedback.
  4. Wave rollout — migrate in waves of 500 to 2,500 users with communications, training, hypercare, and a per-wave retrospective.
  5. Adoption — role-based training, Champions network, executive sponsor enablement, metrics tracked against a measured baseline.
  6. Operate — optional managed-services retainer for license optimization, governance reviews, security monitoring, and quarterly business reviews.

Microsoft-only since 1997

29 years of Microsoft-exclusive consulting. Microsoft Solutions Partner with core designations across Modern Work, Security, and Data & AI.

EPC Group was the oldest continuous Microsoft Gold Partner in North America from 2016 until program retirement in 2022. Errin O'Connor authored four Microsoft Press bestsellers covering Power BI, SharePoint, Azure, and large-scale migrations.

Financial services

For banks, asset managers, and broker-dealers, EPC Group engineers SOC 2 audit trails, FINRA Rule 4511 and SEC 17a-4 retention, MNPI containment, and Communication Compliance for trading floors. Microsoft Purview Audit Premium with seven-year tamper-evident retention is the standard baseline; Defender for Cloud Apps detects shadow-AI exfiltration before it reaches a compliance event.

Engagement models

Three engagement models cover most enterprise needs. Most clients start with a fixed-fee accelerator and grow into a full program or a managed-services retainer.

  • Fixed-fee accelerators — Copilot Readiness, Security Hardening, Tenant Health Check, SharePoint Migration, Teams Governance. Defined scope and price. Typical range $25,000 to $150,000 over four to twelve weeks.
  • Project engagements — full migration or governance program with milestone-based billing. Discovery through hypercare. Typical range $150,000 to $750,000-plus over three to nine months.
  • Managed services — tiered retainer for ongoing operations. Named senior architect on the account. From $3,500 per month with a twelve-month minimum.

Senior-architect-led delivery

Every engagement is led and staffed by 15 to 20 year veterans. No rotating juniors learning on your tenant. The bench includes hundreds of Microsoft-certified consultants who have shipped real production environments for Fortune 500 customers across SharePoint, Microsoft 365, Power BI, Azure, and Microsoft Copilot.

Talk to a senior architect

30-minute discovery call. No pitch deck. Call (888) 381-9725 or schedule a discovery call and a senior architect responds within one business day.