Forum Discussion
Switching organizations in Teams desktop client
- Mar 16, 2020
Hi jaybee1615 ,
There are issues with O365 today, its due to lots of demand on Office 365 from all the remote workers in Europe.
Expect a few more issues until the bottle necks are found and ramped up by Microsoft.
Andy
jaybee1615, et. al:
I can confirm this issue in two different small business tenants where I'm global admin plus a personal tenant I'm owner of. I've been only logged into one of the work tenants for the last couple months, but the org switching control I used many times before is missing from my Teams desktop client. It used to be in the upper right corner just left of the account profile avatar.
Since I already had a Teams-related case open for another matter, a Microsoft support rep got to see this issue first-hand on my PC. I opened a Teams browser instance and organization switching was missing there as well. Support had already provisioned a test tenant and invited me as a guest so we could test our original guest login issue. We also wanted to see how a guest invite would impact tenant switching.
Some interesting and, in some cases, troubling things happened after I clicked on Open Microsoft Teams in the invitation:
- A Teams login page opened in the browser as expected. We chose to open in the desktop client. Windows switched to desktop Teams app, but nothing happened. There was no prompt to switch organizations.
- I went back to the browser instance and told it to open Teams in the web browser. It opened a new tab, logged me in successfully under my work profile and the organization switching control appeared where it should be in the upper right!
- I refreshed the Teams web tab that had already been open (see 2nd paragraph above) and an org switching control suddenly appeared in that instance as well.
- In an effort to troubleshoot the desktop client, we quit out of the running instance and restarted Teams. Still no org switching control. Next I logged out and back in. Still no control appeared.
The Microsoft support rep was equally surprised. After checking for known issues and coming up empty, he promised to check with his colleagues and research this further. I sent him a link to this thread.
Teams Desktop client version: 1.3.00.13565 (64-bit)
Browser: Microsoft Edge ver. 85.0.538.0 (Official build) dev (64-bit)
Windows 10 Pro ver. 10.0.19041 Build 19041
Note: The article posted by JackPaystarAccount shows the difference between external (federated) and guest users, but that wasn't a factor in this case. We were working strictly with non-federated member and guest user access.
Mike_ETC FYI, the next day I started seeing the account switcher button permanently. I don't know what happened overnight, but now it's working!
- Mike GlennJun 14, 2020Steel Contributor
rickytenzer, et al:
Update: This issue seems to be resolved for me as well. After waiting overnight then quitting/restarting Teams desktop again, the org dropdown control reappeared.
- MS support believes the test Team it created had not fully propagated through all of Azure cloud at the time we were testing. Support waited over an hour specifically for this reason, but apparently 90 minutes was still not enough time for changes to impact my desktop client.
- A second work tenant should've been in the org list, but coincidentally, I was temporarily disconnected from that tenant for a different reason.
- A free Teams tenant I created months ago and switched to many times also does not appear in the list. We're still looking into that one. (Perhaps it will appear later this year after Teams is added for MS 365 Home and Personal subscribers.)
So, as far as Teams desktop was concerned, I was only a member of one organization until 24 hours after joining the test Team created by support. Still, I don't think the org switching control should ever disappear—even with only 1 org in the list. Also, others belonging to more than one org reported the same issue. My speculation is it's probably a temporary glitch due to recent changes in the Teams client and/or framework behind tenant switching.