Microsoft Teams For Dummies. Rosemarie Withee

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Microsoft Teams For Dummies - Rosemarie Withee


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the requested information and walk through the setup wizard to get up and running with Office 365.Note that you can use your own name as a business name and choose that your business size is 1 person. Next, you will be asked to choose a domain name that is <your choice>.onmicrosoft.com. This is your Office 365 domain. In this example, I chose teamsfd.onmicrosoft.com for the domain. You can always add a custom domain later down the road if you prefer. For example, I might connect teamsfordummies.com to our Office 365 account and get email there, too.Once you have filled out the information, your free trial will be created, as shown in Figure 1-7. This can take a few minutes, so be patient.FIGURE 1-6: Choosing an Office 365 Business plan.FIGURE 1-7: The Office 365 page creating your trial and welcoming you.

      6 Click the Get Started button.A tutorial walks you through adding a domain and additional users. Once you walk through the setup, you are presented with your Office 365 dashboard where you see a quick tutorial. After the tutorial you are presented with the Office 365 main landing page, as shown in Figure 1-8.Congratulations! You are now up and running with Office 365 and Microsoft Teams.

Snapshot of the main Office 365 landing page.

      FIGURE 1-8: The main Office 365 landing page.

      

You can always get back to your Office 365 dashboard by opening your web browser and going to www.office.com and logging in with the username and password you created.

      For more information on using Office 365, check out Office 365 For Dummies, 3rd Edition (Wiley).

Snapshot of using Microsoft Word from within Teams.

      FIGURE 1-9: Using Microsoft Word from within Teams.

Snapshot of some of the apps that integrate with Teams.

      FIGURE 1-10: Some of the apps that integrate with Teams.

      Don’t get me wrong; I still use Slack in my consulting business, since some of my clients only use Slack and don’t use Teams. In fact, I use other apps, too, such as Google Hangouts (https://hangouts.google.com) and Zoom (https://zoom.us). It is this software diversity that results from my consulting that gives me confidence to contrast and compare these tools.

      Microsoft Teams is becoming the one app to rule them all in the Microsoft world. It has become the entry point for Office applications as well as other non-Microsoft software. This is the reason it has grown so quickly. If you are using Microsoft 365 or Office 365, you may find yourself using the integrated services through Teams instead of trying to remember how to use them independently.

      Throughout this book you will explore the concepts of Teams in detail, and keeping the terminology in Teams straight can be a challenge. For example, you will eventually find yourself inviting one of your teammates to your Teams team. Or asking what Teams team your coworker is talking about. Once you get used to it, the terminology will seem normal.

      To get a jump on the terms, here are some quick definitions:

       Teams: Use the term Teams to refer to the product itself.

       Team: A team (lowercased) is a group of users. You can specify settings for teams and have multiple teams within Microsoft Teams. For example, you might want to create a team for accounting, a team for legal, and another team for external contacts.

       Channel: A channel is a group chat within a team. A team can have multiple group chats with the idea being that you can create a chat for different topics.

       Thread: A thread is a specific topic of discussion within a channel. For example, one person might start a new thread in the channel and then others can reply to that thread. You can have multiple threads going in a channel at the same time.

       External/guest user: An external or guest user is a user that is not part of your organization. For example, you might be a consultant and need to communicate with the company’s accountant. You can invite that person as a guest user to your team.

      There are, of course, many more terms that you will become familiar with as you continue on your Teams journey, but these are the basic terms to get you started. Once you get familiar with the relationship between Teams, a team, a channel, and a thread, you have all the knowledge you need to dive in further and get productive.

      Navigating Microsoft Teams

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Understanding options for using Teams

      

Installing the Teams app

      

Becoming familiar with the Teams interface

      

Learning
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