Macro Systems Blog
All Your Business Needs to Know About Office 365
It would be difficult to find anyone who works on a computer who hasn’t utilized at least one of the applications in Microsoft Office. Office has been a staple for professionals, students, and home users for decades. Over the last few years, Microsoft has reinvented how businesses can collaboratively use Office to enhance productivity, security, and adhere to compliances.
Office 365
Microsoft Office is a line of Microsoft applications that have been around for almost three decades. The most common are Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, but Office has always been bundled with plenty of other applications with various tiers and license options for home users, students/educators, businesses, and enterprises. Every few years, your version of Office would become out of date, and you would need to buy new licenses of the newer version. A single license could cost hundreds of dollars, so upgrading licenses for your whole staff could feel like costly.
Office 365, which was first made available in 2011, has a subscription-based offering, and updates are applied when new versions are available. You no longer have the perpetual license, and you also don’t have to worry about Office becoming outdated, incompatible, or insecure software. Additionally, Office 365 adds tremendous valuable online services which we feel are underutilized by many Metro Washington, DC businesses.
OneDrive for Business
OneDrive is Microsoft’s cloud-storage and collaboration platform. Every user is given 1 TB of online storage. Files and folders can sync between OneDrive and the user’s desktop, so files can be accessed offline as well, but having access to documents from anywhere on any device is a huge advantage, especially in today’s mobile ecosystem.
One feature that is especially helpful is Files on Demand which allows the user to see their files and documents from within Windows in the same way they’d view files on their desktop or on network folders. This makes it much easier for users who sometimes struggle to acclimate to new systems.
OneDrive also empowers your users to share documents and larger files with just a few clicks. Need to share a presentation? Right-click the file and select Share, and you can send a document to a contact or create a link to allow others to view/edit the file.
OneDrive can also be accessed from mobile devices like smartphones and tablets.
Online and Mobile Versions of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint
If you have staff that sometimes needs to work remotely from home, coffee shops, airport lounges, hotels, client sites, or conferences, they can access files AND the applications that open them from virtually any device. Office 365 includes mobile applications, which are available on Google Play and Apple’s App Store. The apps are free to download, and users simply log in with their Office 365 account to use them and get access to their files.
If you aren’t comfortable with editing documents on your smartphones, you can also log in to OneDrive in any web browser and edit Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, and PowerPoint presentations.
Skype and Microsoft Teams
Skype has long been the de facto standard in online meetings, allowing you to hold HD video conferences with team members, partners, and customers. Microsoft Teams is Microsoft’s modern instant messaging tool, permitting organizations to set up groups for collaboration and communication.
SharePoint Online
SharePoint has long been Microsoft’s enterprise-driven collaboration tool. It hosts a huge suite of tools and features to permit file sharing, communication, and team management. Where OneDrive is more of a user-centric system, SharePoint is controlled from the top down, and administrators can restrict what gets shared.
Exchange Online
Microsoft’s Exchange has long been a leader in business-class email. Years ago, Exchange required having a server running onsite at your office to manage and send out email. This has always been a big expense for businesses, both with the upfront cost of the server, the management and maintenance, the licenses for Exchange, and having to upgrade and replace hardware every few years.
With Exchange Online, all of that is bundled under the Office 365 license. Users can access email from Outlook on the desktop, their web browser, or the Outlook app on smartphones. Shared mailboxes and other advanced features can be deployed, and Microsoft includes basic malware and spam filtering.
Want to Learn More?
These are just a few of the vital features found in Office 365. If your organization is still utilizing older solutions to manage email and documents, it is definitely worth looking into Office 365 to save money and add collaborative features for your staff.
Want to get started, and discuss migrating over to Office 365? Give Macro Systems a call at 703-359-9211.
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