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Introducing Multi-Geo in Office 365

samsearth's avatar
samsearth
Icon for Microsoft rankMicrosoft
Sep 25, 2017
See aka.ms/GoMultiGeo for Multi-Geo in Exchange Online/OneDrive and pricing info.
See aka.ms/GetMultiGeo for Multi-Geo in SharePoint Online
 

 

Multinational companies that have offices around the world often have needs to store their employee data at-rest in specific regions to meet their data residency requirements. Today, at Microsoft Ignite, we're announcing Multi-Geo Capabilities in Office 365, a new feature that helps multinational customers address their regional, industry specific or organizational data residency requirements in Office 365.

 

Multi-Geo enables a single Office 365 tenant to span across multiple Office 365 datacenter geographies (geos), and gives customers the ability to store their Exchange and OneDrive data, at-rest, on a per-user basis, in their chosen geos.

 

Available geos in Multi-Geo

For example, Contoso Inc., a multinational corporation with its headquarters in the United States and branches in the European Union and Australia can move from managing many regional on-premises Exchange and SharePoint servers to a single Multi-Geo enabled Office 365 tenant for their entire company. They can set up the Home geo in the United States, and Satellite geos in the European Union and Australia, and choose to store each employee’s data at-rest in one of the chosen geos and meet their global data residency needs.

 

Moving from multiple on-premises servers into a single Multi-Geo enabled Office 365 tenant brings globally dispersed employees together and enables a modern collaboration experience across the company. Organizational content is no longer subject to the discovery and collaboration barriers that are created by on-premises silos. For example, searching in SharePoint presents aggregated search results regardless of in which geo the content is located. Another example is with Delve surfacing relevant documents, presentations and other content for all users regardless of in which geo location the content resides. And as always, users can view and access the content only if they have the right level of permissions to do so.


Onboarding onto Multi-Geo is a straightforward process using familiar tools such as Azure Active Directory Connect and PowerShell. Customers can use these tools to enable Multi-Geo in their tenant and assign geos to their users. Multi-Geo also does not impact the end user experience; users can continue to access their email and OneDrive files while their data is being moved between geos.


We’re currently previewing Multi-Geo Capabilities in Exchange Online and OneDrive. We plan to make Multi-Geo generally available for Exchange Online and OneDrive in the first half of calendar year 2018. We’re planning a SharePoint preview in 2018, as well.


To learn about the Multi-Geo preview and request your nomination, please contact your Microsoft account team.

 

Resources:

Multi-Geo sessions at Ignite: https://aka.ms/MultiGeoIgnite (See the Ignite videos here!)

Multi-Geo in OneDrive: https://aka.ms/OneDriveMultiGeo

Multi-Geo in SharePoint Online: https://aka.ms/SharePointMultiGeo

Updated May 11, 2021
Version 10.0

36 Comments

  • Edward Bogaard Correct, in the context of SharePoint and OneDrive, site = site collection in this conversation.  Once a users preferred data location (PDL) is set by the administrator, that users destination for OneDrive for Business follows the PDL as OneDrive is a user resource, for shared resources such as SharePoint, the site (site collection) is created in the selected geo as specified by the administrator and is accessible to users of all geos if so allowed by the administrator of the site.

  • Yes this is an additional paid service.  Additional information can gleened here - https://www.petri.com/office-365-multi-geo

  • Please make sure to include at least some indicative prices in such announcements, cost is definitely one of the major factors to consider...

  • Alon Goldberg's avatar
    Alon Goldberg
    Copper Contributor

    I understand that this is a paid service. Can this be confirmed by someone at Microsoft?

  • Edward Bogaard's avatar
    Edward Bogaard
    Copper Contributor

    As OneDrive essentially is a SharePoint site collection, does this imply the SharePoint site collections are created (by an admin) at a certain multigeo url, and hence everything in that site collection is stored in that geo location? In other words, is the granularity of SharePoint elements to be multigeo actually the site collection level? It is a bit confusing as some materials mention 'sites' instead of 'site collections', but that's quite a difference!

     

    Thanks!

    Edward

  • What would be interesting is being able to push out to in country data centre providers where there are no azure dcs and a requirement for on country data storage. 

     

    Yet maybe some azure stacks in the providers dcs