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🧩 Understanding Microsoft 365 Group Types
SharePoint Groups vs Microsoft 365 Groups vs Security Groups vs Contact Lists
🎯 Purpose
This article explains the different types of groups in Microsoft 365, what they are used for, and when to use each one. Understanding these differences helps ensure proper access control, governance, and collaboration across BYU-Idaho systems.
🧠 Quick Summary (Recommended Model)
| Layer |
Group Type |
Purpose |
| Identity / Access Control |
Security Groups (Roles) |
Manage access to systems, apps, and data |
| Collaboration |
Microsoft 365 Groups |
Work together (Teams, email, files, Planner) |
| Site Permissions |
SharePoint Groups |
Control access within a SharePoint site |
| Personal Use |
Contact Lists |
Send emails to a personal list |
📊 Full Comparison Table
| Feature |
SharePoint Groups |
Microsoft 365 Groups |
Security Groups (Roles) |
Contact Lists |
| Primary Purpose |
Site permissions |
Collaboration |
Access control |
Personal email |
| Created In |
SharePoint site settings |
Outlook, Teams, Planner, Admin Center |
Entra ID / Admin Center |
Outlook |
| Scope |
One site only |
Organization-wide |
Organization-wide |
One user only |
| Used for Permissions |
✅ SharePoint only |
✅ (indirectly via connected resources) |
✅ Broad (apps, sites, etc.) |
❌ No |
| Used for Teams |
❌ |
✅ Required |
✅ Can grant access |
❌ |
| Email Enabled |
❌ |
✅ |
✅ (optional) |
✅ |
| Dynamic Membership |
❌ |
✅ |
✅ |
❌ |
| Best Use Case |
Site-level access |
Departments / teams |
Roles & automation |
Personal lists |
🔍 Group Types Explained
1. SharePoint Groups (Site-Level Permissions)
What they are
- Groups that exist inside a SharePoint site
- Automatically created as:
- Owners
- Members
- Visitors&wdpartid={c6c0f267-c91d-4ded-a1f9-a5a10db1c25b}{1}&wdsectionfileid={bc490b79-26f2-459f-a461-9efbc839af25})
What they’re used for
- Granting access to:
- Sites
- Document libraries
- Lists
Key characteristics
- Not visible outside the site
- Cannot be used in Teams or apps
- Managed by site owners
✅ Best Practice
Use SharePoint Groups only as permission containers, and add other group types into them.
📌 Example (Music Department Site)
SharePoint Site: BYU Idaho Music Department
Owners Group
→ Luana (Office Manager)
→ Megan (Assistant)
Members Group
→ Security Group: Music Employees (Full Access)
Visitors Group
→ Security Group: Adjunct Faculty (Read Only)
2. Microsoft 365 Groups (Collaboration Groups)
What they are
A group that automatically provides:
- Shared mailbox
- SharePoint site
- Planner plan
- Teams (if enabled)
Adding a user gives access to all of the above at once&wdpartid={a540723d-d331-4f85-9030-4cc76010bc85}{153}&wdsectionfileid={d9f8ec3a-e305-4fa9-906e-ec761bdf6bd5})
What they’re used for
- Department collaboration
- Projects
- Committees
- Classes
📌 Example (Music Faculty Team)
Microsoft 365 Group: Full-Time Music Faculty
Members:
→ Faculty users
Resources automatically created:
→ Team (chat + meetings)
→ SharePoint site (files)
→ Outlook inbox
→ Planner board
✅ Best Practice
Use Microsoft 365 Groups when people need to:
- Communicate (chat/email)
- Share files
- Assign tasks
3. Security Groups (Entra ID Roles / “Modern Groups”)
What they are
- Centralized identity groups in Entra ID (Azure AD)
- Used for controlling access across systems
What they’re used for
- Assigning access to:
- Applications
- SharePoint sites
- Teams
- Licensing
- Conditional Access policies
✅ Key Advantage
- Can be automated (dynamic membership)
- Supports future HR integration (e.g., Workday)
- Central source of truth
📌 Example (Role-Based Access Model)
Security Group: Music Employees
→ All full-time faculty
Security Group: Adjunct Faculty
→ Part-time instructors
Security Group: Music Admin Staff
→ Office assistants
Then:
SharePoint Members
→ Music Employees
SharePoint Visitors
→ Adjunct Faculty
✅ Best Practice (Recommended Governance Model)
Use Security Groups as the foundation:
Security Group (who should have access)
↓
Added to
↓
SharePoint Group (what access they get)
4. Contact Groups (Contact Lists)
What they are
- Personal email lists created in Outlook
What they’re used for
- Quick email distribution (personal use only)
🚫 Limitations
- Not visible to IT
- Not reusable by others
- Cannot assign permissions
📌 Example
Tony’s Outlook Contact List:
“Music Leadership”
Used for:
→ Sending email to same group quickly
✅ Recommendation
Avoid using Contact Lists for:
- Departments
- Permissions
- Shared workflows
Instead use:
- Microsoft 365 Groups (collaboration)
- Mail-enabled Security Groups (distribution)
🧭 Putting It All Together (Visual Model)
+-----------------------------+
| Security Groups (Roles) |
| "Who should have access?" |
+-------------+---------------+
↓
+-------------------------------------+
| SharePoint Groups (Permissions) |
| "What level of access?" |
+-------------------------------------+
OR
+-------------------------------------+
| Microsoft 365 Groups (Collaboration)|
| "Work together" |
+-------------------------------------+
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
| Mistake |
Why it’s a problem |
| Using SharePoint groups across multiple systems |
They only work within one site |
| Using Contact Lists for teams |
Not governed or shared |
| Managing users manually everywhere |
Hard to scale and maintain |
| Not using role-based groups |
Prevents automation and HR alignment |
✅ Recommended BYU-Idaho Approach
Based on current practices and future scalability:
-
Create Security Groups for roles
- Tied to departments (Music Employees, Adjunct Faculty)
-
Use those groups in SharePoint
-
Use Microsoft 365 Groups for collaboration
- When Teams / Planner / email are needed
This supports:
- Cleaner governance
- Easier onboarding/offboarding
- Future automation with HR systems
📌 Final Takeaway
- Security Groups = who gets access
- SharePoint Groups = what access they get
- Microsoft 365 Groups = how they collaborate
- Contact Lists = personal convenience only
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