In-Depth
Deep Dive into Microsoft Teams
The newest member of the "universal toolkit" aims to help Office 365 span the generational divide from millennials to baby boomers.
- By Christian Buckley
- 02/01/2017
The ways organizations collaborate and communicate vary more than ever these days, especially given the generational divide in the workplace that has many employees working with a mix of device types and preferring different modes of interaction. Likewise, the needs of those working on projects and ad hoc teams are now very different than the capabilities provided through traditional enterprise-wide collaboration platforms. Increasingly, however, businesses are looking for the tools used by project teams and their enterprise collaboration solutions to work together.
Trying to solve every collaboration and communications need to ensure engagement and productivity with a single tool is not the right approach. At the other end of the spectrum, having too many tools and too many options can also impact adoption, productivity and business efficiencies. Organizations need to find a balance -- and use the right tool for the job. Microsoft Teams, which will appear this quarter in every Office 365 and Enterprise subscription, is an ambitious bet that Microsoft can bridge existing ways of collaborating with more modern modes, notably chat.
Built from the ground up for "high-velocity" teams and leveraging all that Office 365 offers, Microsoft Teams is the company's response to demand for chat-based interaction made popular by tools such as Slack. Since releasing the Microsoft Teams preview in early November at a launch event in New York, Microsoft critics and supporters alike have heaped praise on it. But the impact to Microsoft's broader Office 365 messaging -- and the blurring of lines between collaboration and communication tools -- remains a question.
Microsoft Teams Inspiration
At the core of Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella's message at the recent launch event was the continuation of the themes that he introduced in his first keynote after taking the helm as CEO, delivered to the 2014 Worldwide Partner Conference, where he talked extensively about transforming collaboration and reinventing productivity.
"When it comes to digital work and life experiences, the thing that we're going to do is start by building great experiences individually," he said at the time. "That means we're going to have fantastic e-mail, great file
sharing, great communication and collaboration. There's Skype, there's Outlook, there's OneDrive. But it's just not about any one of these applications. It's not the application silos themselves. We are building an operating system for human activity across all of their daily lives, across all of their devices. That is what the future of Office, the future of Dynamics represents for us."
Where most keynotes tend to be more about future vision and aspirational messages, customers were both eager and alarmed by Nadella's promise. In speaking about the increasing complexity of solutions that are available to information workers, and the need to use the right tool for the right problem, he positioned Office 365 as the "universal toolkit" for organizations. The new Microsoft Teams looks like a strong new addition to the Office 365 toolkit. But there's much work to be done to help customers understand which tool to use, and when to activate Microsoft Teams when it appears in Office 365 in the coming months.
Avanade, one of Microsoft's largest consulting partners, was an early tester of Microsoft Teams prior to the company's announcement. The firm fielded a survey to determine how employees from different age groups ranging from baby boomers to millennials prefer to collaborate and communicate (see Figure 1). Wictor Wilen, a digital workplace architect at Avanade, said in a blog post that no one tool is sufficient to meet the generational preferences of employees as workplaces become not only more diverse, but people rely on different devices.
Microsoft Teams is poised to fill an important gap among enterprise workgroups, according to Wilen, who is also a Microsoft Certified Architect (MCA) and a SharePoint MVP. "Covering an area that has been somewhat missing between instant messaging (Skype for Business), e-mail (Outlook/Exchange), and enterprise social networks (Yammer), and at the same time having enough overlap on these services to accommodate for personal, cultural, generational, and workstyle preferences [is important]," Wilen noted.
Information Integrated and More Visible
The core of Microsoft Teams is a new chat-based workspace, built "from the ground up" on Office 365, Kirk Koenigsbauer, corporate vice president for the Office team, explained in his Nov. 2 blog post announcing the preview. Emphasizing the point that Office 365 runs on Microsoft's global and secure cloud, Koenigsbauer also recognized that the ways in which teams collaborate and communicate have gone through tremendous changes. In addition to a more diverse workforce, the modern enterprise is much more agile (or attempts to be) and organizational structures are more flat than the traditional hierarchies, making communication and the rapid flow of information more important than ever before. "With Microsoft Teams, we aspire to create a more open, digital environment that makes work visible, integrated and accessible -- across the team -- so everyone can stay in the know," he said.
"With Microsoft Teams, we aspire to create a more open, digital environment that makes work visible, integrated and accessible – across the team -- so everyone can stay in the know,"
Kirk Koenigsbauer, Office Team Corporate VP, Microsoft
Microsoft Teams delivers on the three G's at the core of everything being delivered through Office 365: Groups, Graph and Governance. While the preview of Microsoft Teams is accessed through Teams.Microsoft.com today, when generally available Microsoft Teams will become part of Office 365 Groups, with all conversations and data accessible through the Microsoft Graph, and the service managed by the Office 365 centralized governance and management console. This is where Microsoft Teams immediately takes a commanding lead over competitors like Slack -- because Teams is part of a broader platform, not another standalone solution.
Microsoft Teams consists of four core components:
- Chat: Microsoft Teams provides a modern conversation experience, providing threaded conversations that are persistent (see Figure 2). In other words, the conversations you have within Microsoft Teams become information assets that are saved and become searchable via Microsoft Graph. By default, these conversations are visible to everyone on the team, though you can launch a private discussion. Out of the box there's deep Skype integration, giving users voice and video capabilities, as well as a full range of modern visual communication tools to help increase engagement, such as emojis, stickers, GIFs and custom memes.
- Hub for teamwork: As a full-fledged member of an Office 365 Group, Microsoft Teams leverages the full breadth and depth of Office 365, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, SharePoint, OneNote, Planner, Power BI and Delve. Because Microsoft Teams was built leveraging the full capability of Microsoft Graph, teams or workgroups have the ability to share data, intelligence and insights anywhere within Office 365 (most likely with limitations at first but eventually as the service is expanded). Intelligent services, such as connecting to SAP, or tickets within your Jira platform, can be surfaced through the workspace to help with information relevancy, discovery and sharing. Because Microsoft Teams is part of Office 365 Groups, it will preserve context (of course, that depends on how you define "context," which I'll address later).
- Customizable: This is an important requirement of any tool in this day and age. All organizations are unique, and adoption and engagement increase when the tools we use can be tailored to meet unique cultural and business needs. Microsoft Teams will offer rich extensibility and open APIs at general availability, and will leverage the same Connector model as Exchange, providing notifications and updates from third-party services like Twitter and GitHub. It will also have full support for the Microsoft Bot Framework, allowing organizations to create and customize the tools and intelligent services they bring into Microsoft Teams (see Figure 3).
- Security: This is a key differentiator for Microsoft Teams. Providing advanced security and compliance capabilities through the Office 365 platform means data is encrypted in transit and at rest, and the solution meets compliance standards, including the EU Model Clauses, ISO 27001, SOC 2 and HIPAA. As part of Office 365, Microsoft Teams is supported through Microsoft's global network of datacenters, which the company maintains has a transparent operational model with no standing access to customer data. All teams are automatically provisioned within Office 365, and managed centrally through the Admin console.
Extending Microsoft Teams with Chat Bots
At the core of Microsoft Teams is an Internet Relay Chat-style experience that provides persistent, threaded discussions. In other words, you can jump into a conversation as it happens, but also come back later and search through the conversation as if you were digging through any other information asset. Each team has one or more "channels" which can be set up for specific projects, topics, or business teams, within which you can chat, share files, and interact with external services via Office 365 Connectors, much like Slack does.
An important aspect of Microsoft Teams is the ability to extend them through the creation of "chat bots" that leverage Bot Framework, helping customers to leverage more of their own stored knowledge using machine learning and Microsoft Graph.
The best description for Microsoft Teams is it supports "high-velocity" organizations, or those aspiring to pick up the pace. For example, a support team member might create channels for instant, yet persistent discussions around different customer problem areas, allowing her to pull the right people together quickly to discuss a real-time resolution. The output of that discussion might then be folded into a Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) document in SharePoint or added to the relevant Yammer Group as part of the organization's growing knowledge base.
Is the idea of threaded, persistent chat new? No, there are a few competitors in the space. Microsoft has made it very clear -- Microsoft Teams is a direct competitor to Slack. But, arguably, the real competition for Microsoft Teams comes from within the Microsoft stack itself, as many organizations are confused by the release of yet another tool that seems to overlap with what is already offered.
Yet Another Microsoft Social Tool?
Not everyone is a fan of Office 365 as a "universal toolkit" because it tends to gloss over some product and messaging issues. The "which tool to use when" dilemma has long been a matter of debate, with many partners voicing concerns over how to answer this question for customers. Avanade's Research team created a graph to illustrate which Microsoft tool is best-suited for a given condition (see Figure 4).
The diagram accentuates the broader collaboration problem -- or problems. While organizations have differing cultures, requirements and preferences, some studies also show how too much choice can be detrimental to the user experience. What I hear again and again from customers is that they don't want a menu of options, but direct guidance on what to use to meet their specific needs.
Of course, this cuts right to the heart of Nadella's claim that Office 365 is the "universal toolkit" for the modern workplace: Microsoft provides a collection of tools and capabilities, and organizations need to take the next step -- selecting the tools that best meet their unique needs. Unfortunately, many customers are struggling to take that step.
Understanding the differences between tools within the Office 365 toolkit is key to ensuring your organizational collaboration and communication are effective and employees stay actively engaged:
- Skype for Business provides real-time voice, video and conferencing with more than 100 million meetings a month. Skype is for instant, real-time communication between two people or small groups. By default, chat logs are saved to Exchange logs.
- Microsoft Teams is for synchronous (real-time) and asynchronous communication, with persistent conversations that are more informal, casual. Each team can create multiple Channels around topics or projects, allowing team members to join in active discussions or search through conversation history.
- Yammer is for broader, enterprise-wide discussions and information sharing. Yammer Groups allow for the broad dissemination of content and information, and flatten the organizational hierarchy by simplifying participation in discussions. While Yammer does support presence awareness and real-time conversations within its Groups, as well as through the Yammer messenger tool, where it shines is in long-term, asynchronous information sharing and discussion. However, when trying to participate in a detailed discussion in Yammer, you can easily lose your place. Search is not a Yammer strength, and while threaded discussions are a strength, those conversations can quickly become buried within your newsfeed, making it difficult to keep those threads in context.
- Outlook Groups conversations may not be as efficient as its social counterparts, but its value is unique -- providing conversation through e-mail, with replies going out to the entire group not unlike a traditional distribution group. Because each group has its own mailbox, it's very easy for e-mail-driven organizations to share relevant content and conversations by simply forwarding a message to the group. This is not to be confused with Office 365 Groups, which is the cross-application membership service that includes everything listed here, plus SharePoint, Planner, Power BI and Delve.
Concerns with Microsoft Teams
Beyond the messaging gap (which I believe Microsoft overcomes and figures out sooner rather than later), there are some very real concerns that need to be addressed:
- Office 365 Groups messaging needs a restart. As people see Microsoft Teams, they instinctively "get" the value of the solution, and how it can help smaller, high-velocity teams to be more productive. And as a standalone solution, most understand the value proposition of Yammer as the place to share broad messages and make new connections and discoveries across the organization. But when you then talk about Office 365 Groups, people struggle. Instead of promoting Outlook Group conversations as yet another collaboration alternative and continuing to confuse the marketplace, Microsoft should pause, rebrand and restart with a consistent message: Office 365 Groups is a membership service, which is used by SharePoint, Planner, Microsoft Teams and Yammer. The Conversation view should just be renamed to a Shared Inbox -- which is exactly what it is.
- There's no way to move or migrate between tools. If I start in Microsoft Teams, but later determine that I need to use Yammer or Outlook Groups, how do I "move"? Let's face it, reorganizations are a fact of life. In the SharePoint world, abandoning sites and content is often easier than moving and restructuring, and sprawl continues to be a problem. Having centralized storage through Groups and a related SharePoint Team Site is nice, but when the nature of the project or business group changes, is there a way to restructure without losing those rich social interactions?
- Switching between modalities impacts productivity. When you need to click a tab or move to a separate URL in the browser to jump to a conversation, productivity is lost, plain and simple. The more you can decrease movement between workloads, the better. Some customers are already voicing concerns about jumping between conversations happening in Outlook Groups, Yammer and Skype for Business -- and now add Microsoft Teams to the mix. Architectural issues of merging conversation technologies aside, what if conversations in an Outlook Group appeared as a channel within Microsoft Teams, and likewise, that same threaded discussion also appeared in the related Yammer group? The idea of a change in UI to better meet team style, while leveraging the same conversation or data on the back-end, would solve many of the concerns of consistency and, in my opinion, solve the whole "which tool to use when" dilemma that has worsened with the release of yet another chat tool.
- Context is needed when switching between tools. Context is king. As Koenigsbauer underscored in his blog post, having Microsoft Teams as part of the broader Office 365 Groups is about providing context. The question is whether Office 365 "abstracts" that context too much. The automatic answer is that Microsoft Graph and Delve will provide the glue that binds conversations and context across these tools. SharePoint has also traditionally been used as that baseline platform whereupon organizations can integrate disparate systems. However, solutions (or the APIs) are not yet in place to make everything discoverable or searchable across all of these user experiences. How Microsoft solves this problem of deeper contextual relevance will be key to the company's long-term success.
- Historically, feature overlap at Microsoft means a winner -- and a loser. You cannot get past that part of Microsoft's history of pitting overlapping features or products against each other, and waiting for the winner to emerge. The problem is that customers struggle to know where to invest their time and resources. Yammer has suffered from this combination of confusing roadmaps and poor messaging.
None of these concerns are insurmountable for Microsoft, but the longer they persist and go unanswered, the more likely customers will stay with more straightforward, albeit less-feature-rich competitor solutions. Or they will try to force-fit tools that they know don't meet all of their needs, impacting end-user adoption and engagement.
The hardest part in all of this, but necessary for Microsoft to ultimately succeed, is to make the experiences of each of its tools consistent across the platforms. The more disjointed the feel, the more that customers will push back -- and competitors will feel emboldened.
Crossing the Expectations Gap
Having choice is a good thing, but customers are looking to Microsoft not only for market-leading collaboration and communication solutions, but also clear guidance on how to implement them. If I'm using Office 365 as the core of my digital workplace, I expect the management, search, archiving, governance and reporting capabilities across all of the workloads within the platform to be consistent -- both in UI and functionality. Microsoft has made strides, but there's clearly work to be done.
Microsoft also has room for improvement in understanding and talking openly about the scenarios that work "across" the Office 365 workloads, according to Chris Slemp, director of strategy at Carpool Agency in Seattle. "By continuing to ask the question, 'Which tool should we use?' we're prioritizing technology over culture, a classic mistake made by teams that are trying new ways of working," Slemp said in a blog post. "Instead, we should be asking, 'What are the most important principles our teams share about collaboration?'"
Microsoft Teams is a powerful collaboration and communication tool, and will become a major player within the Office 365 toolkit. As with any technology, customers need to first begin with an understanding of the business scenarios they're trying to solve, and how Microsoft Teams -- as well as SharePoint, Outlook Groups, Planner, Yammer and other services -- can and should be used to meet their needs.
The Microsoft Teams Developer Preview program is still open, allowing developers to play with and extend the tool. Microsoft is promising more than 150 partner integrations at general availability (GA), including Zendesk, Asana, Hootsuite and Intercom. With an Office 365 base of more than 85 million monthly active users, one thing for certain is that Microsoft Teams will have a jump start on the competition.
And it will be interesting to see what features will be added for GA. For one, the ability to include external users is a major difference between the Microsoft Teams preview and Slack. Other key features to watch for include the ability to drop a Microsoft Teams channel into a SharePoint Team Site, or somehow integrate your Microsoft Teams conversations with a relevant Yammer group.
The more workloads Office 365 can integrate, the more compelling the platform becomes.