Forum Discussion
StaffHub licensing requirements
- DeletedJul 01, 2018
Here is the QA for staff hub from here: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2017/01/12/microsoft-staffhub-is-here/ it's an older article but F1 license is the same as K1 which will be your minimum license you will need for the (Kiosk/deskless) works.
Q. Which Office 365 plans include Microsoft StaffHub?
A. StaffHub is available as part of the Office 365 K1, E1, E3 and E5 plans (including the Education version of these plans).
Here is the QA for staff hub from here: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2017/01/12/microsoft-staffhub-is-here/ it's an older article but F1 license is the same as K1 which will be your minimum license you will need for the (Kiosk/deskless) works.
Q. Which Office 365 plans include Microsoft StaffHub?
A. StaffHub is available as part of the Office 365 K1, E1, E3 and E5 plans (including the Education version of these plans).
The article that you have pointed to does not say that each user needs a license. It states that each user needs an Office 365 or Azure AD account - These are free within Azure AD. So simply by having a few K1, E1 or E3 plans you could start using StaffHub across your frontline workers.
- David OgborneJul 11, 2018Copper Contributor
A F1 license is required - which is a shame.
- DeletedJul 04, 2018https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/skypehybridguy/2017/08/10/staffhub-automatically-assign-licenses-to-new-users/
Talks about the need to have licenses assigned to staff hub users as they are added into Staff hub. If it works without a license it's probably similar to how SharePoint Online works, where you should license the users that fall under that umbrella.- Eric AdlerJul 04, 2018Iron ContributorYeah, it's weird how that works. I wish it didn't. We get users logging in with a "Training" account that isn't licensed and doesn't need to be, but they're able to get to some basic functionality so then, of course, it is a SharePoint problem. Fun.