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        Analyst: Microsoft 365 Licensing May Bring Compliance Woes
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- October 25, 2019
Organizations could face costly compliance issues when purchasing Microsoft 365 subscription licenses, according to a recent presentation by Directions on Microsoft (DoM),  a Kirkland, Wash.-based independent consultancy focused on Microsoft roadmap  and licensing issues.
The presentation, "Microsoft  365 Hidden Licensing Costs," was conducted by Rob Horwitz,  DoM's CEO and research chair. His descriptions mostly applied to large  organizations purchasing Microsoft 365 subscription licensing.
Licensing compliance is still a potential problem for  organizations despite the "moving to the cloud" concept of buying  Microsoft 365 subscription licenses. Those licenses provide use rights for applications  such as Office, Exchange and SharePoint, where Microsoft provides hosting  services. However, Microsoft sells access to them as plans (such as F1, E3 and  E5 plans) that are nested "like Russian dolls," creating licensing  dependencies that are associated with accessing certain software features.  Throughout the presentation, Horwitz dissected those feature dependencies using  charts. 
The worst part of it for organizations is that licensing  compliance isn't always built into these Microsoft 365 subscription licensing plans,  even though Microsoft controls the software. Hidden licensing costs especially become  possible when organizations mix the Microsoft 365 F1, E3 and E5 plans, which  appears to be a practice that's fraught with peril.
Hidden costs for Microsoft 365 subscribers fall into  three categories, according to Horwitz:
  - The organization needs to buy "standalone  licenses" for lower level plans because users accessed features  "exclusive to higher level suites."
- The organization needs to buy licensing for  "additional components" or capabilities that "don't come with  any Microsoft 365 suite."
- The organization needs to buy more licenses than  the number of users because of specific circumstances, which occur for "certain  dev/test and provisioning requirements."
Avoid Mixing  Microsoft 356 Plans
The first hidden cost can get triggered when an  organization mixes Microsoft 365 subscription plans. An F1 subscriber can  access some E3 or E5 features, for instance, triggering licensing compliance troubles.
"They are not licensed for the feature, but that feature  is accessible to them. That puts you, the customer, into a license compliance  quandary," Horwitz said. He later explained that having "access"  is rather loosely defined by Microsoft.
In the presentation, Horwitz showed exactly which  features caused licensing compliance problems when Microsoft 365 subscription  plans get mixed. In some cases, organizations can set up manual configurations  to avoid falling out of compliance. In other cases, though, achieving compliance  turns out to be "impractical or not possible." 
Horwitz cited the Advanced Data Governance feature in  Microsoft 365 E5 as an example of the latter case. It's either on or off for  the whole Microsoft 365 tenancy and there's "no granularity of  control."
Beware of Added Component  Costs
Organizations just might not be getting all of the  capabilities they need when buying Microsoft 365 subscription plans. They may  outgrow the plan's base capabilities, as with Power BI, and then have to buy  additional licenses. They may need to buy licensing to meet organizational compliance  with regulations, such as organizations in the European Union needing Office  365 Multi-Geo support for General Data Protection Regulation requirements.
Organizations may need licenses for devices that aren't  covered by the Microsoft 365 plans. Horwitz cited the Microsoft Surface Hub as  an example. Also, other capabilities simply cost extra, such as needing Calling  Plans User subscription licensing for Microsoft 365 E5 users that use voice-over-IP  applications.
Check Licensing  Counts
Oddly, organizations may need more licenses than the  number of Microsoft 365 users. Horwitz cited the case of DevOps scenarios, where  organizations may carve out a "separate development and test  tenancy." Another scenario for having more licenses than users is having to  create a "provisioning buffer." It's done to account for the time  delays that happen when services become available or when services get decommissioned. 
Horwitz suggested that these extra license buffers could  "amount to a percent or two of user base size, so [it's] not insignificant  for large organizations."
Overall Suggestions
Organizations should avoid mixing Microsoft 365 plan  levels. High-level Microsoft 365 features bear extra costs, so they should be  used sparingly. Given this information, organizations should try to negotiate  amendments to Microsoft's licensing rules. The time to negotiate needs to  happen before licensing renewal. 
Organizations should not try to set up separate F1, E3 and  E5 Microsoft 365 tenancies to deal with these licensing compliance issues. Doing  that is fraught with its own licensing issues, which are described in this  new publication authored by DoM analyst Wes Miller,  Horwitz said.
Horwitz's presentation really needs to be viewed to get these  concepts. The presentation, though, requires having a DoM membership. DoM  offers presentations, publications and "licensing bootcamp" meetings  on various Microsoft technicalities. The consultancy is largely staffed by former  Microsoft veterans, although it's independent.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.