Client and Vendor File Sharing Is Changing in Microsoft 365. Small Businesses Should Review Access Now
Many small businesses rely on Microsoft 365 to share files with clients, vendors, accountants, attorneys, contractors, and remote staff. A proposal may live in SharePoint. A spreadsheet may be shared through OneDrive. A vendor may use a link sent months ago.
That convenience is valuable, but it also means small changes in Microsoft 365 sharing can create real business friction if nobody is watching.
Microsoft has been updating how external sharing works in SharePoint and OneDrive. In practical terms, some outside users may need proper guest access instead of relying on older one-time passcode-style sharing. Microsoft documentation also warns that some external collaborators may see access denied if guest accounts are not in place.
This is not just an IT detail. It can affect whether the people outside your company can open the files they need.
A small business might notice problems such as:
The issue is partly convenience and partly control. File sharing should be easy enough for business to move, but organized enough that sensitive information does not float around unmanaged.
Many businesses do not have a formal process for reviewing shared files. Over time, links pile up. Former vendors still have access. Employees leave. Clients finish projects. Old OneDrive accounts remain unlicensed or forgotten.
That can create two problems at once: people who need files may get blocked, while people who no longer need files may still have access.
A better approach is to review external sharing before it becomes a support emergency.
Start with a simple file-sharing review:
The goal is not to make sharing difficult. The goal is to prevent confusion, lost time, and unnecessary exposure.
For example, an Orlando contractor sharing project documents with clients, a medical office sharing forms with an outside billing partner, or a professional services firm sharing reports with customers all need the same thing: reliable access with clear ownership.
When sharing is managed well, employees spend less time resending links and more time doing actual work.
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