Microsoft 365 Governance

Article

Why Governance Must Come Before Automation in Microsoft 365

Automation without governance introduces speed without control. In Microsoft 365, structure must come before automation for outcomes to remain reliable and scalable.

FlairMatrix Insights · March 2026 · 6 min read

Introduction

Automation is often seen as the next step in Microsoft 365 adoption.

Workflows are introduced.
Processes are automated.
AI capabilities are enabled.

The expectation is clear:

Efficiency will improve.
Manual effort will reduce.
Work will scale more easily.

But in many environments, the opposite happens.

Automation increases activity —
but reduces clarity.

The Problem Organisations Are Trying to Solve

Organisations adopt automation to address real challenges.

Manual processes take time.
Repetitive tasks slow teams down.
Information handling becomes inefficient.

Automation promises to resolve this.

And technically, it can.

But the focus is often on what automation can do —
not on whether the environment can support it.

Where It Goes Wrong

Automation is introduced into environments that are not structurally ready.

This means the underlying conditions that automation depends on are not stable.

Information is organised differently across sites and teams.
Ownership of content and processes is not clearly defined.
Permissions are adjusted locally based on immediate needs rather than consistent rules.

Automation is then layered on top of this.

Workflows are created.
Triggers are configured.
AI is enabled.

But the foundation remains inconsistent.

What Is Actually Happening

Automation does not fix structural issues.

It operates within them.

This means automation inherits the conditions of the environment it runs in — including inconsistencies in structure, ownership, and access.

If information is organised differently across similar contexts, automation behaves differently in each case.
If ownership is unclear, processes lack accountability and break over time.
If permissions vary, automation outcomes differ across users and locations.

The system becomes more active —
but less reliable.

Why This Happens

Automation depends on structure.

This means it requires predictable inputs, consistent organisation, and clearly defined boundaries to function reliably.

Automation logic is built on assumptions:

  • Information is stored in expected locations
  • Ownership is defined and maintained
  • Permissions follow a consistent model

When these conditions are not met, automation cannot behave consistently.

Each variation introduces exceptions.
Each exception requires adjustment.
Over time, complexity increases.

This is a widely observed pattern in Microsoft 365 environments, where governance is introduced after implementation rather than designed into the system.

What This Means in Practice

In poorly governed environments:

  • Workflows behave differently across similar scenarios
  • Information is routed incorrectly or inconsistently
  • Automation requires ongoing fixes and adjustments
  • Reuse becomes difficult across teams

Instead of reducing effort, automation introduces dependency.

Teams rely on automation that requires continuous maintenance.

The system becomes harder to manage as it grows.

Governance Defines the Foundation

Governance establishes the conditions required for automation to succeed.

This includes defining:

  • How information is structured across the environment
  • Who is responsible for maintaining it
  • How access is controlled and aligned with roles
  • How consistency is enforced over time

These are not additional controls.

They are the mechanisms that make automation reliable.

Without them, automation operates on unstable assumptions.

Automation Should Follow, Not Lead

Automation should not be the starting point.

It should follow structure.

This means:

  • Information architecture is defined
  • Ownership is clearly assigned
  • Permissions are aligned and controlled

Only then can automation be introduced in a way that is predictable and reusable.

In this sequence, automation becomes:

  • Consistent across contexts
  • Easier to maintain
  • Scalable across the organisation

Without this sequence, automation amplifies inconsistency.

Conclusion

Automation is powerful.

But it is not foundational.

In Microsoft 365 environments, governance must come first.

Because:

  • Structure defines how information behaves
  • Governance defines how that structure is controlled
  • Automation reflects the conditions it operates in

When governance leads, automation delivers value.

When it does not, automation accelerates instability.