Forum Discussion
How to Assign the Co-Organizer Role to Microsoft Teams Meetings
- Jan 12, 2022
Rae_Jay Hello, these are the details of the co-org role.
Co-organizers can do the following:
- Access and change meeting options
- Bypass the lobby
- Admit people from the lobby during a meeting
- Lock the meeting
- Present content
- Change another participant’s meeting role
- End the meeting for all
- Create & manage breakout rooms
To make co-organizers breakout room managers, you must first assign them the breakout room manager role.
Co-organizers cannot do the following:
Create & manage breakout rooms(updated, see above)- View & download attendance reports
- Manage the meeting recording
- Edit the meeting invitation
- Remove or change the Organizer role
Let me elaborate with a common (i think) scenario.
Multiple management assistants with Office licenses were used to creating meetings for management through a shared mailbox ("planning assistant"). This Shared mailbox however consists of a disabled account without an office license.
Now these meetings have to change to teams meetings. That works fine but options can only be changed by this shared mailbox account (organizer) so options cannot be changed.
The only solution is to assign a Teams/office license but still when I want to open the options the context in which you logon needs to be this shared mailbox account.
Does this sound familiar? and is there a real solution for it? thanks in advance
- TonyRedmondFeb 02, 2022MVP
Paul_van_Rijn An online meeting has to have an owner. The owner could be the assistant who schedules the meeting on behalf of another person, who can then become a co-organizer. However, the organizer still owns the meeting and they can't transfer that responsibility to someone else. It's a different way of working - Teams is not Outlook and Outlook is not Teams.
- danny4567Feb 03, 2022Brass Contributor
TonyRedmond It's not a problem that a meeting needs to have one owner. It's a problem that we can't assign permissions that are equal to the owner role to someone else. The owner can work part time, the owner can get sick or temporary unavailable. All valid scenario's for which you want to have a proper backup organizer.
- TonyRedmondFeb 03, 2022MVPI understand, but that doesn't take away from the issue that Teams doesn't support the rich array of delegate permissions which are available in Outlook, or that a meeting involves more resources than Outlook (the meeting space, attendance report, recordings, and so on), stored in different repositories with different permission models. Hence my remark that you can't take what works in Outlook and expect it to work in Teams. What you can do is work with Teams to leverage the way the software works. For instance, you could create a user account and use it to perform all the shared scheduling. Give access to that account to those who need to schedule and manage meetings. They'll need to sign into the account to perform this work, but it will work. It's just that you can't use a shared account.