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Mastering Office 365 Administration
Mastering Office 365 Administration

Mastering Office 365 Administration: A complete and comprehensive guide to Office 365 Administration - manage users, domains, licenses, and much more

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Profile Icon Rogers Profile Icon Hall Profile Icon Carpe Profile Icon Nikkia Carter
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€32.99
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Paperback May 2018 532 pages 1st Edition
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Arrow left icon
Profile Icon Rogers Profile Icon Hall Profile Icon Carpe Profile Icon Nikkia Carter
Arrow right icon
€32.99
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Half star icon Empty star icon 3.3 (9 Ratings)
Paperback May 2018 532 pages 1st Edition
eBook
€17.99 €26.99
Paperback
€32.99
Subscription
Free Trial
Renews at €18.99p/m
eBook
€17.99 €26.99
Paperback
€32.99
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Free Trial
Renews at €18.99p/m

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Mastering Office 365 Administration

The Office 365 Administration Portal

While there's more than one way to perform most administrative functions in Office 365, the majority of administrators will find that most tasks can be performed conveniently and easily by using the Office 365 administration portal. In this chapter, we're going to go through the different parts of the main portal, and very briefly touch on the functions of the individual administration sites accessible from the portal, since most of those are covered in other parts of this book.

The following topics will be covered in this chapter:

  • The dashboard
  • The left sidebar's navigation
  • Administrative portals for individual services

The dashboard

You can access the administration portal from any Office 365 site, including the main site at https://portal.office.com, by clicking on the apps icon in the top-left corner that looks like a tic-tac-toe board to get your list of apps, and then selecting Admin. But if you are going to be visiting the portal a lot, which is normal for anyone who has Office 365 administration as one of their general job duties, you might want to bookmark it directly. The direct link for it is https://portal.office.com/adminportal. However you choose to get there, the first thing you're going to see is the Office 365 administration dashboard.

Clicking on the apps icon opens your list of apps and allows you to access the portal by clicking on Admin:

The Office 365 administration dashboard

You cannot access everything that you can do in the Office 365 administration portal through the dashboard. On the left-hand side, there's a side navigation bar with expandable headings that grants access to the rest of the portal's functionality. There's also a heading at the bottom of the side navigation that shows all of the main administrative centers for Office 365. Those administrative centers will be covered in their own separate chapters.

Dashboard components

Dashboard components aren't necessarily identical between tenants. For instance, the one in the preceding example has a section for Windows 10 Upgrade, because this particular dashboard belongs to a tenant that has purchased a Windows 10 subscription product. My company's portal doesn't have the Videos section, but rather, a Train yourself section that shows links for training for admins and for end users.

We'll go over the components that you'd generally expect to find in most tenant dashboards.

DirSync Status

You'll only see this dashboard component if you're using Active Directory (AD) synchronization, either to an Azure Active Directory or on-premises. This dashboard component quickly tells you when the last directory sync was done, when the last password sync was done, and if either of them had any errors. Clicking on this component takes you to the same place you'd get to via the side navigation bar if you clicked Health | Directory Sync Status.

Users

You'll probably use Users more often than any other component. The Users dashboard component takes you to the same place as Users | Active Users on the side navigation bar. There are also direct links for adding, deleting, and editing users, and resetting passwords.

We'll go into more detail on the functions available in the Active Users area when we cover the side navigation bar, and even more in Chapter 3Administering Azure Active Directory.

Billing

This component takes you directly to the Subscriptions link area under Billing | Subscriptions. It's important to note that the subscriptions you see here are the ones you've ordered directly from Microsoft. If you're purchasing Office 365 through a partner, you might not see anything here.

Some Office 365 customers purchase services through Microsoft, and others through the partnership Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) program. Some do both. If you buy any subscriptions from Microsoft, you'll see them under Billing, but any that you buy through a reseller will only appear in Licenses.

There are levels of administrator access that give you the ability to use the portal to maintain services, but not to interact with the financial end. If your level of administrator access doesn't give you billing access, you might not see this dashboard component.

Office software

It might seem strange to you that downloading Office software is an administrative component on the dashboard. Doesn't downloading your own software seem like something you do as a user, rather than as an administrator? The truth is, administrators are more likely to interact with the administration portal than they are with the Office 365 home page, where you'd normally find your software download link.

Clicking on the name of the component takes you to the my software download page, which you'd otherwise access via the Office 365 end user home page. It's not part of the administration portal at all at that point. But there are also links on the component for various administrative functions that have to do with Office software installation:

  • Install my software: This is, confusingly, not the link that takes you to a place to install your own software. It's actually a link for setting up manual deployment of software for the users in your company. If there are any issues with internet speed (or worse, metering) at the physical offices where your users work, we highly recommend following the instructions here to perform a manual deployment, as it lets you get away with performing the download oncerather than once per user. That's outside of the scope of this book, but Microsoft provides instructions right on the Manually deploy user software popup.
  • Share the download link: This opens an email in your default mail client, which has the link to the Office software download page in it.
  • Software download settings: Here, you can exert some control over what software your users can install for themselves. At one point, the options included Office 2013 products, but they've been discontinued for most customers as of February 2017:
    • For PC, you can choose to block or allow the Office suite as a whole, the extra products that don't come with the Office suite (Project and Visio), SharePoint Designer, and standalone Skype for Business. You can also choose whether your users get upgrades to Office every month or every 6 months.
    • For macOS, you can block or allow Office itself, additional Office applications that need separate downloads, and Skype for Business.
  • Troubleshoot installation: This opens a link on Microsoft's Office 365 Admin Help, covering how to deal with installations gone wrong.

Domains

This component takes you to the same place as Setup | Domains on the left-side navigation pane. The direct link options are Add a domain, Delete a domain, Edit a domain, and Check health, which checks on the DNS status of the domains you own.

It's a good idea, if you're not frequently looking at the advanced DNS options in your domain name provider, to occasionally check your DNS health. We've seen DNS entries that were placed when a domain was first migrated disappear from the clients' domain name provider, on occasion. This is particularly likely if your company has just migrated to a new provider or brought on a new website host, or has undergone other circumstances that could lead to changes to your domain. Office 365 is pretty robust, and in many cases, it will continue to work if domain name entries are wrong; but it won't necessarily work well.

More detailed information on how to configure DNS is covered in Chapter 3, Administering Azure Active Directory.

Support

The header of this component is not a link, and it won't do anything when you click on it. The options provided are New service request and View service requests, both of which can be accessed from the side navigation pane, under Support.

Windows 10 Upgrade

You'll see this component if your company has purchased any licenses for Windows 10 through the Windows 10 Enterprise E3/E5 subscription model. This is another component where the header itself doesn't go anywhere. The options within are Install Upgrade, Share the download link, Create installation media, and Troubleshoot installation. Except for Share the  download link, which creates an email the same way the similar function did under Office software, all of these link to locations on Microsoft's websites and will take you out of the administration portal.

The functions of this component can't be accessed through the side navigation pane.

Videos

This component displays quick links to Microsoft training videos for various functions in the administration portal. If your company is a Microsoft partner or has purchased training services from Microsoft, you might see this as a component that invites you to train yourself or your end users; if that's the case, the material that's normally under Videos will be under Train yourself. For most tenants, however, what you'll see is the Videos component.

Message center

This is, sadly, more important than you might realize. Microsoft has, in recent years, been very assertive about shutting down software products, applications, and options that some businesses have come to rely on. The Message center is where announcements of new products and downgrades or retirements of older products will appear, and if you don't stay abreast of what Microsoft is doing, you might find yourself blindsided. The Message center is also accessible under Health | Message center in the side navigation pane.

Service health

When you click on this component, you'll be taken to the same place you could access from Health | Service health. It'll show you all of the Office 365 services and their health statuses, with incidents and advisories. The component will also allow you to jump directly to lists of incidents or advisories, with links that show how many services may be affected by either type of warning. Checking this on a regular basis is a good way to stay on top of issues with Office 365 before your users complain.

Setup guides

This component contains wizards, deployment advisors, and setup guides for various Office 365 products. Clicking directly on the header takes you to an overview page containing all of the wizards and guides. There's an option in the component and in the overview page called Setup guidance, which provides even more detailed guidance on setting up your Office 365 services, and there are direct links to the various setup guides and wizards that you can scroll through from directly within the component.

You'd expect that such extensive setup guidance would be accessible from the sidebar navigation, perhaps under Setup, but as of the time of writing, the dashboard component seems to be the only way to access this.

Active users

This shows a small version of the Active users graph from Reports | Usage (which is where you get to if you click on the header of this component), so you can get a sense of your company's Office 365 usage at a glance. The usage reports that you'll see upon clicking it show more detailed breakdowns of the various activities.

Dashboard summary

We've gone through the dashboard components that most administrators will see, but it's important to remember that these components change depending on what products your company has purchased, and Microsoft is also constantly changing its Office 365 offerings, expanding what's available, and occasionally pruning back older services. The dashboard I see today might not be one hundred percent identical to the dashboard you will see by the time this book reaches your hands, because this dashboard is one of the first places Microsoft will add new features to the administration portal, even before they're added to the sidebar navigation pane.

Now, let's turn our attention to the left sidebar. There's a lot of functionality in this navigation tree that can't be accessed any other way, and we'll go into a bit more detail on some of the functions we already touched on when they were also reachable from the dashboard.

The left sidebar navigation menu

Like many modern left sidebar navigation trees, this menu will collapse down to a narrow column of icons if you click the left-pointing carat on the right side of the bar, but the default on most browsers is for it to be full-sized. On mobile, you might find that it defaults to being minimized. (It's also small enough to be almost unreadable on a phone. I'd recommend that if you're going to be using mobile devices to access administrative functions more than occasionally, you should probably get the Office 365 admin app, available for iOS, Android, and Windows mobile. But a discussion of that app is outside the scope of this book.)

Users

The options under Users are Active users, Contacts, Guest users, and Deleted users.

Active users

There's a lot you can do in Active users, and you're going to be doing a lot of it. Interacting with your active users—adding new ones, disabling terminated ones, resetting passwords, and adding and removing licenses—is the bulk of the work that most Office 365 administrators do:

The Active users panel

The top bar for Active users gives you the options to add a user, change which users you're viewing, search users, export your list of users to CSV, and other functions, available under the More drop-down menu.

Again, the options you see here may vary, depending on what products you have (you won't see an option for Directory synchronization if you're not syncing Office 365 to Active Directory, for instance).

The most common activities are adding a user and resetting passwords (particularly if you don't sync to Active Directory), but a dynamic, quickly changing company may also have a lot of setting licenses to do. We'll go over those functions and how to work with the views of your users (a vital skill, if you're a large company with a lot of users) in some detail. Most of the other functions are fairly self-explanatory.

We'll go over much of this information again in Chapter 3Administering Azure Active Directory, drilling down into PowerShell and some of its more obscure details.

Adding a user

To add a user, you'll enter the user's First name and Last name, and this will assemble the Display name by default. If you want the display name to be something different than the first and last names, change it after it populates by default; this won't affect the first or last names:

Add a new user

Most instances of Office 365 have more than one domain, but usually, one's the real domain, and one's domain.onmicrosoft.com, which hardly anyone uses. In most Office 365 tenants, the default domain has been set to whatever your company usually uses for public websites and the like. However, there might be circumstances where a user needs to be assigned to a different domain name. Enter the username, and use the drop-down menu to select the correct domain name if the default isn't the right one.

It's important to select a location if it hasn't prepopulated for you. You won't be able to add licensing until the location is set.

Whether you fill out the contact information or not is probably a matter of your company's policy. It won't affect a user's capabilities if you don't do it, but if you do, that information will be carried into Exchange and SharePoint, so it won't need to be reentered in the global address list or user profiles:

Password and role options

The options for setting the password include either autogenerating it and emailing it to the email you choose upon completion of the new user task, or creating it manually by yourself. For either option, you can force the user to change it when they sign-in, or allow them to continue to use it.

Most users will be assigned User (no administrator access), and most IT staff who need administrative access will probably be assigned Global administrator, but in a large organization, you may well want to use the Customized administrator setting to fine-tune which rights you grant.

Finally, you will need to set the licenses. You'll see a series of toggle switches that represent all of the licenses your company has available:

Assign licenses

The last toggle is Create user without product license. While Microsoft labels this as Not recommended, it might be a perfectly reasonable thing to do if you're not the one with the authority to purchase extra licenses; get the user created without a license, and they'll be able to get into the Office 365 portal and set their new password while you're waiting for the purchasing people to acquire the license. (This is also what you're likely to do if you need to create a service account.)

You must set one of the toggle switches, or it won't allow you to create the user. So, if there are no available licenses, use the one that creates the user without a license.

After you're done, you'll get a window telling you the user's password (if it was autogenerated) and offering to email that password to the default address (usually yours, if you're the primary Office 365 administrator.)

Using the user panel

You can reset passwords, set licenses and roles, disable or enable Office 365 sign-in, add new aliases and change which email address is primary, and perform many other functions, via the user panel.

To access the user panel, simply click on an active user, and it'll open to the right.

A lot of these functions are very similar to the equivalent that you'd perform for new users. For example, resetting a password is just like setting it for the first time for a new user:

The user panel

Assigning a license is just like assigning a license to a new user. But there are some functions that can be performed via the user panel that don't have an equivalent in the Add a user task:

  • Group memberships aren't something that you can assign in Add a user, because the mailbox needs to be provisioned before groups can be assigned. By clicking Edit under Group memberships in the user panel, you can add the user to a group, see the groups they're already in, and delete them from groups they are members of.
  • You can also change the sign-in settings. If you have an employee that's leaving the company at the end of the day, you can cut off their ability to sign in to Office 365 products without either deleting them or changing their password by simply setting their Sign-in status to Sign-in blocked. (There will be more on this topic in Chapter 3Administering Azure Active Directory.) This is especially useful if they're synchronized with Active Directory and it's handled by a different department, so you don't have the rights to change their password or delete them. You should note, though, that because this disables sign-in, it won't affect a user who is already signed in until that sign in expires. So it's not the best tool to use for the person who's being frog-marched out the door by security right now and might still be signed in on their personal tablet.
  • You can view the devices that a user has installed Office onto, and deactivate their installation. (Possibly a good idea to do to the home laptop of that employee in the previous example! However, you can only perform it on PC and macOS devices, not mobile ones, so you still can't get that tablet.) If an employee had a device stolen or destroyed, and they're at their five-device limit for Office installations, you can deactivate the lost device here, so that they can install it on their replacement device.
  • If you click the expanding carat for Mail Settings, you can directly work with mailbox permissions, email forwarding, litigation hold, auto replies, what apps the user is allowed to use to access email with, and whether they're in the global address list, without having to go into Exchange. (We'll go into what these options mean in more detail in Chapter 3Administering Azure Active Directory and Chapter 4, Administering Exchange Online – Essentials.) There's also a direct link to Exchange, which will take you straight into this user's Exchange properties.
  • The expanding carat for OneDrive Settings gives you the option to get access to the user's OneDrive, which is very helpful if they're out of the office or have left the company, and there's important business information that they are storing in there. You can also turn external sharing to the user's OneDrive (meaning that the user can share with users outside of your company) on or off.
  • You can kick off a one-time sign-out event that kicks the user out of every instance of Office 365 they're signed into. This is useful if you're changing their username, or in the case of that employee being frog-marched out the door in the example. Oddly, though this has nothing to do with OneDrive; it's stored under the OneDrive Settings carat.
  • The direct links at the bottom let you edit the user's Skype for Business properties, or go directly to their multi-factor authentication settings.

Views

Views are covered in detail in Chapter 3Administering Azure Active Directory, so we won't delve too deeply here. 

There's a default view that shows all users. If you have a small company, that might be fine. As soon as you have a large number of users (or accounts, such as service accounts that were assigned email addresses, external contacts who were invited as guest users, former employees, special-purpose administrator accounts, and so on), the list can get unwieldy. You may want to use one of the other default views, or create one of your own. See Chapter 3, Administering Azure Active Directory for more information on how to do this.

Import multiple users

Finally, the last function of the Active users page that we'll discuss is the Import multiple users function. If you have a moderately large organization and you are not planning to synchronize with AD, you might want to import a large number of users at the same time:

Import multiple users

You get to this feature by clicking the More drop-down menu at the top of Active users. Download a CSV file to use as a template (you can choose one with just the headers, or one with sample user data, to help you understand how to format your users), enter all of your users into it, upload with the Browse button, and then click Verify to make sure your formatting is correct. Click Next and follow the prompts. You'll be able to set a sign-in status and choose product licenses on the next page, and then send the results to yourself or someone else. (Note that the passwords handled this way will be in plain text, so you may want to require your users to change their passwords as soon as possible.)

Other functions of the Active users page are fairly self-explanatory, such as Delete a user or Export. Let's move on.

Contacts

Contacts are email addresses from outside of your organization that are recorded in Exchange so that users can find them in the global address list:

Contacts

It's easier to enter a contact than it is to enter a user—there are a lot fewer fields to fill out.

Display name and Email are the only required fields, although if you are going to use contacts heavily and need to be able to search for them with multiple criteria, you might want to fill in the other fields.

By default, contacts appear in the global address list, although you can exclude them with the Hide from my organization address list toggle. Contacts, as a concept, come from Microsoft Exchange, and are a means to include people from outside the company in distribution lists. They can also be included in Office 365 Groups, as of May 2017.

Guest users

Guest users, as a concept, are more closely related to SharePoint and OneDrive. A guest user has been granted access, via sharing, to a resource on SharePoint or OneDrive. They're only relevant if your organization allows external sharing.

A guest user will automatically be created if you create a sharing link for a specific email address within SharePoint or OneDrive. You can't create them here, but you can view and delete them.

Note that guest users don't have a presence in the global address list, and the same email address can't be both a contact and a guest user. If you have a need to give people who are frequently contacted by your users access to SharePoint and OneDrive while also having them as a global contact, and also having them on a list that automatically sends them and other people email, it might make more sense to use an Office 365 Group rather than a traditional distribution list, because members of those Groups can be both guest users and mail contacts at the same time.

Deleted users

Up to 30 days after you delete a user, they can be restored:

Deleted users

Use the Deleted users screen to see who has been deleted, export them if you need a CSV report, and restore them.

More vital information about the user recycle bin will be covered in Chapter 3Administering Azure Active Directory

Groups

While there's more functionality for working with groups in the Exchange Administration Center, many of the most common functions have been made available directly in the Office 365 administration portal, under Groups.

The two headings you'll find here are Groups (yes, really, it's the same word) and Shared mailboxes.

Groups

There are four types of groups within Office 365: distribution lists, security groups, mail-enabled security groups, and Office 365 lists. There are also shared mailboxes, but they have their own heading. We'll discuss the differences in Chapter 4, Administering Exchange Online – Essentials:

The Groups page

When you click on any group, a panel will open (usually to the right) displaying its properties, and you can edit many of the properties right there.

Distribution lists and mail-enabled security groups primarily live in Exchange, so their panels offer direct links to Exchange, to do further editing there, if desired.

Office 365 Groups and regular security groups are accessible via the Exchange administration site, but the Office 365 administration portal is equally competent at handling them, so Microsoft hasn't bothered including those links on their panels.

Within Office 365, you can edit:

  • The name, description, ownership, and membership of a distribution list, and whether external senders are allowed.
  • The name, description, ownership, and membership of a security group.
  • The name, description, ownership, and membership of a mail-enabled security group, and whether external senders are allowed.
  • The name, description, ownership, and membership of an Office 365 group, whether external senders are allowed, and whether senders should be automatically subscribed. It'll display your privacy settings—that is, is the group public or private—but you can't edit them after creating a group.

For a new group, there's a lot less functionality for creation than there is for editing, and particularly for the traditional types of groups; distribution, security, and mail-enabled security groups can't have owners or members defined during creation, and Office 365 Groups can only define the owner at creation, if you're using the administration portal.

Shared mailboxes

You can edit a lot of the properties of a shared mailbox by using the shared mailbox panel when you click on one of the shared mailboxes on this page:

The Shared mailboxes page

Using this panel, you can edit the name, email, email aliases, forwarding, auto-replies, litigation hold status, membership, and other settings, such as whether sent items get copied to the mailbox, whether the mailbox is in the global address list, and so on. You can also delete the mailbox, go directly to Exchange administration to work with the mailbox, or read about how to use Shared mailboxes in Outlook:

The shared mailbox panel

Again, there's a lot less functionality for actually creating mailboxes. You can set the name and the email address, and that's all. For all other properties, you'll need to wait for it to be created, and then edit it.

Resources

The next heading on the side navigation bar is Resources. The three subheadings are Rooms & equipment, Sites, and Public website.

Rooms and equipment

In Exchange, you can assign a room or a piece of equipment (for example, a projector) to a meeting by giving it an email address:

Rooms and equipment

To enter a room or equipment, you click Add and choose which one—Room or Equipment. You then fill out the name and the email address you're assigning to it (it would also be a good idea to fill in the capacity, location, and phone number).

Rooms can be abstract entities; my company, for instance, has no physical conference rooms, but we assign conferencing vendors, such as GoToMeeting and WebEx, as rooms.

The panel for editing a room allows you to edit the same things you set when you created the room, but it also allows you to set whether repeated meetings are allowed, whether automatic processing (inviting a room to a meeting automatically reserving the room without requiring human intervention) is allowed, and who's a delegate for the room (the person who receives the room's email; also, the person who can choose to reject a booking for the room). There's also a direct link to the settings in Exchange.

Sites

The Sites page displays all SharePoint site collections in the tenant (excluding individual OneDrive sites), and shows what type of sharing is allowed (that is, no external sharing, new and existing external users, or anonymous guest links allowed). You can edit the type of sharing here.

If you choose Add a site, you jump to the SharePoint management portal, to the page for creating a new site collection. That's outside the scope of this chapter, but is covered in Chapter 6Administering SharePoint Online.

Public website

This entry seems to be purely vestigial. Office 365 hasn't allowed new public websites to be created in several years, and as of this writing, Microsoft is planning to eliminate all the existing ones at the end of March 2018. Don't be surprised if, by the time you are able to buy this book, this entry has disappeared entirely.

Billing

In many organizations, the people who handle the billing aren't the site administrators; responsibilities are often divided between finance and IT departments. If that's your position, you'll probably only ever need to touch the subheadings Subscriptions and Licenses; and possibly, not even Subscriptions. Sometimes, though, particularly in small organizations, the person who manages Office 365 also manages the spending on it, so we'll cover the various parts.

Subscriptions

This page is more to provide information than to be a place with things that you can edit or act on. It'll show your active product subscriptions (and when you click on one, it'll tell you how many licenses you have for it), expired subscriptions, disabled subscriptions, and deprovisioned subscriptions:

The Subscriptions page

Expired subscriptions will have run out 30 days ago (or less), and all of the data in them is still accessible; disabled subscriptions will have run out between 31 and 90 days ago, and the data in them can be accessed by an administrator, but not by the user. Deprovisioned subscriptions have had their data deleted. Often, a free trial your company might have used at one point will show up as a deprovisioned subscription.

You can add a subscription here. Clicking on Add subscriptions takes you to the Purchase services page.

Bills

If your company purchases directly from Microsoft, you'll see the invoices for your services on this page. You can use the drop-down menu to access This month, Last month, the Past 3 months, Past 6 months, Past year, and Specify date range quickly. If you want more detailed breakdowns or to view individual invoices prior to the last month, click on View details. You can also view the invoices as PDFs:

Bills page

If you purchase your Office 365 from a Microsoft partner through the CSP program, another reseller, or through a specialty program (for example, there is special handling for nonprofits, as well as annual purchases through MS Open), you will not see anything here. The Bills page only shows Microsoft invoices.

Licenses

If you purchase your licenses directly from Microsoft, your Licenses page will show your products, the number of valid licenses you have for each product, the number of expired licenses (this includes disabled licenses, but not necessarily deprovisioned ones), and the number of licenses assigned, with a prompt to assign licenses if you have unassigned ones, or unassign licenses if you don't have enough. There will also be a link for each product, to allow you to buy more:

Licenses page

If you purchase through a CSP partner or another distribution program, you won't see the prompts to assign, unassign, or buy now. Your distributor or Microsoft partner handles that; you should contact them for more licenses. Instead, you may see a link directing you to contact information for your Microsoft partner.

Purchase services

Even if you generally purchase your licenses through a CSP partner or reseller, Microsoft will still offer you the chance to buy products directly from them on this site.

Believe us when we say that this creates no end of opportunities for confusion.

Avoid doing this. If your company's buying through a distributor or CSP, you are probably getting a better deal than what Microsoft offers directly. They've actually rigged the incentives so that distributors can offer a better deal than they do, because they'd rather that partners and distributors do the selling; Microsoft isn't famous for its keen interest in support and customer service for large numbers of individual consumers and small business users:

Purchase services page

Of course, if you are purchasing directly from Microsoft, there's no reason not to use this site to purchase products, as long as whoever authorizes spending in your company has given you the OK.

Each carat by a suite listing (such as Small Business Suite, Enterprise Suite, Dynamics 365 Suite, and Other plans) expands so that you can see the full listing of all the products for sale in that category. Most products require an annual commitment if you're buying from Microsoft, so be sure you've got funding secured for a full year.

Billing notifications

Regardless of whether your tenant shows invoices to view (meaning that you purchase some services directly from Microsoft) or not, you'll have a list on this page of everyone that's authorized to receive billing statements. Whether the billing statements will be directly attached to the emails or not is a switch you can toggle On and Off:

Billing notifications page

You cannot directly add to this list; it's a list of all global and billing administrators, and any custom administrator that contains billing administration rights. However, by clicking on a user in this list, you can change what administration rights they have, which can effectively delete them from the list if you downgrade their rights.

Support

There are two styles of Support screen that you might see, depending on if Microsoft has rolled out their newer Support UI to your company or not. In one, clicking on New service request or View service requests takes you to a separate page; in the other, you get a right-side pop-out panel, like all of the other pop-out panels you've encountered thus far. We'll touch on both, since how long it will take Microsoft to decommission the older version fully is not easily predictable.

Customer lockbox request

The Customer Lockbox feature comes with an Office 365 E5 plan automatically, and can be purchased as an add-on to any Enterprise plan. If your company has no such plans, you can safely skip this section. (However, this is one among many reasons that we recommend that every Office 365 customer purchase at least one E3 plan.)

When Microsoft support engineers answer service requests, they sometimes need to access your company's data. Without the Customer Lockbox feature, they will access what they need as they need it, and will relinquish access after they're done; but you, the customer, will have no control of or knowledge of their access. With the lockbox feature, you receive an email telling you there's a customer lockbox request, and you log in to the page to approve or deny the request.

The Customer Lockbox feature, if your tenant has a license that gives you access to it, can be turned on and off in Security & privacy, under Settings. More on that will follow.

Settings

The Settings page covers a variety of different functions that apply to your organization and don't fit particularly well in any of the other subsections.

The Services & add-ins page

The Services & add-ins page will show you a long, long list of various services and add-ins that an Office 365 administrator can activate or administer from this page. It's outside the scope of this chapter to go over them all; some will be covered in more detail in Chapter 13, Administering PowerApps, Flow, Stream, and Forms:

Services & add-ins

In the top-left corner, there's a button for uploading an add-in, which could be something purchased from a third party or created by developers in your company. The add-ins that you can deploy here are Office web add-ins that you can globally deploy for all users of Word, Excel, Outlook, and/or PowerPoint, in your company.

The Security & privacy settings

This is the page you use to set your Office 365 Password policy (options include the days before passwords expire and the number of days before a user is notified of imminent password expiration), the Sharing settings (whether your users can add guest users—with this setting off, users cannot share with external users from OneDrive or SharePoint), and self-service password reset:

The Security & privacy settings

If your company has the Customer Lockbox feature, this is also where you can turn it on or off.

DirSync errors

The DirSync errors report shows all objects that are experiencing a conflict in DirSync. In our experience, many of these errors are false alarms, or at least not particularly serious. However, keep in mind that all high-level admins will get emails alerting them to their (continued) existence. These issues are caused when properties that are supposed to be unique—for example, the UserPrincipalName—are assigned to more than one record. A common cause of this would be the existence of a mail contact within a distribution group with the same email as a guest user. Clicking on the object in error will give you more details on how to resolve the error.

Organization profile

Here is where you keep information about your company, including the email address of the technical contact, up to date. In small companies, it's often the case that the CEO or owner of the company assigned themselves as the technical contact when the Office 365 tenant was created, and later, they ended up flooded with error messages that clogged their inbox and should have been going to IT, anyway. You can fix that issue here:

The Organization profile page

There are other settings that affect your organization here. You can decide what the release schedule for your company will be: Will you get the new Microsoft releases of Office 365 updates as soon as they come out? Will you get them when Microsoft pushes them out to everyone? Or, will you choose a few users to bravely go where no user has gone before, so that they can break what no one has broken before, and advise everyone else accordingly?

There are settings here for managing custom themes, custom tiles, and custom help desk information, as well, and you can find out what continent your data centers are on.

Partner relationships

If you purchase Office 365 from Microsoft and you don't have any Microsoft partners that you're working with, this page will be blank. Distributors, CSPs, partners of record, and other Microsoft partners that you may have granted delegated administration privileges to, will be listed here:

The Partner relationships page

You can look up your Microsoft partner's phone number and email address. If, for some reason, you need to move on, you can remove them from delegated administration access.

Setup

There are actually many more setup-related pages available than Microsoft makes available in the Setup heading of the sidebar navigation. It might be that Microsoft will eventually make those available in the sidebar, as well; as of right now, you can access the others through the dashboard component setup guides, discussed at the beginning of this chapter. The ones that you can access through the sidebar as of this writing are Products, Domains, and Data migration.

Products

The Products page is actually very similar to the Licenses page, but much more user-friendly and attractive. It displays the products your company is subscribed to, with icons showing what applications those products entitle you to. (Sometimes, the same application has multiple licensed products that can apply to it; for example, Audio Conferencing and Domestic Calling Plan both apply to Skype for Business. And many products offer multiple applications within; any Office plan that includes software will include Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook, for example.):

The Products page

As with the Licenses page, it'll show you how many licenses you have, how many are free to be used, and what their status is, and will give you the opportunity to assign licenses if some are free, or buy more if none are. Disabled and deprovisioned products won't show in this view. Note that Buy more just takes you to the Subscriptions page and Assign licenses takes you to Active users.

Domains

For most companies, you're only likely to engage with the initial setup of domains once or twice, and if you're coming on board to administer an existing Office 365 site that's already been set up with the company domain, you might never need to touch this page.

Because having a domain is very important to how your users are provisioned, we'll cover setting up a domain in detail in Chapter 3, Administering Azure Active Directory.

Data migration

The Data migration page shows various common email providers that you might be migrating data from, as well as giving you a convenient link for uploading a PST file.

There are also many guides of various types for onboarding onto and migrating to various Office 365 services, such as SharePoint, Teams, OneDrive, and so on, and detailed instructions for migrating from Gmail.

If this is your very first experience with Office 365, quite probably, you'll want to skip the extra helping of antacids and get the assistance of a Microsoft partner to help you make the switch. Microsoft partners will bring the experience of many different migrations for many types of organizations, and will have the tools and processes needed to make your transition to Office 365 a smooth one.

Reports

The reports that are available here are Usage and, under the heading Security & compliance, Rules and DLP (DLP stands for data loss prevention) reports. The more detailed security and compliance reports, such as protection and auditing, have moved to other areas, and we'll cover them in later chapters.

Usage

The Usage reports show an overview of the usage of some of the most important online components of Office 365 (such as Exchange, OneDrive, SharePoint, and so on) for 7 days, 30 days, 90 days, or 180 days, followed by detailed bar charts of various types of activities within those components (for example, the charts for Exchange track messages sent, received, and read, separately):

Usage reports page

These are the effective ways to track user adoption and see if there are any issues that need addressing. (If there's very little content on your company's main SharePoint team site, and yet usage and the number of files are unusually high, there may be a site collection that someone else created and is using that isn't being tracked by your centralized governance, for instance.)

The Security & compliance option

The protection reports that were at one point under this heading have moved to the Security & Compliance center, and will be discussed in Chapter 8Understanding Security and Compliance. The auditing reports have moved to the Exchange administration center, and will be discussed in Chapter 4, Administering Exchange Online – Essentials. What's left are reports on Rules and the DLP policies:

The Security & compliance page

Rules are created in Exchange, and the DLP policies are created in the Security & Compliance center, so they will be discussed in more detail in the future chapters mentioned in the preceding paragraph. The reports are on the number of rule and DLP policy matches that have passed through your Office 365 systems within 7, 14, or 30 days, or a custom date range.

Health

The Health component is somewhat unusual, in that all of its subheadings are components of the dashboard, as well, so we have already covered the entire section in the preceding material.

Administrative portals for individual services

Under all of the components within the administration portal, there are a number of additional portals for administering specific services, under the expandable heading Admin centers:

Admin centers

It's outside the scope of this chapter to go into any detail regarding those administrative centers; most are covered within their own chapters. (Note that this screenshot comes from a tenant which also has Dynamics 365 and Intune; neither of those are within the scope of this book, as neither are technically a part of Office 365. Intune is part of Windows Azure, and Dynamics 365 is its own separate product. Azure AD, despite the name, is part of Office 365, as well as Azure.)

Summary

In this chapter, we went over all of the components of the Office 365 administration portal, demonstrating what you can do with these components, and, in many cases, why you would want to use them. We drilled down into the detailed functionality of the most commonly used components. We also briefly touched on the various other administration centers that one can access via this portal, and listed the chapters in which you can expect to find more detailed information about those specific portals.

One thing that we have not done is discuss performing administrative tasks with PowerShell. Many of the functions that can be performed on this portal can also be done in PowerShell. A detailed description of how to use PowerShell to administer every possible Office 365 function is outside the scope of this book, but the next chapter will explain how to connect to Office 365 using PowerShell, and will give a general overview of the functionality that PowerShell covers.

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Key benefits

  • •Perform common to advanced-level management and administrative tasks for your organization with Office 365
  • •Become an Office 365 generalist who can work with the entire stack—not just specific products
  • •An advanced-level guide that will teach you to implement enterprise-level services into your organization, no matter the size of the business

Description

In today's world, every organization aims to migrate to the cloud in order to become more efficient by making full use of the latest technologies. Office 365 is your one-stop solution to making your organization reliable, scalable, and fast. This book will start with an overview of Office 365 components, and help you learn how to use the administration portal, and perform basic administration. It then goes on to cover common management tasks, such as managing users, admin roles, groups, securing Office 365, and enforcing compliance. In the next set of chapters, you will learn about topics including managing Skype for Business Online, Yammer, OneDrive for Business, and Microsoft Teams. In the final section of the book, you will learn how to carry out reporting and monitor Office 365 service health. By the end of this book, you will be able to implement enterprise-level services with Office 365 based on your organization's needs.

Who is this book for?

This book targets architects, sys admins, engineers, and administrators who are working with Office 365 and are responsible for configuring, implementing, and managing Office 365 in their organization. A prior knowledge of Office 365 and Exchange servers is mandatory.

What you will learn

  • • Understand the vast Office 365 feature set
  • • Understand how workloads and applications interact and integrate with each other
  • • Connect PowerShell to various Office 365 services and perform tasks
  • • Manage Skype for Business Online
  • • Get support and monitor Office 365 service health
  • • Manage and administer identities and groups efficiently
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Table of Contents

15 Chapters
The Office 365 Administration Portal Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Using PowerShell to Connect to Office 365 Services Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Administering Azure Active Directory Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Administering Exchange Online – Essentials Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Administering Exchange – Advanced Topics Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Administering SharePoint Online Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Office 365 Groups and Microsoft Teams Administration Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Understanding Security and Compliance Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Administering Skype for Business Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Administering Yammer Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Administering OneDrive for Business Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Power BI Administration Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Administering PowerApps, Flow, Stream, and Forms Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Usage Reporting Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Other Books You May Enjoy Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Customer reviews

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Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Half star icon Empty star icon 3.3
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4 star 44.4%
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Hairy BongoBanger May 29, 2021
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
It's a great book. You will learn everything to do withe cloud based apps from Microsoft. As a reader of this material, you will need to set yourself up with test accounts to get use to the functionality of M365 and Azure. I use this as a guide at my work place. It is worth buying.
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Ayman519 Sep 21, 2018
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Very nice and need to know information .Thanks
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Alisa Mar 01, 2019
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This book is really helpful way to start as an Office 365 Administration. It covers the basics and is easy to follow along with.
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Karl Hershberger Jan 26, 2020
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Lots of helpful lessons. Written to be understandable and enjoyable. The only chapter that was difficult was the powershell. A good book for the money.
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Norm Mar 26, 2019
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Empty star icon 4
This book is a very useful overview of basic and some not-so-basic Office 365 administration features. But, it's not a deep dive and the reader is not going to be a "master" of Office 365 administration just by reading this book. Very good for someone who needs to know the basics - clearly written and well illustrated - and a good starting point. The inclusion of some basic PowerShell scripts is helpful, also.
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