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The newsroom reviewed a recent YouTube video produced by SharePoint Maven Inc that demonstrates how to build and apply term hierarchies in the SharePoint Term Store. In clear steps the presenter shows how to create parent and child terms, tag documents, and configure the display so users see the full path of each term. Consequently, the video aims to help administrators and content managers reduce confusion when multiple levels of metadata are in use. Importantly, the video also flags a few limitations to expect when filtering by parent terms.
The video follows a concise structure with timestamps for each major action, such as defining terms, creating a managed metadata column, and configuring the display to show Term + Parent. Therefore, viewers can jump to the exact section they need, which saves time during implementation. Moreover, the author pairs demonstrations with practical advice on when to prefer managed metadata over simple Choice columns. This makes the material accessible for both newcomers and experienced SharePoint stewards.
First, the presenter opens the Term Store and shows how to create a term set and then add child terms to build a hierarchy. Next, they create a managed metadata column in a document library and tag items using the subterms to illustrate how metadata flows into content. Then, the video explains how to change the column’s display to show the full path (term plus parents), which can significantly reduce ambiguity for end users. As a result, the demonstration gives a practical, step-by-step guide that teams can follow in their own environments.
Additionally, the video includes a short segment on tagging multiple items and verifying that the tags appear consistently across lists and libraries. Consequently, administrators can see immediate effects on search and filtering behavior when terms are applied correctly. The demonstration also highlights the updated interface and performance improvements that make handling larger taxonomies more feasible today. Thus, the how-to sections balance clarity with actionable procedures.
Using a hierarchical taxonomy brings clear benefits: it improves organization, supports consistent tagging, and enhances search and filter precision. For example, parent-child relationships let users filter broadly or drill down to specific subtopics, which improves discovery across large content collections. However, there are tradeoffs to consider, such as the additional governance and design effort required to build a useful taxonomy. Therefore, teams must weigh the upfront cost of planning and maintaining a hierarchy against the long-term gains in findability and consistency.
Moreover, the video points out that managed metadata scales better than ad-hoc approaches, with recent changes increasing supported terms significantly and improving performance. Still, deeper hierarchies can complicate filtering and make the user interface busier, which may confuse some end users. In practice, organizations should balance depth and breadth when designing taxonomies to avoid overly complex structures that hinder usability. Consequently, a pragmatic approach often mixes controlled vocabularies for core fields with simpler choices where appropriate.
One key challenge highlighted in the video is governance: who can add terms, how terms are approved, and how changes propagate across sites. Without clear policies, taxonomies can drift and lose effectiveness, which undermines the goal of consistent metadata. Furthermore, the video notes specific technical limitations such as how filters behave with parent terms and where display options may not fully meet user expectations. Thus, administrators must test scenarios and document known constraints before rolling out a taxonomy widely.
Training also emerges as a practical hurdle because end users must understand when to tag with a child term versus a parent term, and why the full path might appear in columns. Therefore, the author recommends configuring the display to show Term + Parent in many cases to reduce ambiguity and improve adoption. Ongoing maintenance matters too, since mergers, renaming, or reclassification require planned updates to the term store and communication to affected teams. As a result, successful deployments combine technical setup with governance, training, and regular reviews.
Overall, the video by SharePoint Maven Inc offers a compact, practical guide to building and applying term hierarchies in SharePoint, and it balances clear instruction with candid notes on limitations. For organizations considering this approach, the video supports the case for managed metadata when consistency, scale, and searchability matter most. However, teams should plan taxonomy design carefully, limit unnecessary depth, and establish governance to avoid drift and user confusion.
Finally, we advise readers to follow the video’s stepwise demonstrations in a test site before committing changes to production. This allows teams to validate filtering behavior, the appearance of the managed metadata column, and the impact on search results. In short, the video is a useful resource that pairs practical demos with sensible warnings, and it can help SharePoint teams set up cleaner, more maintainable metadata systems when combined with governance and user training.
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