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        Microsoft Offers Guidance on Deploying Office 365 ProPlus 
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - January 09, 2017
 
		
        Microsoft recently issued a best practices guide for deploying Office 365 ProPlus, the subscription-based version of its Microsoft Office  desktop productivity suite.
The guide, available as a OneNote file download, is currently  dated Sept. 26, but the document gets updated periodically by Microsoft. The  guide's availability was announced last month in this  Office blog post. It can be downloaded from Microsoft's Office 365 FastTrack  page here. 
The download page for the guide states that  all organizations  "should follow this guidance throughout the lifecycle of Office 365  ProPlus deployments." 
Office 365 ProPlus is essentially the  Office suite (consisting of Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint, Word and  other applications) offered on a monthly subscription-based licensing basis. It's  different from traditional perpetual-license versions of  Office in  that software feature updates for Office 365 ProPlus are automatically streamed  down to individual desktops via Microsoft's "click-to-run" update  technology, so the software is frequently updated in a service-like manner. In  contrast, software feature updates to Office Professional Plus 2016, Microsoft's  productivity suite offering for volume licensing subscribers, typically get  installed by IT pros via .MSI files.
Even though Microsoft handles the feature updates for users  of Office 365 ProPlus subscriptions, IT pros are still tasked with assessing  their infrastructures and planning for the initial migration to using the  service. Additionally, they are tasked with deploying Office 365 ProPlus in their computing environments and managing it after it's been deployed.
Assessment
On the assessment side, the guide explained that  organizations likely can anticipate possible application compatibility issues if they have been using "VBA [Visual Basic for Applications], Macros, third-party  add-ins and complex documents." Microsoft's guide directs IT pros to  initiate a discovery process involving select business users to test such "high-priority documents" for compatibility with Office 365 ProPlus.
IT pros can also use Microsoft's "Office telemetry"  solution to gather information on application compatibility. Office telemetry is  built into Office 2016 and will keep a log on events associated with Office  document use, which is called the "Telemetry  Log," a companion to the "Telemetry  Dashboard," which is essentially an Excel workbook. Office telemetry was  first introduced in Office 2013 and can be used with older versions of Office,  although an agent has to be deployed first to collect the application  compatibility information, according to this Microsoft TechNet  article description. The Telemetry Dashboard article, though, explains that  a registry edit is required to enable the telemetry agent for older Office versions, so Microsoft hasn't exactly  provided a ready-built discovery tool for organizations that are considering migrations  to Office 365 ProPlus.
Planning and Deployment
The planning phase of the guide has a focus on setting up  user groups. The idea is to follow Microsoft's "channel membership" approach  to getting Office 365 ProPlus updates. This scheme is associated with three Office  ProPlus software releases, which are called "channels." There's a "current  channel" monthly release, a "deferred channel" release every  four months and an early test version called "first release for deferred  channel." Here's how organizations should segregate Office 365 ProPlus users, per the guide: 
  - 1% get Current Channel
 
  - 10% get First Release for Deferred       Channel
 
  - 89% get Deferred Channel
 
If an organization gets its Office 365 ProPlus updates via  Microsoft's Office content delivery network, then the update delivery will  follow the channel model that has been set up for end users, delivering updates  to desktops automatically via click-to-run streaming. However, if Office 365  ProPlus updates are distributed from an organization's server located on their  infrastructure (that is, a local file share, or "premises"-based  resource), then the click-to-run distribution service won't follow the channel  model that's been set up.  
"An important note with Office 365 ProPlus is that once  the builds are hosted on premises, the Office client is missing the proper  channel management control as previously stated and the update engine will pick  up the latest available build rather than the associated channel membership,"  the guide noted, under its "Manage" chapter.
Microsoft's concept is that the testing of Office 365 ProPlus updates  should happen by a small group of end users. With its new "agile"  approach to software delivery, Microsoft officials have been downplaying the  traditional cautious patch testing model employed by IT pros in which they test  updates first before deploying company wide. Getting Office click-to-run updates  on a central server was one way to do that kind of testing before rolling patches  out broadly, but Microsoft's guide is saying that organizations going that  route will lose channel model distinctions for end users.
The guide also advises against switching channels once they  are set up. It's an obscure point. A switch will result in "a 100% file  delta install," the guide states, implying a larger bandwidth hit than  usual will follow. It's possible to skip an Office 365 ProPlus build, too, but the next  update also will be a "100 percent file download," affecting  bandwidth.
Deployment of the Office 365 ProPlus productivity suite to  client devices gets carried out via the Office content delivery network (which  is called "off-premise distribution") or via an on-premises local  file share. Organizations with internal software tools for software distribution  management and a local file share should use them, the guide explained. Microsoft  does provide its Office  2016 Deployment Tool, which lets IT pros "customize and manage Office  2016 Click-to-Run deployments." It provides customizable XML templates for  configuration purposes. It's also possible to deploy and configure using Group  Policy. Microsoft provides Office  2016 Administrative Template files for use with Group Policy configurations.
Helpful Resource
In a nutshell, Microsoft's "Preferred Practices for  Office 365 ProPlus Deployment" guide is probably a pretty helpful resource. However, organizations likely will still have to shuffle through the guide's external links to  TechNet articles to get all of the information they'll need. 
In the end, the click-to-run streaming updates and channel  models associated with using Office 365 ProPlus might not mean less work for organizations, even though it may sound like it's an easier model to  manage. Essentially, organizations will have to address the frequent software  update model of Office 365 ProPlus by relying on feedback from internal "guinea  pig" testers. Microsoft's model implies a change  in IT's traditional gatekeeper practices as well.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.