Transition Department Files to Microsoft Teams

Summary

A step-by-step guide for departments moving shared files from the Microwave department drive (J:) to Microsoft Teams, in partnership with the Service Desk. Covers requesting help, designing a Team structure, reviewing and grouping files by destination, and completing the transition.

Body

Questions

  • How do I move my department's shared files from the Microwave department drive (J:) to Microsoft Teams?
  • How do I request help migrating department files to Teams?
  • Who coordinates a department's file transition to Teams?
  • Where should old, personal, or archival files go when we move to Teams?
  • What happens to the J: drive after the migration is complete?
  • Why should my department use Microsoft Teams for files instead of the J: drive?

Environment

This article is for department heads and staff responsible for coordinating a department's transition from the Microwave department drive (J:) to Microsoft Teams. The Bowdoin Service Desk partners with your department to set up or update your Team(s), identify folders to move, and transfer files to Teams. The College Archives' Records Management Program advises on records that should be preserved in the College Archives.

Why Microsoft Teams for files? Teams provides real-time collaboration, version history, easier sharing, improved search, secure access from anywhere, and stronger protection than the J: drive.

Resolution

The Service Desk guides your department through the steps below so you can begin working in Teams with your active departmental files.

  1. Submit the Migration Assistance Request. Request help through the Migration Assistance Request. A Service Desk member will meet with you to develop a plan that works for your department.
  2. Assign a department migration lead. Choose a staff member or members to coordinate the transition and work with the Service Desk.
  3. Design your Team structure.
    • Start simple: typically one Team per department.
    • Some departments already use multiple Teams. In some cases these can be consolidated by using additional channels within the main department Team.
    • Maintain at least two Team owners for continuity.
    • Create additional channels only when they support a clear purpose, such as private or cross-department collaboration. For more on channel structure, see the Understand Microsoft Teams: Channels, Permissions, and File Structure article in the Related Articles section.
  4. Review Microwave files using a folder inventory.
    • The Service Desk will provide a File Review spreadsheet (see the Related Articles section) showing top-level folders, size, number of files, and last accessed dates.
    • This overview helps departments quickly identify large or outdated folders. Whenever possible, make decisions at the folder level rather than reviewing individual files.
    • The College Archives' Records Management Program will advise on records that should be preserved in the College Archives.
  5. Move active working files first.
    • Identify the active files your department currently uses and move them to Teams.
    • Depending on the number and size of the files, they can be moved by IT or by a department member using file sync. For sync instructions, see the How to Sync Teams Files to Your Computer and Move Network Files to Teams article in the Related Articles section.
  6. Train staff and begin working in Teams. A Service Desk staff member will lead a short kickoff session to introduce the new file structure, explain when to use OneDrive versus Teams, demonstrate sync and version history, and answer questions.
  7. Review remaining files in your department drive. As you review folders, decide where each set of files should go:
    • Teams: older departmental files that should be retained but are rarely used. Consider a "Department Archive" channel or folder.
    • OneDrive or \\microwave\research: personal work or research files belonging to an individual.
    • Delete: duplicates, temporary exports, outdated drafts, or files beyond retention.
    • College Archives: records identified for long-term institutional preservation.
  8. Group folders by destination. To make the move easier, move files into top-level folders that indicate the destination, for example: MIGRATION, COLLEGE ARCHIVES, DELETE, TeamName-ChannelName, OneDrive-Username, Research-Name. Someone from the Service Desk will check in regularly on progress and answer questions. When the review is complete, the Service Desk can assist with transferring the grouped folders to their final locations.
  9. Complete the transition.
    • Confirm files are in the expected locations.
    • Once the main migration is complete, access to the Microwave folder will be set to read-only for one year in case additional material needs to be moved to Teams.
    • Access to the department drive on Microwave will be removed after one year.
    • Submit the Records Transfer Form for materials moving to the College Archives.

Additional Help

If you need further assistance, you have several options:

  • Bowdoin Bot: Chat with Bowdoin Bot directly from any KB page for instant answers.
  • Phone: Call the Bowdoin College Service Desk at (207) 725-3030.
  • In person: Visit the Tech Hub in Smith Union during business hours.
  • Submit a ticket: Request assistance through the Service Catalog.

Additional Resources

Details

Details

Article ID: 166593
Created
Thu 3/27/25 11:19 AM
Modified
Thu 7/16/26 5:14 PM

Related Articles

Related Articles (7)

A reference guide to the key recommendations, restrictions, and limits for storing and collaborating on files in Microsoft Teams, SharePoint, and OneDrive at Bowdoin. Covers Teams and channel structure, file and folder management, storage and sync limits, external sharing, retention, and Team lifecycle.
This guidance applies to departments reviewing and cleaning up shared network department drives as part of a migration to Microsoft Teams.
This guide explains how to sync Microsoft Teams files to your laptop for offline access, manage them directly in File Explorer (Windows) or Finder (MacOS), and move files from local drives or network file shares into Teams channels.
This article is for individuals using Microsoft Teams and SharePoint through Microsoft 365 on desktop, browser, or mobile. It is especially helpful for users who are new to working with shared files in Teams and want to understand how to store, access, collaborate on, and manage documents.
Explains how OneDrive, Microsoft Teams, and SharePoint work together for storing and sharing files in Microsoft 365, where files shared in Teams actually live, and how to choose the right place to save a file. Includes a quick reference for common scenarios.
Microsoft Teams is a powerful collaboration tool, but it helps to understand how files are stored and how permissions work across teams and channels. This guide explains how Microsoft Teams organizes files, manages access, and links with SharePoint behind the scenes.
This article is for department staff who have been asked to review their shared drive content as part of the migration to Microsoft Teams. The File Review spreadsheet is provided by Bowdoin IT and contains a complete list of your department's files plus a summary view to help guide your decisions

Related Services / Offerings

Related Services / Offerings (1)

This request applies to a department looking to transition from Microwave to Microsoft Teams with SharePoint files.