Forum Discussion
Mark Volders
May 08, 2017Copper Contributor
Office 365 Groups - Active Groups versus All Groups
When searching Office Groups in OWA, a distinction is made between "Active Groups" and "All Groups". What officially defines an Active Group? I can guess what it means, but I would like to know th...
- May 08, 2017Hi there,
An "active group" on that page is defined merely as a group that has had some sort of conversations activity in the past 30 days. It's a binary state, meaning that in that view there is not a notion of groups that are "more active" than others.
This heuristic helps identify groups that still have some sort of conversation happening in them, as sometimes groups stop seeing usage or people create lots of test groups to try things out and don't take the time to go back and clean them out.
Hope this helps!
Blake, PM @ Office 365 Groups
Blake T Walsh
May 08, 2017Former Employee
Hi there,
An "active group" on that page is defined merely as a group that has had some sort of conversations activity in the past 30 days. It's a binary state, meaning that in that view there is not a notion of groups that are "more active" than others.
This heuristic helps identify groups that still have some sort of conversation happening in them, as sometimes groups stop seeing usage or people create lots of test groups to try things out and don't take the time to go back and clean them out.
Hope this helps!
Blake, PM @ Office 365 Groups
An "active group" on that page is defined merely as a group that has had some sort of conversations activity in the past 30 days. It's a binary state, meaning that in that view there is not a notion of groups that are "more active" than others.
This heuristic helps identify groups that still have some sort of conversation happening in them, as sometimes groups stop seeing usage or people create lots of test groups to try things out and don't take the time to go back and clean them out.
Hope this helps!
Blake, PM @ Office 365 Groups
May 08, 2017
It really helps @Blake!!!! Do you have this documented somewhere?