Forum Discussion
finsfree
Jul 30, 2019Copper Contributor
Creating a Department shared Calendar in Office 365?
Hello, I'm fairly new to Office 365. I have been asked my a department head to create a shared calendar that the whole department can use (view, edit, etc...). It seems like there are a couple ...
ankit shukla
Jul 30, 2019Iron Contributor
finsfree Office 365 Group - and add members to it . Simple and Best !!
- Multiple users can access a Group mailbox, just as they would a shared mailbox.
- A Group mailbox can be used as a single point of email contact for a team or group of users, just as a shared mailbox can be.
- Users can send-as or send-on-behalf of a Group mailbox, just as they would a shared mailbox.
- Emails sent to Groups and shared mailboxes are preserved for historical reference, unless deleted by a user.
Office 365 Groups have additional features that shared mailboxes do not.
- Users (members) can subscribe to receive a copy in their own mailbox of the emails sent to the Group mailbox, which makes Groups work in a similar manner to distribution lists.
- Groups include additional collaboration apps and resources such as a SharePoint team site, OneNote notebook, Planner, and Teams.
- Groups have a guest access model for external collaboration that shared mailboxes do not.
- Groups have https://support.office.com/en-gb/article/Connect-apps-to-your-groups-in-Outlook-ed0ce547-038f-4902-b9b3-9e518ae6fbab?ui=en-US&rs=en-GB&ad=GB for integrating other applications.
However, shared mailboxes have some capabilities that may make them more suitable to teams than Groups.
- Shared mailboxes can have sub-folders in the mailbox, whereas Group mailboxes can't.
- Shared mailboxes have more granular permissions available than Groups do.
If the data you expect to have in Shared Mailbox may be more in size lets say 50 gigs . then there is an additional cost of License as Shared Mailboxes are free to use only upto 50 GB.
Cheers !!
Ankit Shukla