News
        
        Microsoft To Activate Office 365 'Insights for MyAnalytics' Soon
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - March 18, 2019
 
		
        
Microsoft plans to switch on its  "Insights for  MyAnalytics" service sometime this month for most Office 365 users.
MyAnalytics tracks how much time employees spend in Office 365 applications like Outlook or in Calendar-scheduled meetings, with the aim of helping them become more efficient. Insights for MyAnalytics, meanwhile, is an Outlook add-in that's a  separate product from MyAnalytics, a distinction that  was explained last week in this  Microsoft Tech Community post by "trusted contributor" Cian  Allner. Insights for MyAnalytics is different from   MyAnalytics  because the former lacks "access to the Dashboard,  Email digest or MyAnalytics nudges," Allner said.
Late-March Arrival
The Insights for MyAnalytics add-in will be available to  Office 365 users "starting in late March 2019," according to an  undated Microsoft document cited by Allner.
Previously, MyAnalytics was just available as part of the  Microsoft 365 Enterprise E5 plan or as an add-on for E1 and E3 plan subscribers,  and that's still the case, but users of other Office 365 plans are now getting  Insights for MyAnalytics, the Outlook add-in. Eligible recipients are listed as  follows, per this  Microsoft roadmap entry:
  The MyAnalytics add-in for Outlook will be  made available to everyone using Office 365 and Microsoft 365 Enterprise and  Business suites that include Exchange Online, specifically Microsoft 365 E5,  E3, Business, Office 365 E5, E3, E1, Business Premium and Business Essentials.  It will also be available to Microsoft 365 and Office 365 Education suites,  specifically Microsoft 365 A3 for faculty, Microsoft 365 A3 for students,  Office 365 A3 for faculty, and Office 365 A3 for students.
The only Office 365  tenancies not automatically getting this add-in apparently will be government,  Office 365 Germany and China (Vianet) tenancies, according to this "Availability of Features" document.
Microsoft originally  had said back in January that MyAnalytics would be coming more  broadly to Office 365 tenancies. However, that original announcement was later  updated on March 15. It uses the word "insights" in lowercase  letters, so it wasn't clear back then that Microsoft was talking about the  Outlook add-in. An "insight" is also a technical term in MyAnalytics lingo  and refers to a scoreboard-like "card" that users see of their  activities, according to this document.
Management Target
Microsoft's January  announcement, revised on March 15, included the information that IT pros won't  be able to manage Insights for Analytics until May 15, even though it's getting  activated for end users this month. Here's that explanation, which is somewhat vague  about an April or May timing for management capabilities:
  Beginning  mid-March, 2019, MyAnalytics licenses will be assigned and activated; however,  users will not be able to see any MyAnalytics functionality. In mid-April,  admins will begin to see a toggle in the Exchange Admin Center that supports  tenant-level management of MyAnalytics functionality. The add-in functionality  will begin rolling out on May 15, 2019.
Possibly, IT pros can block this functionality beforehand,  as Microsoft has posted instructions on how to disable Insights for MyAnalytics  at this  page. 
MyAnalytics can be conceived as either a productivity tool  or as a privacy concern for organizations. It uses Office 365 metadata to track  who communicates and when events happen. However, Microsoft claims that only  the end user will ever see the information that gets collected, according to its  FAQ document.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.