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Note: To manage content in SharePoint, we recommend you use Microsoft Purview risk and compliance solutions rather than the older information management policies. For example, you can use Microsoft 365 retention to automatically retain and delete content across SharePoint, OneDrive, Teams, Exchange, and other online services.

Information management policies enable you to control who can access your organizational information, what they can do with it, and how long to retain it. A policy can help enforce compliance with legal and governmental regulations or internal business processes. As an administrator, you can set up a policy to control how to track documents, who has access to documents, and how long to retain documents.

Each policy can establish a set of rules for a specific type of content. Each rule in a policy is a policy feature. For example, an information management policy feature could specify how long a type of content should be retained.

Note: Information management policies are compiled by an Information Management Policy Timer Job, managed by Microsoft, which runs weekly. Therefore, your policies may not take effect immediately. The frequency and date of the Information Management Policy Timer Job cannot be changed.

An information management policy can be created on a site in three different ways:

  1. Create an information management policy to use on multiple content types within a site collection.

  2. Create an information management policy for a site content type.

  3. Create an information management policy for a list or library.

Activating the Site Policy feature allows site collection administrators to define retention schedules that apply to a site and all its content. To activate this feature:

  1. Go to the home page of the site collection for which you want to activate the Site Policy feature.

    Go to Settings Office 365 Settings button, Site Settings.

  2. Under Site Collection Administration, choose Site Collection Features.

  3. Scroll to Site Policy. On the right side, if you don't see Active, choose Activate.

To ensure that an information policy is applied to all documents of a certain type within a site collection, consider creating the policy at the site collection level and then later apply the policy to content types. These are referred to as site collection policies.

  1. Go to Settings Office 365 Settings button, Site Settings.

  2. On the Site Settings page, in the Site Collection Administration list, click Site collection policies.

  3. On the Site Collection Policies page, click Create.

  4. Type a name and description for the policy, and then write a brief policy statement that explains to users what the policy is for. A policy statement can be up to 512 characters.

  5. See Create a policy for a content type later in this article to learn how to set up the features you want to associate with the policy.

  6. Click OK to return to the Site Collection Policies page.

Adding an information management policy to a content type makes it easy to associate policy features with multiple lists or libraries. You can choose to add an existing information management policy to a content type or create a unique policy specific to an individual content type.

You can also add an information management policy to a content type that is specific to lists. This has the effect of applying the policy only to items in that list that are using the content type.

  1. Go to Settings Office 365 Settings button, Site Settings.

  2. On the Site Settings page, in the Web Designer Galleries section, click Site content types.

  3. On the Site Content Type Settings page, select the content type that you want to add a policy to.

  4. On the Site Content Type page, in the Settings section, click Information management policy settings.

  5. On the Information Management Policy Settings page, select Define a policy, and then click OK.

  6. On the Edit Policy page, type a name and description for the policy, and then write a brief description that explains to users what the policy is for. A description can be up to 512 characters long.

  7. In the next sections, select the individual policy features that you want to add to your information management policy.

  8. To specify a retention period for documents and items that are subject to this policy, click Enable Retention, and then specify the retention period and the actions that you want to occur when the items expire.

    To specify a retention period

    1.

    Click Add a retention stage for records…

    2.

    Select a retention period option to specify when documents or items are set to expire. Do one of the following:

    • To set the expiration date based on a date property, in the Event section click This stage is based off a date property on the item, and then select the document or item action (for example, Created or Modified) and the increment of time after this action (for example, the number of days, months, or years) when you want the item to expire.

    • To use a custom retention formula to determine expiration, click Set by a custom retention formula installed on this server.

    Note: This option is only available if a custom formula has been set up by your administrator.

    3.

    The Start a workflow option is available only if you are defining a policy for a list, library, or content type that already has a workflow associated with it. You will then be given a choice of workflows to choose from.

    4.

    In the Recurrence section, select Repeat this stage’s action…and enter how often you want the action to reoccur.

    Note: This option is only available if the action you selected can be repeated. For example, you cannot set recurrence for the action Permanently Delete.

    5.

    Click OK.

  9. To enable auditing for the documents and items that are subject to this policy, click Enable Auditing, and then specify the events you want to audit.

    To enable auditing

    1.

    On the Edit Policy page, in the Auditing section, select the Enable auditing check box, and then select the check boxes next to the events you want to keep an audit trail for.

    2.

    To prompt users to insert these barcodes into documents, select the Prompt users to insert a barcode before saving or printing check box.

    3.

    Click OK to apply the auditing feature to the policy.

    The Auditing Policy feature enables organizations to create and analyze audit trails for documents and to list items such as task lists, issues lists, discussion groups, and calendars. This policy feature provides an audit log that records events, such as when content is viewed, edited, or deleted.

    When auditing is enabled as part of an information management policy, administrators can view the audit data in policy usage reports that are based in Microsoft Excel and that summarize current usage. Administrators can use these reports to determine how information is being used within the organization. These reports can also help organizations to verify and document their regulatory compliance or to investigate potential concerns.

    The audit log records the following information: event name, date and time of the event, and system name of the user who performed the action.

  10. When barcodes are enabled as part of a policy, they are added to document properties and displayed in the header area of the document to which the barcode is applied. Like labels, barcodes can also be manually removed from a document.

    To enable barcodes

    1.

    On the Edit Policy page, in the Barcodes section, select the Enable Barcodes check box.

    2.

    To prompt users to insert these barcodes into documents, select the Prompt users to insert a barcode before saving or printing check box.

    3.

    Click OK to apply the barcode feature to the policy.

    The barcode policy generates Code 39 standard barcodes. Each barcode image includes text below the barcode symbol that represents the barcode value. This enables the barcode data to be used even when scanning hardware is not available. Users can manually type the barcode number into the search box to locate the item on a site.

  11. To require that documents that are subject to this policy have labels, click Enable Labels, and then specify the settings that you want for the labels.

    To enable labels

    1.

    To require users to add a label to a document, select thePrompt users to insert a label before saving or printing check box.

    Note: If you want labels to be optional, do not select this check box.

    2.

    To lock a label so that it cannot be changed after it has been inserted, select the Prevent changes to labels after they are added check box.

    This setting prevents the label text from updating once the label has been inserted into an item within a client application such as Word, Excel, or PowerPoint. If you want the label to be updated when the properties for this document or item are updated, do not select this check box.

    3.

    In the Label format box, type the text for the label as you want it to be displayed. Labels can contain up to 10 column references, each of which can be up to 255 characters long. To create the format for your label, do the following:

    Type the names of the columns that you want to include in the label in the order in which you want them to appear. Enclose the column names in curly brackets ({}), as shown in the example on the Edit Policy page.

    Type words to identify the columns outside the brackets, as shown in the example on the Edit Policy page.

    4.

    To add a line break, type \n where you want the line break to appear.

    5.

    Select the font size and style that you want, and specify whether you want the label positioned left, center, or right within the document.

    Tip: Select a font and style that are available on the users' computers. The size of the font affects how much text can be displayed on the label.

    6.

    Type the height and width of the label. Label height can range from .25 inches to 20 inches, and label width can range from .25 inches to 20 inches. Label text is always vertically centered within the label image.

    7.

    Click Refresh to preview the label content.

  12. Click OK.

You can define a retention policy that applies only to a specific list, library or folder. If you create a retention policy this way however, you cannot reuse this policy on other lists, libraries, folders or sites.

Note: You cannot apply a site collection policy to a location based policy.

If you want to apply a single retention policy to all types of content in a single location, you will most likely want to use location-based retention. In most other cases, you will want to verify that a retention policy is specified for all content types.

Note: Each subfolder inherits the retention policy of its parent, unless you choose to break inheritance and define a new retention policy at the child level.

If you want to define an information management policy other than retention to a list or library, you need to define an information management policy for each individual list content type associated with that list or library. See Create a policy for a site content type in this article for more information.

Important: If at any point you decide to switch from content type to location-based policies for a list or library, only the retention policy will be used as the location-based policy. All other management policies (audits, barcodes, and barcodes) will be inherited from the associated content types.

Tip: Location based policies can be disabled for a site collection by deactivating the Library and Folder Based Retention feature. This enables site collection administrators to ensure that their content type policies are not overridden by a list administrator’s location based policies.

You must have at least the Manage Lists permission to change the information management policy settings for a list or library.

  1. Navigate to the list or library for which you want to specify an information management policy.

  2. For a document library, click Settings Settings: update your profile, install software and connect it to the cloud, Library Settings.

    If you don't see these menu items, or for a list, click the Library or List tab in the ribbon, and then click Library Settings or List Settings.

  3. Under Permissions and Management, click Information management policy settings.

  4. On the Information Management Policy Settings page, make sure that the source of retention for the list or library is set to Library and Folders. If Content Type appears as the source, do the following:

    • Click Change Source.

    • On the Edit Policy page, in the Source of Retention section, select Library and Folders. You are alerted that content type retention policies will be ignored.

    • Click OK.

  5. On the Edit Policy page, in the Library Based Retention Schedule section, type a brief description for the policy you are creating.

  6. Under Non-Records, click Add a retention stage…

    Important: Note that under Records, you can choose to define different retention policies for records by selecting the Define different retention stages for records option.

  7. On the Stage properties dialog, select a retention period option to specify when documents or items are set to expire. Do one of the following:

    • To set the expiration date based on a date property, in the Event section click This stage is based off a date property on the item, and then select the document or item action (for example, Created or Modified) and the increment of time after this action (for example, the number of days, months, or years) when you want the item to expire.

    • To use a custom retention formula to determine expiration, click Set by a custom retention formula installed on this server.

      Note: This option is only available if a custom formula has been set up by your administrator.

    • Under Action, specify what you want to happen when the document or item expires. To enable a specific action to happen to the document or item (such as deletion), select an action from the list.

  8. The Start a workflow option is available only if you are defining a policy for a list, library, or content type that already has a workflow associated with it. You will then be given a choice of workflows to choose from.

  9. In the Recurrence section, select Repeat this stage’s action…and enter how often you want the action to reoccur.

    Note: This option is only available if the action you selected can be repeated. For example, you cannot set recurrence for the action Permanently Delete.

  10. Click OK.

If information management policies have already been created for your site as site collection policies, you can apply one of the policies to a content type. By doing this, you can apply the same policy to multiple content types in a site collection that do not share the same parent content type.

Note: If you want to apply policies to multiple content types in a site collection, and you have a Managed Metadata Service configured, you can use Content Type Publishing to publish out information management polices to multiple site collections. See Apply a policy to content types across site collections in this article for more information.

  1. Navigate to the list or library that contains the content type to which you want to apply a policy.

  2. For a document library, click Settings Settings: update your profile, install software and connect it to the cloud, Library Settings.

    If you don't see these menu items, or for a list, click the Library or List tab in the ribbon, and then click Library Settings or List Settings.

  3. Under Permissions and Management, click Information management policy settings.

  4. Verify that the policy source is set to Content Types, and under Content Type Policies select the content type you want to apply the policy to.

  5. In the Specify the Policy section, click Use a site collection policy, and then select the policy that you want to apply from the list.

    Note: If the Use a site collection policy option is not available, no site collection policies have been defined for the site collection.

  6. Click OK.

    Important: If the list or library you are working with supports the management of multiple content types, under Content Types you can click the content type for which you want to specify an information management policy. This will take you directly to Step 5 above.

Share content types across site collections by using a Managed Metadata service application to set up content type publishing. Content type publishing helps you manage content and metadata consistently across your sites because content types can be created and updated centrally, and updates can be published out to multiple subscribing site collections or Web applications.

You can define an information management policy and then create a template from it to use as needed across multiple site collections. This method can be used if you want to have a backup of your information policies, or it can also be used as an alternate method to using content type publishing for applying one policy across site collections. You create a template or backup of the policy by exporting the policy from one site collection and then importing it to a saved location or to another site collection.

Important: If you using the export/import feature as a way to make a set of policy templates, keep in mind that a unique identifier exists in the policy .xml file. Because of this, you cannot import that policy into a site more than once without changing this unique identifier.

Export a policy

  1. In the site collection where the policy resides, go to Settings Office 365 Settings button, Site Settings.

  2. On the Site Settings page, under the Site Collection Administration section, click Site collection policies.

  3. Click the policy you want to export, scroll to the bottom of the policy, and then click Export.

  4. At the prompt to save or open the file, click Save, and then select a location to save the file to. Be sure to select a location that is available to the site collections that are importing the policy.

  5. When the Download Complete dialog is displayed, click Close.

Import a policy to a different site collection

Importing an information management policy enables you to apply it to multiple content types at the site or list level within any given site collection. The benefits of doing this are twofold: you don’t have to re-define and apply the policy on each content type, and you can more easily manage policy modifications by making changes to the policy in just one place.

  1. On the home page of the site collection to which you want to apply the policy, go to Settings Office 365 Settings button, Site Settings.

  2. In the Site Collection Administration section, click Site collection policies.

  3. On the Site Collection Policies page, click Import, and then click Browse to find the XML file for the policy.

  4. Select the XML file in which the policy has been saved, and then click Open.

  5. On the Import a Site Collection Policy page, click Import to add the policy to the site collection.

Your imported policy can now be applied to one or many content types at the site or list level. See Apply a site collection policy to a content type earlier in this article.

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