So, I volunteer at my church as the tech guy, and basically we use just the client apps, but I do have a question about licenses... I honestly don't know what they have for licenses, but I would like to know what the options are for something like a church, where 2 or 3 people in the pastor's family are the only ones basically, who use the applications, aside from on our projector PC... They all have some roll in the church, so it would be mostly church stuff they do with it, I'd reckon. I open an app and go to the account settings and I think it says microsoft 365, but I'm not sure, since we might not have been activated at that time, due to a reinstall. The legalities here, with so many plans, are very, VERY, murky, and I want to make sure we are covered if we ever have our licenses audited, or whatever process that might be. Oh, and as for workers, there are only 2 or 3 people who have paid positions, just to be clear
For a church, you might want to look at non-profit subscriptions as these will give you M365 licences for free or at a significant discount. I can't say whether your church will be eligible, but I do know of several in the UK that are using this. This link may help to get started with that: www.microsoft.com/nonprofits/eligibility A key point to remember is that M365 licences are for individual people. You are not allowed to share a PowerPoint licence between multiple users of a projector PC for example - each person would need their own licence. In practice if a lot of people share that role it might be easier for you to buy an Office 2019 licence for that computer instead of M365 so that anyone can use it, rather than requiring every person to have their own individual login and licence. You will need to check with whoever administers the programme wherever you're based, but last I asked here the guidance I was given was that a staff licence required the user to have a permanent role at the church (e.g. the pastor). People helping out temporarily (e.g. managing the projector on Sunday) could use a volunteer licence, which is still discounted, but not as heavily. You should direct more specific questions to whoever manages the non-profit programme in your area as the rules can vary by location and over time.
@@ProTechShow ok... We just use the one user account, but I'm not sure if it's accounts, it goes by, or actual people... Also, I don't know if location is a factor, but it's in the US... And as I said before, I don't know for sure what subscription type they have... Currently, I mean
If it's Microsoft 365 it is licensed per person (human being rather than user account). That's the first thing to look at from what you've said in terms of licensing compliance. Definitely check and see if you can use the non-profit programme in the US as it could save you quite a lot of money if you meet the eligibility criteria.
i have a question, I run a small family real estate office 8 people and right now I use my personal 365 accounts to manage all files and forms etc....1tb. yet I'm signed in on there devises ( APP ACCESS ) and they have there own File that they upload to and have access to other folders I made to Grab black forms out or look for old properties that have settled or check on files that are currently being worked on to see what's in the file if they need to grab the Agreement of sale and there not in the office - its very organized ... it works and I have my personal Locked Volt for all my stuff BUT.....its not ideal. I saw Family 365 up to 6 people there own account ... ok? but I need access to ALL the accounts as well so I can go in grab forms out or add forms. I saw 365 Small businesses and that looks ok but I'm not sure. If you can give me some advice ill appreciate it.
It sounds like the Business plans are probably a good fit. The Personal and Family subscriptions are not licensed for business use. I suggest signing up for a trial (check the video description for links) and taking a look at SharePoint & Teams. From what you've described you may find that SharePoint document libraries are a good fit for the way you're working. That way you have a lot more flexibility and control over permissions, document sharing, retention, etc. E.g. you could use retention policies to ensure files for old properties are retained (and can’t be deleted) for a minimum period if required. All the standard plans include email as well, so if you're paying for that elsewhere it's worth looking to move that across so you're not paying twice.
Better than every official explanation from Microsoft (video, documentation or website). I found your channel, and you cover many interesting topics. I'm looking forward for your future videos! Keep up the professional and good work!
So far this review as many have mentioned is spot on. I know it was last year but now I've subscribed so I can look at your other videos. I am hoping to find some other straight forward videos. Thanks for this easy to follow and clarity of the 2.
Another excellent, informative video that lays out the entire MS cloud and software packages in an easy to understand format. Microsoft should pay you for making it clear & concise!
Thank you for the comprehensive overview. A question for you, if you don't mind: some of the a la carte products in Office365 (PowerBI Pro, for example) and in Azure (Data Catalog, PowerBI Embedded) are not available to people with only personal subscriptions (i.e., Microsoft indicates that "a work or school account is required" to use these services). These applications are of course available for Enterprise accounts, but are they available to Small Business accounts? I assume any plan that has a check mark in your table under "Cloud Productivity Services" is probably eligible, but perhaps you can confirm. Thanks again for the nice video.
You should be fine with the Small Business tier. A fundamental difference between the personal and business-focused tiers is the business ones have an underlying Azure AD instance to manage user identities (that's what it means by "work or school account") and security. Most of the O/M365 services are dependent on Azure AD. If there's anything you want to test before committing, you can sign up for a free trial. Just pick the tenant name with care - whilst it doesn't really make any difference, you can't change it afterwards!
Ok question. I would like to get the family plan for 6 people. But will it work in different languages has we are bilingual (Swedish & English) so my wife can have it on her computer in her language and me in mine and the kids and have what they what? Also we have both Mac and Windows in the house. Or do we have to all choose just one language and one OS at the start?
When you download Office there should be a link that says something like "other install options". From that you can choose different languages. Whilst I haven't specifically installed the family plan, I assume it is the same as the others in that you have a limit on the number of installs that can be activated concurrently, but they can be any mixture of OS / language. There's a link in the video description that should let you sign up for a one month trial if you want to test it first.
thanks, I like how you explain it. My question what is the difference on a software level when you package office 365 software? Are the features missing when you package office business on a company that has e3 licences?
Thanks. Not sure if I've understood your question. Are you asking about deploying from the M365 Apps for Business install media, then using it with a subscription that includes Apps for Enterprise? I'm not sure I've ever tried, but Office can update from 2019 to 365 on the fly these days in many cases so given this is a smaller change I expect it would probably just switch to the Enterprise version when the person signs in or it checks for updates.
@@ProTechShow thank you for the reply. I will try to ask my question again. What is the end user missing out (features) when I deployed Microsoft 365 Apps for business to a user with Office 365 E3 licence?
Gotcha. I suspect the answer may be "nothing", because Apps for Business may well reconfigure itself to Apps for Enterprise after someone with an E3 licence signs into it, although I've not tested that. This page seems to have the full list of feature differences between the different Office editions. I'll link it rather than attempt to copy it here because it's a rather massive table! docs.microsoft.com/office365/servicedescriptions/office-applications-service-description/office-applications-service-description
i came across this very useful link when I was reviewing AWS vs Azure options. Looks like the plan for Microsoft is to monopolize market share under one roof again.
Great video, any chance of an update with the non-profit offerings, as that is also a minefield - Ended up with non-profit portal licenses and I cannot seem to find out what they can and cannot do as well we mixes of N3 and N5
Thanks! Most of them were named very similarly to those in the video last I checked, so the features should match. There is some complexity around volunteer/staff licensing though. I have a "tech for charities" video on my ideas list, although it's likely to be a few months before I get to it.
I have a personal subscription to OneDrive and want to upgrade to Business Basic plan, so I can use TEAMS. Is this an easy transfer? Will my OneDrive be unaffected?
When you set up the business plan (links in video description) you'll be creating a separate "work account" to log in with, so you'll end up with two OneDrives with different logins. It won't affect your original OneDrive, but it won't transfer tbe data, either. The easiest way to migrate would be to sync both to your computer then drag and drop the files from one to the other.
Thanks for the simple explanation. I would really appreciate if you clear my dilemma. I have seen you earlier videos as well and need an advice on my situation: I have a windows laptop and an apple iPad. I want an office product for my personal/home use on both my devices. Should I buy office 2019 or go with subscription model (please specify the subscription in which I can use it on both my devices) Also would your answer change if I say I'm a student. I'd appreciate if you give an elaborated reply. Thanking in anticipation.
If you're a student you might be able to get an Office 365 subscription for free. Depending on your school/university's licence agreement, that free subscription may cover you for the Office apps on up to 5 PC/Mac, plus mobile devices. If you have an email address associated with your school/university you can try signing up here: www.microsoft.com/education/products/office
@@ProTechShow thanks for the suggestion. What would you suggest for a person with similar needs but not a student? I'm sorry if I'm bothering too much. Thanks.
It depends on the size of your iPad. If you've got one of the smaller ones (10.1" or smaller screen) then it should work fine with the free Office apps. In that case the question is do you want a subscription (365) or one-off payment (2019) for your laptop? I've done the 365 Vs 2019 comparison here: th-cam.com/video/AFRbA43l9iU/w-d-xo.html. If your iPad's screen is larger than 10.1" then the Office apps will be downgraded to read-only unless you sign in with an Office 365 subscription that includes the client apps. Any of those subscriptions will allow you to use it on up to 5 Windows/Mac devices as well. If you need to edit on a larger iPad, then you're pretty much forced down the 365 route unless you want to pay twice.
@@ProTechShow thanks once again. Your insights really help. One last question. How does the office apps perform on an iPad and Mac OS in general. I have an iPad Air 3 and planning to get the Air 4 later this year. I mostly work on excel (heavy formulas with link between multiple Excel files) and PowerPoint. Do we get all the features and functions as on a windows pc? Since my iPad is more than 10.1", I believe office 2019 is out of the question (please advise) Thanks.
Barring the odd exception when I'm stuck, I only use the Windows version. The Mac version should be pretty close, but I don't believe it has full feature parity and I have heard it's a little less reliable than the Windows equivalent. The mobile versions are definitely limited compared to their desktop cousins. You could always sign up to a trial to test your scenario out? If you need to edit on a tablet >10.1" then you're going to need a 365 subscription. Given that will also cover your laptop, there's probably no point in buying 2019. That's assuming it's just you using the laptop... 365 is per-person, and 2019 can be per-device, so with shared devices it gets more complicated.
This video is useful along side ours. If the names just changed to Microsoft 365 without Business Premium, Business Essentials etc changing, it would have been simple to understand
Where I've seen most confusion is the fact that people already understand "Microsoft 365" to mean "Office 365 plus other services". They've renamed some "Office" plans to "Microsoft" and haven't included those services. In the small business tier in particular, quite a few people have incorrectly thought this meant they were getting additional security services as part of their existing subscription when in fact they're just getting a change of name.
Thanks! I don't have it uploaded anywhere other than this video I'm afraid. The easiest thing to do is probably to make the video full-screen, pause it at the point you want to copy, then take a screenshot. "Print Screen" (PrtScn) button on Windows will put it in your clipboard, or Windows + PrtScn will save it to your Pictures\Screenshots folder. On a Mac, Shift + Command + 3 should do it.
It is certainly confusing... It used to be that most of the M365 plans included Windows 10 Enterprise, but since they renamed them that's no longer true. Even so, Windows 10 Enterprise is an upgrade that assumes you already have Windows 10 Pro. I don't believe a full version of Windows 10 Pro has ever been included in any of the plans - it's assumed you got that with your computer. What you may have heard is that M365 Business Premium does include Windows 10 Pro upgrade rights. This lets you upgrade from Windows 7/8 Pro to Windows 10 Pro, although its usefulness is debatable as that was previously offered to anyone for free anyway. So, if you have Windows 7/8 Pro, and you missed the free upgrade, and you have M365 Business Premium (but not Standard), then you can use it to cover Windows 10 Pro on your existing computer.
This video is comparing the cloud services rather than the client apps. You may find this one useful to compare the subscription Vs perpetual versions of the apps themselves: th-cam.com/video/AFRbA43l9iU/w-d-xo.html If you literally only need Excel then you can buy it standalone from the Microsoft Store. It is much better value to buy the full bundle compared to buying each app separately, but if you only need the one app then standalone is a bit cheaper. If you want the full bundle of apps (Word, PowerPoint, etc.) then you're probably after M365 Apps for Business or Office 2019 (see linked video for more info). The "Small Business" link in this video's description should take you to a page with Apps for Business. You can find Excel standalone here: www.microsoft.com/en-gb/microsoft-365/p/excel/cfq7ttc0k7dx
That depends on the app. Some are available as standalone subscriptions, others are only available as part of a package, and some can be bought as an add-on to upgrade an existing package with some of the functionality of a higher-tier package. The packages are better value overall, but if you just need one app it may be cheaper to buy it standalone. E.g. Exchange Online Plan 1 (standalone) is £3.00, SharePoint Online Plan 1 (standalone) is £3.80. M365 Business Basic (package) is £3.80 and includes both SharePoint and Exchange Plans 1, but is limited to 300 users.
Best to go through your licensing partner as I haven't seen those sold directly (although if you Google it you will find some distributers listing them). The O365 variants are listed, though.
You'd think companies would start to simplify licensing and not have their own teams and customers sorting through unnecessary licensing/installation/configuration/policy complexities.
Tell me about it... Microsoft's own people don't understand it half the time. If I talk to 3 different people in their licensing team I expect to get at least 4 different answers!
My top tips for anyone thinking of using Microsoft/Office 365: th-cam.com/video/yioOE6mIo0w/w-d-xo.html
I’ve been in IT for going on 30-years. This is hands-down the clearest most cogent comparison of the plans ANYWHERE on the web. Thank you.
Thanks! 🙂
So, I volunteer at my church as the tech guy, and basically we use just the client apps, but I do have a question about licenses... I honestly don't know what they have for licenses, but I would like to know what the options are for something like a church, where 2 or 3 people in the pastor's family are the only ones basically, who use the applications, aside from on our projector PC... They all have some roll in the church, so it would be mostly church stuff they do with it, I'd reckon. I open an app and go to the account settings and I think it says microsoft 365, but I'm not sure, since we might not have been activated at that time, due to a reinstall. The legalities here, with so many plans, are very, VERY, murky, and I want to make sure we are covered if we ever have our licenses audited, or whatever process that might be. Oh, and as for workers, there are only 2 or 3 people who have paid positions, just to be clear
For a church, you might want to look at non-profit subscriptions as these will give you M365 licences for free or at a significant discount. I can't say whether your church will be eligible, but I do know of several in the UK that are using this. This link may help to get started with that: www.microsoft.com/nonprofits/eligibility
A key point to remember is that M365 licences are for individual people. You are not allowed to share a PowerPoint licence between multiple users of a projector PC for example - each person would need their own licence. In practice if a lot of people share that role it might be easier for you to buy an Office 2019 licence for that computer instead of M365 so that anyone can use it, rather than requiring every person to have their own individual login and licence.
You will need to check with whoever administers the programme wherever you're based, but last I asked here the guidance I was given was that a staff licence required the user to have a permanent role at the church (e.g. the pastor). People helping out temporarily (e.g. managing the projector on Sunday) could use a volunteer licence, which is still discounted, but not as heavily.
You should direct more specific questions to whoever manages the non-profit programme in your area as the rules can vary by location and over time.
@@ProTechShow ok... We just use the one user account, but I'm not sure if it's accounts, it goes by, or actual people... Also, I don't know if location is a factor, but it's in the US... And as I said before, I don't know for sure what subscription type they have... Currently, I mean
If it's Microsoft 365 it is licensed per person (human being rather than user account). That's the first thing to look at from what you've said in terms of licensing compliance. Definitely check and see if you can use the non-profit programme in the US as it could save you quite a lot of money if you meet the eligibility criteria.
Wish MS could explain it so clearly!
Me too. It would save a lot of work!
i have a question,
I run a small family real estate office 8 people and right now I use my personal 365 accounts to manage all files and forms etc....1tb. yet I'm signed in on there devises ( APP ACCESS ) and they have there own File that they upload to and have access to other folders I made to Grab black forms out or look for old properties that have settled or check on files that are currently being worked on to see what's in the file if they need to grab the Agreement of sale and there not in the office - its very organized ... it works and I have my personal Locked Volt for all my stuff BUT.....its not ideal. I saw Family 365 up to 6 people there own account ... ok? but I need access to ALL the accounts as well so I can go in grab forms out or add forms. I saw 365 Small businesses and that looks ok but I'm not sure. If you can give me some advice ill appreciate it.
It sounds like the Business plans are probably a good fit. The Personal and Family subscriptions are not licensed for business use. I suggest signing up for a trial (check the video description for links) and taking a look at SharePoint & Teams. From what you've described you may find that SharePoint document libraries are a good fit for the way you're working. That way you have a lot more flexibility and control over permissions, document sharing, retention, etc. E.g. you could use retention policies to ensure files for old properties are retained (and can’t be deleted) for a minimum period if required.
All the standard plans include email as well, so if you're paying for that elsewhere it's worth looking to move that across so you're not paying twice.
Better than every official explanation from Microsoft (video, documentation or website).
I found your channel, and you cover many interesting topics. I'm looking forward for your future videos!
Keep up the professional and good work!
Thanks! Glad it's useful. 🙂
So far this review as many have mentioned is spot on. I know it was last year but now I've subscribed so I can look at your other videos. I am hoping to find some other straight forward videos. Thanks for this easy to follow and clarity of the 2.
Glad it's still useful!
Microsoft 365 Business Basic plan is the best one from price to features.
Another excellent, informative video that lays out the entire MS cloud and software packages in an easy to understand format. Microsoft should pay you for making it clear & concise!
Thanks! If you want to suggest that to them... 😉
Yes, I 💯+1% agree. Even those who retail the license don't explain that. Thank you so much! :)
Thanks for the insights. It's really difficult to understand the differences, even working within IT... ;) Thumbs up.
I've spoken to Microsoft's partner team several times, and most of the time they don't understand it either!
Thank you for the comprehensive overview. A question for you, if you don't mind: some of the a la carte products in Office365 (PowerBI Pro, for example) and in Azure (Data Catalog, PowerBI Embedded) are not available to people with only personal subscriptions (i.e., Microsoft indicates that "a work or school account is required" to use these services). These applications are of course available for Enterprise accounts, but are they available to Small Business accounts? I assume any plan that has a check mark in your table under "Cloud Productivity Services" is probably eligible, but perhaps you can confirm. Thanks again for the nice video.
You should be fine with the Small Business tier. A fundamental difference between the personal and business-focused tiers is the business ones have an underlying Azure AD instance to manage user identities (that's what it means by "work or school account") and security. Most of the O/M365 services are dependent on Azure AD.
If there's anything you want to test before committing, you can sign up for a free trial. Just pick the tenant name with care - whilst it doesn't really make any difference, you can't change it afterwards!
@@ProTechShow Understood, I will try that. Thanks so much!
Ok question. I would like to get the family plan for 6 people. But will it work in different languages has we are bilingual (Swedish & English) so my wife can have it on her computer in her language and me in mine and the kids and have what they what? Also we have both Mac and Windows in the house. Or do we have to all choose just one language and one OS at the start?
When you download Office there should be a link that says something like "other install options". From that you can choose different languages.
Whilst I haven't specifically installed the family plan, I assume it is the same as the others in that you have a limit on the number of installs that can be activated concurrently, but they can be any mixture of OS / language.
There's a link in the video description that should let you sign up for a one month trial if you want to test it first.
thanks, I like how you explain it. My question what is the difference on a software level when you package office 365 software? Are the features missing when you package office business on a company that has e3 licences?
Thanks. Not sure if I've understood your question. Are you asking about deploying from the M365 Apps for Business install media, then using it with a subscription that includes Apps for Enterprise? I'm not sure I've ever tried, but Office can update from 2019 to 365 on the fly these days in many cases so given this is a smaller change I expect it would probably just switch to the Enterprise version when the person signs in or it checks for updates.
@@ProTechShow thank you for the reply. I will try to ask my question again. What is the end user missing out (features) when I deployed Microsoft 365 Apps for business to a user with Office 365 E3 licence?
Gotcha. I suspect the answer may be "nothing", because Apps for Business may well reconfigure itself to Apps for Enterprise after someone with an E3 licence signs into it, although I've not tested that. This page seems to have the full list of feature differences between the different Office editions. I'll link it rather than attempt to copy it here because it's a rather massive table!
docs.microsoft.com/office365/servicedescriptions/office-applications-service-description/office-applications-service-description
i came across this very useful link when I was reviewing AWS vs Azure options. Looks like the plan for Microsoft is to monopolize market share under one roof again.
That's pretty much how they work!
Great video, any chance of an update with the non-profit offerings, as that is also a minefield - Ended up with non-profit portal licenses and I cannot seem to find out what they can and cannot do as well we mixes of N3 and N5
Thanks! Most of them were named very similarly to those in the video last I checked, so the features should match. There is some complexity around volunteer/staff licensing though.
I have a "tech for charities" video on my ideas list, although it's likely to be a few months before I get to it.
Hi, does design ideas available for these two version?
That's a feature of PowerPoint, so it is included with any subscription that includes the client apps
I have a personal subscription to OneDrive and want to upgrade to Business Basic plan, so I can use TEAMS. Is this an easy transfer? Will my OneDrive be unaffected?
When you set up the business plan (links in video description) you'll be creating a separate "work account" to log in with, so you'll end up with two OneDrives with different logins.
It won't affect your original OneDrive, but it won't transfer tbe data, either. The easiest way to migrate would be to sync both to your computer then drag and drop the files from one to the other.
@@ProTechShow Thank you so much.
You are amazing- after watching a ton of videos- found yours to be the best. Just subscribed!
Thanks! Glad to have you. 🙂
Thanks for the simple explanation.
I would really appreciate if you clear my dilemma. I have seen you earlier videos as well and need an advice on my situation: I have a windows laptop and an apple iPad. I want an office product for my personal/home use on both my devices. Should I buy office 2019 or go with subscription model (please specify the subscription in which I can use it on both my devices)
Also would your answer change if I say I'm a student.
I'd appreciate if you give an elaborated reply.
Thanking in anticipation.
If you're a student you might be able to get an Office 365 subscription for free. Depending on your school/university's licence agreement, that free subscription may cover you for the Office apps on up to 5 PC/Mac, plus mobile devices.
If you have an email address associated with your school/university you can try signing up here: www.microsoft.com/education/products/office
@@ProTechShow thanks for the suggestion.
What would you suggest for a person with similar needs but not a student?
I'm sorry if I'm bothering too much.
Thanks.
It depends on the size of your iPad. If you've got one of the smaller ones (10.1" or smaller screen) then it should work fine with the free Office apps. In that case the question is do you want a subscription (365) or one-off payment (2019) for your laptop? I've done the 365 Vs 2019 comparison here: th-cam.com/video/AFRbA43l9iU/w-d-xo.html.
If your iPad's screen is larger than 10.1" then the Office apps will be downgraded to read-only unless you sign in with an Office 365 subscription that includes the client apps. Any of those subscriptions will allow you to use it on up to 5 Windows/Mac devices as well. If you need to edit on a larger iPad, then you're pretty much forced down the 365 route unless you want to pay twice.
@@ProTechShow thanks once again. Your insights really help.
One last question. How does the office apps perform on an iPad and Mac OS in general. I have an iPad Air 3 and planning to get the Air 4 later this year. I mostly work on excel (heavy formulas with link between multiple Excel files) and PowerPoint. Do we get all the features and functions as on a windows pc?
Since my iPad is more than 10.1", I believe office 2019 is out of the question (please advise)
Thanks.
Barring the odd exception when I'm stuck, I only use the Windows version. The Mac version should be pretty close, but I don't believe it has full feature parity and I have heard it's a little less reliable than the Windows equivalent. The mobile versions are definitely limited compared to their desktop cousins. You could always sign up to a trial to test your scenario out?
If you need to edit on a tablet >10.1" then you're going to need a 365 subscription. Given that will also cover your laptop, there's probably no point in buying 2019.
That's assuming it's just you using the laptop... 365 is per-person, and 2019 can be per-device, so with shared devices it gets more complicated.
This video is useful along side ours. If the names just changed to Microsoft 365 without Business Premium, Business Essentials etc changing, it would have been simple to understand
Where I've seen most confusion is the fact that people already understand "Microsoft 365" to mean "Office 365 plus other services". They've renamed some "Office" plans to "Microsoft" and haven't included those services. In the small business tier in particular, quite a few people have incorrectly thought this meant they were getting additional security services as part of their existing subscription when in fact they're just getting a change of name.
Awesome informative video.
Any way that you can share that image of the table of the subscriptions?
Thanks! I don't have it uploaded anywhere other than this video I'm afraid. The easiest thing to do is probably to make the video full-screen, pause it at the point you want to copy, then take a screenshot. "Print Screen" (PrtScn) button on Windows will put it in your clipboard, or Windows + PrtScn will save it to your Pictures\Screenshots folder. On a Mac, Shift + Command + 3 should do it.
Very nicely explained 👍🏻
Thanks 🙂
@@ProTechShow keep it up, more great tutorials and hacks 👍🏻
I am a bit confused, I thought that M365 Business Standard and Premium also include Windows 10 Pro?
It is certainly confusing... It used to be that most of the M365 plans included Windows 10 Enterprise, but since they renamed them that's no longer true. Even so, Windows 10 Enterprise is an upgrade that assumes you already have Windows 10 Pro. I don't believe a full version of Windows 10 Pro has ever been included in any of the plans - it's assumed you got that with your computer.
What you may have heard is that M365 Business Premium does include Windows 10 Pro upgrade rights. This lets you upgrade from Windows 7/8 Pro to Windows 10 Pro, although its usefulness is debatable as that was previously offered to anyone for free anyway. So, if you have Windows 7/8 Pro, and you missed the free upgrade, and you have M365 Business Premium (but not Standard), then you can use it to cover Windows 10 Pro on your existing computer.
I need only excel for my bussiness so which subscription should i use?
This video is comparing the cloud services rather than the client apps. You may find this one useful to compare the subscription Vs perpetual versions of the apps themselves: th-cam.com/video/AFRbA43l9iU/w-d-xo.html
If you literally only need Excel then you can buy it standalone from the Microsoft Store. It is much better value to buy the full bundle compared to buying each app separately, but if you only need the one app then standalone is a bit cheaper. If you want the full bundle of apps (Word, PowerPoint, etc.) then you're probably after M365 Apps for Business or Office 2019 (see linked video for more info).
The "Small Business" link in this video's description should take you to a page with Apps for Business.
You can find Excel standalone here: www.microsoft.com/en-gb/microsoft-365/p/excel/cfq7ttc0k7dx
if i want one APP only >example msteam only.. can be ?! or should i buy for all package ?!
That depends on the app. Some are available as standalone subscriptions, others are only available as part of a package, and some can be bought as an add-on to upgrade an existing package with some of the functionality of a higher-tier package.
The packages are better value overall, but if you just need one app it may be cheaper to buy it standalone.
E.g. Exchange Online Plan 1 (standalone) is £3.00, SharePoint Online Plan 1 (standalone) is £3.80. M365 Business Basic (package) is £3.80 and includes both SharePoint and Exchange Plans 1, but is limited to 300 users.
Pro Tech Show many thanks 😊
Cystal clear! Thanks mate! 👍🏽
Cheers!
thanks bro , nice work
Thanks 🙂
pricing for m365 A3 and m365 A5 ?
Best to go through your licensing partner as I haven't seen those sold directly (although if you Google it you will find some distributers listing them). The O365 variants are listed, though.
Great video. Thanks you!
Cheers!
You'd think companies would start to simplify licensing and not have their own teams and customers sorting through unnecessary licensing/installation/configuration/policy complexities.
Tell me about it... Microsoft's own people don't understand it half the time. If I talk to 3 different people in their licensing team I expect to get at least 4 different answers!
Great video!!!
Thanks 🙂
thanks for this,
You're welcome ;-)
Microsoft Office i though was better. It's a great informative video. 👍
Cheers!
Just want to say..... WOW amazing!
Thanks 🙂
Apparently, tech-giant Microsoft doesn't have anyone to explain their own services clearly. Thanks for saving my sanity!
Haha! You're welcome. Even the people who work for Microsoft's licensing team can't figure it out most of the time!
Short:Microsoft office
Reason:Microsoft owns everything from office and adds some noice features like sensibility and editor
How do you not go crazy??
Microsoft marketing is in a class by itself.
thanks for an informative video.
Thanks! I was probably a little crazy to begin with...
Nice! Nice! Nice!
Thanks! You found the new version I see. 🙂
Wow!
mouth full