Category positioning · Last reviewed May 2026

SharePoint enhancement, or a complete intranet product?

Quick answer: There are two architectural approaches to an intranet on Microsoft 365 today. You can enhance your own SharePoint with a webpart and design-system layer (Athena, ShortPoint), keeping control of your intranet structure. Or you can buy a complete intranet product (Powell, LiveTiles, intranet.ai) that wraps SharePoint with a vendor-defined experience. Both approaches are valid for different organisations. This guide explains the trade-offs honestly.

This is not a comparison page disguised as an explainer. We don't claim Athena is a like-for-like replacement for Powell or LiveTiles; it isn't, because we sit in a different architectural category. What we do claim is that for organisations evaluating intranet platforms, the architecture decision matters more than any individual product comparison. Make the architecture call first; then pick a vendor that fits.

The two architectures

Side by side, honestly.

Enhancement

You enhance your own SharePoint

The intranet is your SharePoint. The vendor provides premium webparts, themes, and design systems that you compose into pages. You decide site structure, navigation, and content patterns. If the vendor disappears, your pages, content, and structure remain in your M365 tenant; you lose the premium components but the intranet keeps running.

Best fit: organisations that want control, have or want to develop in-house SharePoint capability, value design-led admin work, and prefer per-tenant pricing.
Vendors in this category: Athena (Lewis Enright Limited), ShortPoint.
Complete intranet

You buy a vendor-defined intranet

The intranet is the vendor's product, deployed inside or alongside your SharePoint. The vendor provides a packaged experience with templates, structures, and an integrated administration layer. Your customisation happens within the vendor's framework. If the vendor goes EOL, the intranet experience may stop working (Valo, July 2025 worked example).

Best fit: organisations that want minimal architectural decisions, don't have SharePoint expertise in-house, prefer vendor-defined patterns, and accept per-user pricing.
Vendors in this category: Powell Software, LiveTiles Hub, intranet.ai, (formerly) Valo Intranet.
Trade-offs

The decisions that actually matter.

CapabilityEnhancement approachComplete intranet product
Who owns intranet architectureYou do: site structure, nav, pagesVendor defines; you customise within their framework
Time to first usable deploymentHours for first pages; depends on your design paceDays to weeks for vendor onboarding + configuration
Typical pricing modelPer tenant (flat)Per user (scales with headcount)
Sweet-spot organisation sizeAny, especially 50+ users on M365100-5,000 users with limited SharePoint expertise in-house
SharePoint expertise requiredLight: admin who can edit SharePoint pagesLower: vendor often handles deployment
Vendor lock-in riskLow: intranet runs on your SharePointHigher: intranet depends on vendor's continued operation
Data residencyInside your M365 tenantVaries: some vendors host externally
Customisation ceilingHigh: you control architecture and designBounded by vendor's framework
Renewal exposureWalk away, keep the intranetWalk away, lose the intranet
Choose a complete intranet product when

Packaged. Vendor-defined. Live next month.

Minimal architectural decisions wanted

You want a packaged experience with a vendor-defined navigation, structure, and content layout.

No SharePoint expertise on staff

You don't have a SharePoint admin and don't want to develop one.

Below ~500 users and per-user pricing is acceptable

Per-user pricing is comfortable at your headcount.

Comfortable with vendor-defined patterns

Navigation, site structure, and content layout the vendor's way is fine.

Speed-to-deploy outweighs long-term flexibility

Vendor onboarding gets you live faster than designing your own.

Choose a SharePoint enhancement tool when

Controlled. Composed. Yours.

Keep control of structure and design

You want the intranet to be visibly yours, designed by your team.

An admin who can edit SharePoint pages

Or you want to develop that capability.

Above ~50 users and per-tenant pricing wins

Flat per-tenant pricing materially undercuts per-user alternatives.

Long-term vendor independence matters

The Valo EOL outcome should not happen again.

Composition over configuration

Premium components you compose, not a packaged experience you configure within.

Honest

The honest case for the other side.

If enhancement fits

Two products serve different sub-segments.

ShortPoint

Design-element library with 80+ blocks and 100+ templates, designer-led page-building paradigm via Live Mode and Grid Mode page builders.

See our honest comparison →

Athena

19 production webparts (each a turnkey feature, not a raw block), bundled point-solution categories (org chart, knowledge base, policy management, internal job board, recognition, events, noticeboard), Athena Orchestrator wizard for guided deployment, per-tenant pricing at £290/month.

See everything included →

Both stay inside your SharePoint. The choice between them depends largely on whether you want a page-builder with rich design elements (ShortPoint) or purpose-built feature webparts (Athena).

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

SharePoint enhancement tools (Athena, ShortPoint) are webpart and design-system layers that add capability on top of the customer's existing SharePoint Online. The intranet remains the customer's SharePoint. Complete intranet products (Powell Software, LiveTiles Hub, Valo Intranet, intranet.ai) are SaaS platforms that either replace or wrap SharePoint with a vendor-controlled intranet layer. The intranet is the vendor's product, deployed to the customer.

If the enhancement path fits, Athena is built for it.

19 production webparts, bundled point-solution features, per-tenant pricing, and an intranet that stays yours. £290/month per tenant. 21-day free trial, no credit card.

Built by Lewis Enright Limited, United Kingdom. Last reviewed . Powell Software, LiveTiles, intranet.ai, Valo, ShortPoint, and other product names are trademarks of their respective owners. References describe publicly documented features and architectural categories at time of writing.
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