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

Chapter 5 – Configuring and Managing External and Guest users

  1. B. Security group settings

Explanation: Guest user access relating to Microsoft may be controlled by/from the Teams admin center, Microsoft 365 group settings, or the Azure portal. These settings may not be controlled by security group settings.

Reference: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoftteams/guest-access

  1. A. Specific people

Explanation: Specific people is the most secure way to restrict and limit access to content shared with only those individuals who require access.

  1. A. True

Explanation: Guest users who you invite into your organization must use an existing Microsoft 365 account or a personal email account such as Outlook.com or Gmail.com that can be enabled as a Microsoft organizational account, or a one-time passcode (OTP) for guest access.

Reference: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/solutions/collaborate-with-people-outside-your-organization...