Book Image

MS-700 Managing Microsoft Teams Exam Guide - Second Edition

By : Nate Chamberlain, Peter Rising
Book Image

MS-700 Managing Microsoft Teams Exam Guide - Second Edition

By: Nate Chamberlain, Peter Rising

Overview of this book

Exam MS-700: Managing Microsoft Teams tests your knowledge and competence in the deployment, management, and monitoring of Microsoft Teams features within the Microsoft 365 platform. This book will teach you how to effectively plan and implement the required services using both the Teams admin centre within Microsoft 365 and Windows PowerShell. Throughout the chapters, you'll learn about all the policies relating to messaging, teams, meetings, and more; get to grips with the settings; and explore configuration options that a Teams administrator would encounter in their day-to-day responsibilities. You'll also discover best practices for rolling out and managing Teams services for users within your Microsoft 365 tenant as you explore each objective in detail. By the end of this Microsoft Teams book, you'll have covered everything you need to pass the MS-700 certification exam and have a handy, on-the-job desktop reference guide.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Section 1: Plan and Configure a Microsoft Teams Environment
8
Section 2: Manage Chat, Teams, Channels, and Apps in Microsoft Teams
13
Section 3: Manage Calling and Meetings in Microsoft Teams
19
Section 4: Mock Exam and Assessments
21
Chapter 17: Mock Exam Answers

Create, manage, and interpret dial plans

Dial plans are sets of rules that can convert partial dial pad entries into a standard (E.164) phone number format. E.164 is the international public telecommunication numbering plan, or international standard, that is used globally and ensures every number worldwide is unique.

We want to use a dial plan to make our users' dialing experiences as simple as possible while still utilizing full E.164 format numbers. For example, when users dial 700 from within your organization, it could direct them to the help desk. Another common example is letting users dial within the organization just by using an extension (the last three or four digits of assigned numbers). You could pair this with a dial plan setting that requires a 9 to be dialed before users can dial an external number so it doesn't attempt to interpret a full, external number as an extension.

Dial plans can be configured with the following settings:

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