

Alternatively, have Content Types with more than one visible property and the WSPPP will display correctly: Property value had to be set via the Office Backstage, otherwise the WSPPP throws a 'No SharePoint Properties Found' error:Ī work-around for this issue may be to set a default value on the required property, which may not be a good practice in general. In testing, I found some strange behaviour when the content type included a single, required property - specifically that the One item to note is that the WSPPP Add-In panel only displays once the document is saved, if it's clicked prior to save the 'Office Backstage' is displayed and you're able to set any properties and then save the document as required.
HOW TO ADD VALUES TO DOCUMENT PROPERTIES WORD UPDATE
The WSPPP Add-In will automatically work for content in SharePoint Online and OneDrive for Business libraries, but you need to be running the December 2017 Cumulative Update in SharePoint 20 on-premises environments. The Add-In is accessed via the ribbon in the View tab:

The Word SharePoint Properties Pane is currently rolling out to Word 2016 Click-to-Run, and is available to MSI-based (Volume License, etc) installations of Word 2016 by way of KB4011671. And for anyone attempting to increase the use of metadata in SharePoint knows, reducing the effort required is half the battle.

There are more than a few organizations that have held on to their old Office installations specifically to retain the DIP functionality - manipulating SharePoint metadata directly within the Office client application makes for a streamlined user experience. It's now called the Word SharePoint Properties Pane (WSPPP), is only available in Word 2016 - as the name would suggest - and is implemented by way of an Office Add-In. Originally announced by Chris McNulty in the Updating content management for the cloud in the Microsoft Tech Community, the Document Information Panel (DIP) returns to Word 2016 for SharePoint.
