IT Admins - Microsoft Teams deployment overview
Tip
Are you looking for information on how to install the Teams client on your PC or mobile device? Go here: Download Microsoft Teams.
There are several options for setting up Teams. To help you find the information you need, we've split up some articles into two audiences: Small business (fewer than 50 users) and Medium/large business (more than 50 users).
Tip
As a companion to this article, we recommend using the Microsoft Teams automated setup guide when signed in to the Microsoft 365 admin center. This guide will customize your experience based on your environment. To review best practices without signing in and activating automated setup features, go to the Microsoft 365 setup portal.
Start with a pilot rollout
If you're a larger organization, pilot Teams with a small group of early adopters so you can learn about Teams and start planning your org-wide deployment. Later, use the guidance on the Microsoft Teams Adoption site to help you roll out Teams across your organization.
We recommend rolling out Teams in stages, workload by workload, as your organization is ready. You don't have to wait until you've completed one step before you move to the next. Some organizations might want to roll out all Teams features at once, while others might prefer a phased approach. Here are the Teams workloads, in the order we recommend rolling them out:
If you have a medium or large organization, use Advisor for Teams to help you roll out Microsoft Teams to help you plan the rollout of these workloads across your organization. The Advisor uses Teams itself to create planning tasks and assign them to owners, share documents, and enable discussions amongst your deployment team.
See these additional resources to help you get started:
Section | Description |
---|---|
Small business setup | This article guides smaller businesses through setting up Teams. Small business might want all the core features of Teams (such as chat, teams, channels, meetings, and phone support), but don't need to plan for multiple office locations, rolling out Teams to large numbers of users, and so on. |
Enterprise setup | This article guides larger business through setting up Teams in situations where network planning, lifecycle management, and wide-scale adoption, are critical factors to successful deployment. This article also helps you understand the requirements for audio and video conferencing, and configuring Phone System and PSTN connectivity. |
Deploy Team clients | This article provides instructions for setting up the new Teams client in your organization. |
Teams training | This article provides training materials for end-users who use the Teams clients, and also for organization admins who need to manage Teams across your organization. |
Upgrade or migrate from Skype for Business Server
If you're coming to Teams from Skype for Business Server, or if you need a hybrid configuration, you still want to follow the recommended path above for a Teams deployment, but first you need to do some extra planning. Start by reviewing the guidance in the table below that applies to your organization's profile.
Your organization's profile | Guidance |
---|---|
My organization is running Skype for Business Server, and I want to roll out Teams. | For a full-scale Teams rollout, first you need to configure hybrid connectivity between your on-premises environment and Microsoft 365. Start by reading Plan hybrid connectivity between Skype for Business Server and Microsoft 365 or Office 365. You should also review Upgrade to Teams. |
I don't have Skype for Business Server, but I do have an on-premises Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) solution. I want to roll out Teams, but I want to keep my on-premises PSTN solution. | Roll out Teams following the suggestions in this article. Then read Plan Direct Routing to learn about using Phone System Direct Routing to hook up your on-premises PSTN solution with Teams. |
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