

- Microsoft office 365 business premium trial trial#
- Microsoft office 365 business premium trial series#
Enter an organisation and domain nameīefore long you should see the link to start managing the directory you have just created.

As this is only a test/demo environment I won’t be verifying a domain name as part of this, even though you would be doing this in a production environment. Next up create an easy to remember domain name. Select Create a resource, Identity and then Azure Active Directory Create A New AAD Tenant The easiest way to do this is via the Azure Portal. There are a few different ways to create this tenant, but let’s start one that is free from other services as the basis.
Microsoft office 365 business premium trial trial#
The main reason I’m taking this approach, rather than just signing up for a trial, is that it seems that it’s getting harder to set up a free trial without providing more details including a credit card number, for example, and the only pre-requisite for the approach I’m using is that you can sign in to the Azure portal and can create a new Azure Active Directory (AAD) tenant. Hopefully there are a few things in today’s post that you weren’t aware of, and that you can potentially work into some production environment defaults as well.

I’ll start by saying this isn’t exactly a direct path to achieving integration, but think of it as showing a few of the tips and tricks I use when I’m setting up a new demonstration environment for events or for training purposes.
Microsoft office 365 business premium trial series#
This is going to be a series of posts on the process of adding Microsoft Defender Advanced Threat Protection (MDATP) into a Microsoft 365 Business Premium (M365BP) tenant, and this first post will start with an alternate approach to how you might normally set up a test environment if you are also ramping up your Azure skills.
