Forum Discussion
jheim24
Aug 13, 2021Copper Contributor
Centralized Scheduling in Teams
We are a non-profit behavioral healthcare organization transitioning to Teams to provide telehealth services. We currently use Zoom for these telehealth appointments and have schedulers create the a...
- Aug 13, 2021From what I'm reading it shouldn't be an issue. If a colleague of yours in the same organization (?) schedule a Teams meeting that person simply adds the client and you to the meeting invite and also verifies that the meeting options are set appropriate. Then that person don't have to join the meeting but you need to be having the Teams Presenter role.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/change-participant-settings-for-a-teams-meeting-53261366-dbd5-45f9-aae9-a70e6354f88e
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/roles-in-a-teams-meeting-c16fa7d0-1666-4dde-8686-0a0bfe16e019
There's a co-organizer role coming this fall, it will make these scenarios much easier to manage.
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/roadmap?filters=&searchterms=81391
Aug 13, 2021
There’s no way then to make someone else the organizer. Although that doesn’t make a huge difference unless attendance and break out rooms shouldn’t be used. As long as the other part is an internal user and the meeting options are set so they are a presenter. ( Most commonly the default) in that case the other user can start and run the meeting