Evolving Microsoft 365 certifications help keep you in sync with the new era of work
Published Feb 01 2023 10:00 AM 215K Views
Microsoft

The past couple of years have demonstrated that the future of work is fluid, dynamic, and cloud-powered—and that future is now here. Whether you’re a tech professional tuning your skills or you’re part of an organization that relies on those skills, you know that staying ahead of the curve in this rapidly changing environment requires proactivity and adaptability.

 

Microsoft Learn helps you build skills that open doors, so you can get the most value from Microsoft products and services. Because your career or the success of your organization depends on keeping skills current and relevant to the work you do, we regularly review and update our portfolio of training and certification offerings to help ensure that they’re tightly aligned with workplace needs.

 

Meeting the demands of a transforming work landscape

In the coming months, watch for the following changes in the Microsoft 365 certification portfolio.

 

We’re renaming the Microsoft 365 Certified: Modern Desktop Administrator Associate certification to Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator Associate, and we’re streamlining the exam requirements—consolidating two exams into one.

 

Plus, we’re renaming the Microsoft 365 Certified: Enterprise Administrator Expert certification to Microsoft 365 Certified: Administrator Expert. Here, too, we’re consolidating two exams into one.

 

We’re replacing the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Voice Engineer Expert certification with the new Microsoft 365 Certified: Collaboration Communications Systems Engineer Associate certification, which comes with a new exam.

 

Finally, we’re retiring two certifications, Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Application Developer Associate and Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator Associate.

 

Microsoft 365 Certified: Modern Desktop Administrator Associate—renaming certification and replacing exams

The new Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator Associate certification name better reflects the focus for professionals in this role, as the term endpoint more accurately characterizes the range of applicable devices used in solutions they manage. The associate level remains the same.

 

Plus, the new Exam MD-102: Endpoint Administrator (beta available in May 2023) will replace Exam MD-100: Windows Client and Exam MD-101: Managing Modern Desktops (both retiring on September 30, 2023). This change can help streamline your journey to certification.

 

Exam MD-100 and Exam MD-101 were scheduled to retire on July 31, 2023, however, that date was moved out to September 30, 2023. A replacement exam, Exam MD-102: Endpoint Administrator, is available and will move from beta to live status on September 6, 2023. On the same date, Microsoft 365 Certified: Modern Desktop Administrator Associate certification will be renamed to Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator Associate.

 

MW Updates to Microsoft 365 Certified Aug 8 23 MD-102.png

 

Q. I’ve already earned the Microsoft 365 Certified: Modern Desktop Administrator Associate certification. What happens now?

A. At the end of July or in early August, the Microsoft 365 Certified: Modern Desktop Administrator Associate certification will be renamed to Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator Associate. The new certification name will appear in your profile on Microsoft Learn, replacing the old name. If your certification is active, be sure to renew it before it expires—passing the renewal assessment will prove that you’re current on the skills for the new version.

 

Q. What are my options if I’ve already passed just one of the exams—Exam MD-100 or Exam MD-101?

A. We encourage you to earn the certification by passing the other exam before it retires. Exam MD-100 and Exam MD-101 were scheduled to retire on July 31, 2023, however, that date was be moved out. They will now retire on September 30, 2023. 

 

Q. I’m preparing for the current exams. What should I do?

A. If you’re preparing for this certification but haven’t yet passed either Exam MD-100 or Exam MD-101, we recommend that you consider preparing for the new Exam MD-102. Review the required skills, and start your preparation with this curated collection of learning paths.

 

Microsoft 365 Certified: Enterprise Administrator Expert—renaming certification and replacing exams

The new Microsoft 365 Certified: Administrator Expert certification name more closely aligns with current workplace opportunities. The focus for the role hasn’t changed—you’ll still be proving the same expert-level skills in evaluating, planning, migrating, deploying, and managing Microsoft 365. But because the role and skills apply to organizations of all sizes, the new name better fits the scope of work opportunities. The expert level remains in place, as do the current prerequisite certifications.

 

In addition, we’re streamlining the certification process with Exam MS-102: Microsoft 365 Administrator (beta available in May 2023), which will replace Exam MS-100: Microsoft 365 Identity and Services and Exam MS-101: Microsoft 365 Mobility and Security 

 

Exam MS-100 and Exam MS-101 were scheduled to retire on July 31, 2023, however, that date was moved out to September 30, 2023. A replacement exam, Exam MS-102: Microsoft 365 Administrator, is available and will move from beta to live status at on September 6, 2023. On the same date, the Microsoft 365 Certified: Enterprise Administrator Expert certification will be renamed to Microsoft 365 Certified: Administrator Expert.

 

MW Updates to Microsoft 365 Certified Aug 8 23 MS-102.png

 

Q. I’ve already earned the Microsoft 365 Certified: Enterprise Administrator Expert certification. What happens now?

A. At the end of July or in early August, the Microsoft 365 Certified: Enterprise Administrator Expert certification will be renamed to Microsoft 365 Certified: Administrator Expert. The new certification name will appear in your profile on Microsoft Learn, replacing the old name.  If your certification is active, be sure to renew it before it expires—passing the renewal assessment will prove that you’re current on the skills for the new version.

 

Q. What are my options if I’ve already passed either Exam MS-100 or Exam MS-101?

A. We encourage you to earn the certification by passing the other one before it retires (retirement date to be confirmed ASAP).

 

Q. I was preparing for the current exams. What should I do?

A. If you’re preparing for this certification but haven’t yet passed either exam, we recommend that you consider preparing for the new Exam MS-102. Review the required skills, and start your preparation with the curated collection of learning paths. If you need to earn the certification before the new exam is available, be sure to pass Exam MS-100 and Exam MS-101 before they retire on September 30, 2023. The prerequisite certifications remain the same.

 

Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Voice Engineer Expert—replacing with new certification and exam

The new Microsoft 365 Certified: Collaboration Communications Systems Engineer Associate certification will be available in May 2023. We’re expanding the definition of the role—the current certification is focused on one technology, but as we carefully examine what organizations are looking for, it’s clear that the role has evolved to include a broader-based set of skills to build and manage solutions across multiple communication technologies, including audiovisual (AV), telephony systems, and team meeting room solutions.

 

To earn the new certification, you’ll need to pass the new Exam MS-721: Collaboration Communications Systems Engineer (beta available in mid-March 2023). Because the new certification embraces a wider range of skills rather than deep expertise in a single technology, the level will be associate. The associate-level certification will not require any prerequisites—you need only pass the new exam.

 

The Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Voice Engineer Expert certification and corresponding Exam MS-720: Microsoft Teams Voice Engineer will retire in June 2023.

 

Updates to Microsoft 365 Certified teams voice engineer.jpg

 

Q. I’ve already earned the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Voice Engineer Expert certification. What happens now?

A. In May, 2023, you’ll see both the original Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Voice Engineer Expert and the new Microsoft 365 Certified: Collaboration Communications Systems Engineer Associate certifications on the transcript in your profile on Microsoft Learn.

 

In November 2023, you’ll be in the renewal window for the new Microsoft 365 Certified: Collaboration Communications Systems Engineer Associate certification. Be sure to pass the renewal assessment before the certification expires to prove that you’re current on the skills for the new definition of the role.

 

The Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Voice Engineer Expert certification will stay on your transcript in your profile on Microsoft Learn, and you’ll be able to renew it through December 2023 (extending the expiration for one year). After it expires, it will move to the certification history section of your transcript.

 

Q. I’m preparing for Exam MS-720, and I’ve already earned the prerequisite certification, Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Administrator Associate. What should I do?

A. You can continue preparation for Exam MS-720 and take it before it retires in June 2023. If you pass the exam, you’ll earn the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Voice Engineer Expert certification and will be granted the new Microsoft 365 Certified: Collaboration Communications Systems Engineer Associate certification when it becomes available in May 2023.

 

Q. I’m considering the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Voice Engineer Expert certification but haven’t started yet. What should I do?

A. We recommend that you work toward the new certification instead. You can get started with the Exam MS-721 skills definitions and this curated collection of learning paths.

 

Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Application Developer Associate—retiring certification and exam

We’ve heard from learners and organizations that the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Application Developer Associate certification should be better aligned to current needs. Right now, the measured skills are too specific and are covered by other roles. To focus on developing the right experience, we’ll retire the certification and the corresponding exam, Exam MS-600: Building Applications and Solutions with Microsoft 365 Core Services, on March 31, 2023. We’ll be sure to let you know when the new experience is available.

 

Learners who are employees of organizations in the Microsoft Cloud Partner Program will have the opportunity to take the exam through December 31, 2023, using a private access code they can find in the partner portal.

 

Updates to Microsoft 365 Certified.jpg

 

Q. I’ve been preparing for Exam MS-600. What are my options now?

A. Be sure to pass the exam on or before March 31, 2023.

 

Q. I work with a company that’s part of the Microsoft Cloud Partner Network, and I’m preparing for Exam MS-600. What are my options?

A. Microsoft Cloud Partners can take the exam through December 31, 2023. You’ll need it to register for the exam with the private code you can find in the partner portal.

 

Q. I already have the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Application Developer Associate certification. What happens now?

A. The certification will stay on your transcript.

 

Q. What about renewals for the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Application Developer Associate certification?

A. Learners with an active certification can renew it up to six months after its final retirement date of December 31, 2023.

 

Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator Associate—retiring certification and exam

Security-related roles have evolved to deliver solutions in specialized areas of security—like information protection, operations, or identity management—using multiple technologies. Because of this evolution, Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator Associate no longer has a distinct role, and we are retiring the certification and Exam MS-500: Microsoft 365 Security Administration on June 30, 2023. Skills for security administrators are included on certifications like Microsoft Certified: Security Operations Analyst Associate (Exam SC-200), Microsoft Certified: Identity and Access Administrator Associate (Exam SC-300), and Microsoft Certified: Information Protection Administrator Associate (Exam SC-400), each reflecting the depth of knowledge for its particular specialization.

 

Summary of updates to Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator AssociateSummary of updates to Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator Associate

 

Q. I’ve been preparing and I’m ready to take Exam MS-500. What should I do?

A. We encourage you to continue your preparation and to pass the exam before it retires on June 30, 2023.

 

Q. I’ve already earned the Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator Associate certification. What happens now?

A. This certification will stay on your transcript.

 

Q. What about renewals for the Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator Associate certification?

A. Learners with an active certification can renew it for up to six months after its final retirement date of June 30, 2023.

 

Q. I am considering the Microsoft 365 Certified: Security Administrator Associate certification. What should I do?

A. We recommend that you consider any of these certifications instead: Microsoft Certified: Security Operations Analyst Associate, Microsoft Certified: Identity and Access Administrator Associate, or Microsoft Certified: Information Protection Administrator Associate.

 

Stay tuned for more updates

In today’s mobile, remote, and hybrid work environments, organizations need professionals who have what it takes to keep operations running smoothly 24/7. Microsoft Learn is committed to helping you stay up to date with the right skills for the changing market landscape. We’ll keep you posted with new information in the coming weeks and months to help you succeed on your learning journey, skill up your teams, and grow your career.

 

 

 

 

 

84 Comments
Copper Contributor

Thanks for the update

Iron Contributor

In MD-102, Skills measured, I wonder why one of the subjects are Microsoft Deployment Toolkit as it doesn't support Windows 11 or Arm64, and apparantly never will

Iron Contributor

Great changes! thanks for sharing

Copper Contributor

I understand the need to update the focus of the exams and certifications but changing the Administrator Expert from 2 exams (MS-100/2 to 102 & MD-100/1 to 102) to 1 exam devalues them, in my opinion. If the Expert type certifications are to be respected, then I believe they should require some commitment to achieve. The original MCSE took 7 exams and was rightly valued as the 'Rolls-Royce' of certifications, the current suite of certifications don't seem to command the same esteem.

Iron Contributor

@Sean Breddy it's an Associate cert, not expert. Solution Architect is an expert with 2 exams

Copper Contributor

I think this is the right move. You need candidates to prove they are knowledgeable and can apply the skills in real world scenarios. Overbearing individuals with exam is what has gotten us to the current situation. Exams prove mastery of understanding the body of knowledge, that's it.

Copper Contributor

How about MD-100 and all the client staff? How about Mobility and Services staff in MS-102? It's not putting the two exams into one, basicly MS-102 became the new MS-500, while we are retiring the Enterprise Admin cert completely. We need a Service Desk Associate cert that covers client-side knowledge, and another 365 Expert cert that covers Mobility and the Collaboration workloads.

Brass Contributor

Please can you explain what other roles in this statement: "We’ve heard from learners and organizations that the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Application Developer Associatecertification should be better aligned to current needs. Right now, the measured skills are too specific and are covered by other roles." - MS have very few "developer" exams left (that isn't Power Platform). Is there a new "aligned"  certification coming soon?

Iron Contributor

MD-101 exam has a subject regarding Microsoft Store for Business, which retires March 31st. Could you please remove that subject, as it will be hard to teach it after the retirement date?

Copper Contributor

Congratulations to Microsoft for de-valuing the certifications for those that have already worked so hard to obtain them. I agree with @Sean Breddy that the exams should remain at an Expert level and require some sort of commitment to achieve them. It's like taking giving away a MCSE if you meet the MCSA requirements at this point.

Brass Contributor

The skilling requirements for the Solution Partner - Security currently require that "Each individual should be certified in Microsoft 365 Security Administrator Associate "

 

As MS-500 retires on June 30 with no similar replacement announced, what is the suggested path for an individual to meet these skilling requirements? Studying for and passing the exam just in time before it retires just to meet partner requirements is not very appealing. Perhaps the skilling requirements could be reviewed quickly to take more account of the security path heading down the SC-200/300/400 route and acknowledging the expert SC-100 exists?

 

For those above concerned about two exams being replaced for one for an expert level certification... I would much rather face the narrow focus of the MCSE+I exams back in the late 90s than the breadth and depth required by expert exams such as SC-100 and AZ-305 today (though acknowledging that expert status in these requires an admin exam too)

Copper Contributor

Last sentence, should be "overloading", not "overbearing", the latter means something completely different.

 

Copper Contributor

Truly understand the changes to certifications but expiring them in a few weeks like the MS600 makes it harder to commit long term into the less used certifications. I remember in 2021 when the MCSD certs expired, it was also short notice. I wonder why Microsoft seems to be running out of developer focused certifications . Besides Azure Developer and Power Platform certs there is none more.

Brass Contributor

Hello, 

If you can help me understand the below. As per MS learn Microsoft 365 Certified: Enterprise Administrator Expert - Certifications | Microsoft Learn doc people who completed MS-101 and MS-500 should automatically earn the Expert badge, but I'm not able to see it on my MS Learn profile :( 

Any comments will be appreciated. 

Regards

Tim

 

 

PREREQUSITE.jpegMY CERTIFICATES.jpeg

Copper Contributor

Have been studying for almost 2 months on MD-100 to get prepared. There was no retirement date except for the Russian exam until this week..

Now it seems that most of MD-100 topics won't be covered in MD-102. Am I wrong? For what I saw for now, based on the poor documentation that we can find about this new certification exam, it seems like a revision of just the MD-101 with some additions.

Correct me if I'm wrong, at the moment I don't know what to expect from this.

Copper Contributor

I understand most of these changes, but renaming the Microsoft 365 Certified: Enterprise Administrator Expert certification to Microsoft 365 Certified: Administrator Expert makes little sense. It doesn't make it much clearer what someone is certified in.
And cramming all the required skills into a single 50 questions exam seems like it removes the opportunity to rigorously test the candidate in each area. 

@Richard_Yule I think MS-500 has been a bit of a strange exam since its introduction, most of what it covers was already covered in some form in MS-10x and MD-101, and I remember when I was preparing for the beta of the exam, I kept thinking to myself that I'm just revising content that I looked at for the betas of the other 3 exams I mentioned.

 

The other problem I have with it is that the name of the exam isn't really accurate any longer. Initially it was mostly a security focused exam, but over time the amount of compliance related content increased dramatically without it being reflected in the title. Apart from SC-900, the SC exams generally do a better job at sticking to security or compliance, which I think is needed with both areas having expanded dramatically in terms of capabilities since the time MS-500 was launched. 

@Sean_Breddy - regarding the multiple exams... while I agree with you, having been through the era of Win2K certs and earlier, the problem is that today multi-exam certs aren't the path that people will go on with the same enthusiasm. Microsoft has to respond to what's happening in the market in general, and to me this just looks like the M365 certs are catching up with what the Azure exams went through with consolidation with exams in the AZ-10x and AZ-30x series.

 

While I think the Azure certs motivation to change was that people were choosing to do one AWS exam to earn a cert vs. two Microsoft exams to earn a cert. I don't really think the M365 certs have the same kind of external competition as the Azure certs do, but if someone wanted a Microsoft cert, doing one Azure exam vs. two M365 exams would definitely be way more appealing to some people, taking into account the preparation time and costs involved.

Brass Contributor

Is the solution partner designation for Security being updated to reflect the retirement of MS-500?

 

r0bu_0-1675683976081.png

 

Copper Contributor

I have tried the last 5 months to pass the MS 500 exam and now i lose it very sad about it :cry:

Copper Contributor

@Tim67 As you can see, it is a 'and'
So that's means MS-500, MS-101 (AND MS-100).

Brass Contributor

AZ-500 retiring is frustrating. Now I'll have to look at one of the SC exams.

Also with MD-100 retiring there is no entry pathway for front line technicians to evidence their expertise with Windows OS.  Will there be a Windows OS configuration exam for technicians or would Microsoft recommend we point them to Comptia A+ to validate their Windows Desktop OS expertise?

Iron Contributor

@Opalfruit Why do you assume AZ-500 is retiring? I don't see anything in this blog post or on the exam site Exam AZ-500: Microsoft Azure Security Technologies - Certifications | Microsoft Learn

Actually the exam was updated this week

Brass Contributor

@Tommykobberoe That'll be me misreading MS-500 as AZ-500. That's a relief.

Copper Contributor

@Timothy Polc you should see your certification in your certification profile since you have the MS-500, MS-100, and MS-101 exams completed.

Brass Contributor

@PerkinsAndrew cheers and I know this ;) from my screenshots you can see it MS-500, MS-100, and MS-101 exams completed. BUT according to the above screenshot, I should be getting the "Expert" badge automatically when the MS-500, MS-100, and MS-101 exams are completed. In my profile, there isn't an "Expert badge" as you can also see from the above 

Copper Contributor

@Tim67 

 

Check in your Certification profile under "Certifications" as it shouldn't show under passed exams.

 

PerkinsAndrew_0-1675782424647.png

 

If not, I would recommend you contact certification support and have them check it.. Mine appeared automatically in "Certifications" after passing the prerequisite as well as the MS-100 and MS-101.

 

Iron Contributor

@Tim67, @PerkinsAndrew is right, your screenshot shows your exams, NOT your certifications. Go to your Certification Dashboard on MS Learn, and check your certs. Mine looks like this 

Screenshot_20230207_160933_Edge.jpg

 

Brass Contributor

@Tommykobberoe @PerkinsAndrew thanks guys, finally managed to find it :) :) :) ... too many MS clicks to find this... much appreciated your feedback. 

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Brass Contributor

My question about the MS-series exam. The MS-500 is being retired and Microsoft is recommending the SC-200, SC-300 and SC-400. Does this also mean that in the future the MS-900 exam would be retired and test takers be recommended to take the SC-900? I am asking because Zero Trust and other security principles were added to the MS-900 exam last May 2022. Please let me know. Thanks. 

@carlarjenkins Even though MS-900 has some overlap with SC-900, it does contain M365 objectives that are outside the scope of the security and compliance topics in SC-900. MS-500 is a bit different in that most if not all of its objective items were already covered to a degree in MS-100/MS-101/MD-101 even before the introduction of the SC exams.

 

The other thing to consider with the SC exams is that they also include Azure functionality (except SC-400).

 

Brass Contributor

@Mark O'Shea Thanks for clarifying and answering my question. Since you've mentioned SC-400, would SC-400 be a future associate prerequisite for SC-100 after MS-500 retirement or would it keep only SC-200, SC-300 and AZ-500 as the prerequisite exams for SC-100? Thank you.

@carlarjenkins This is something that I've seen asked previously with no official response. My best guess is that it has been excluded because it focuses more on compliance technologies rather than focusing on security. That logic does seem to break down though because SC-100 has a compliance section, but it's more Azure focused, which in turn doesn't really align with SC-400. 

 

I quickly checked some of the announcement blog posts for security architect/sc-100 and didn't see any official reasoning though. Considering that MS-500 does include some compliance content, I'm sure this is something that will need to be addressed at some point.

 

 

Brass Contributor

I had planned to go down the route of Microsoft 365 Certified: Enterprise Administrator Expert and take the MD-100 & MD-101 (for the Microsoft 365 Certified: Modern Desktop Administrator Associate) alongside the MS-100 & MS-101 exams which should give me the final certification.

 

So since I haven't even passed any of the prerequisite exams yet should I just start working on the MD-102 & MS-102? I liked the idea of passing 4 exams as it meant my knowledge is spread over time and not packed into singular exams (which is what Cisco did with the CCNA not so long ago)

 

If I pass these two beta exams (which packs the old requirement of 4 into 2) for MD-102 & MS-102, am I then given the Microsoft 365 Certified: Administrator Expert badge and certification?

 

I would like to start on these now instead of wasting time to pack 4 exams 5 months which I think is not enough for me personally.

 

@TechyTroublez The beta exams count as full exams, so you can go down the 2 exams versus 4 exams path.  Something else that may be worth considering is if there is anything in particular that you really want to learn about and get tested on that is in one of the retiring exams you could still do both exams in that track.

 

I haven't looked too closely at what gets dropped from the MS exams yet, but on the MD side nearly everything in MD-102 is from MD-101 plus a few new items. If traditional desktop Windows technologies are important for your current or future role requirements, you could even consider MD-100, MD-101 and MS-102.  

 

I've already posted in detail about MD-102 here, it might have some more details that help you make a decision - MD-102: Endpoint Administrator Exam Resource Guide (Beta) – intunedin.net,

Copper Contributor

Guys, good night. With the discontinuation of the MS-500 exam, what about the annual renewal issue? Will it be possible to renew? If not, will the title still be valid or expired?

With respect to the MS-600 & associated cert retirement, specifically, the renewal aspect, this announcement in this post is a contraction & is ambiguous. Can you please clarify?

In the post you say:

Q. What about renewals for the Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Application Developer Associate certification?

A. Learners with an active certification can renew it up to six months after its final retirement date of December 31, 2023.

 

Six months after the final retirement date (December 31, 2023) is June 30, 2024. But the image says the renewal window ends in January 2024. IOW, the text says 6 mo after final retirement, but the picture shows 1 day or 1 month.

 

Which one is it @Michael Kophs @terryrendall ?

Copper Contributor

I'm also wondering what the future intermediate certificate metrics of Solutions Partner for Security - Partner Center | Microsoft Learn would be? As multiple comments before me stated one of the requirements is MS-500 that is being retired.

 

Should we do all of SC-200, SC-300 and SC-400 instead of just one? Or maybe SC-100? Or what are the new requirements?

Learn Expert

You would need to ask about partner certification requirements on Microsoft Partner Center or on one of the partner forums

Brass Contributor

As someone who was going for the Security competency in the Partner arrangement, I'm now at a bit of a loss as to progression towards that competency.

 

MS-500 was a requirement, along with AZ-500 and SC-400 as one of the others.  

If MS-500 is being retired, they really should update the partner portal to show what is required for the Security competency. Until then it leaves people in limbo!

 

 

Copper Contributor

Will MS-500 still count as a prerequisite for Cybersecurity Architect Expert after its retirement as long as it is maintained active before passing SC-100 or will I need to pass one of the other three available prerequisites if I was to take the SC-100 after the 30th of June?

Copper Contributor

According to the "Exam MS-500: Microsoft 365 Security Administration" will retire on June 30, 2023. How about the Solution Partner for Security criteria. Any update for the certification requirements in Solution Partner for Security. When you will update the requirements. Thank you.

padtawee_0-1683080364566.png

 

Copper Contributor

Any update?

MS-500 is retiring and we still don't know if it will have a replacement or none.

What about the requirements for the security designation for partners: should we only consider Azure Security (through AZ-500) + SC-* exams?

Brass Contributor

@Pernille-EskeboSome clarification here would be greatly appreciated.

Copper Contributor

Hello MS partners,

I noticed an updated description of the requirements concerning Security in the Partner Center.

Have a look!

Brass Contributor

@cocxy well spotted!

 

There are no updates to the docs yet and this is only in the Partner Center for now. The docs will presumably be updated shortly.

 

Copper Contributor

@cocxy @Richard_Yule Could you maybe enlighten us about the change.

We really want to know what the replacement will be for the security partnership but as of now we can see no change in our partner center. 

If you can tell / show us the change in the partner center this would be great so we don't have to wait for our partner center to get updated.

Copper Contributor

Hello,

Go to Membership > Security (View Details) > Skilling (View details).
You'll see the new pre-requisites which are Azure Security Associate and Security Operations Analyst.
The certifications based on SC exams will count towards points.
The MS-500 is not replaced by something on 1:1 basis.

Brass Contributor

There's now a Partner Blog Post will more details including future changes

Copper Contributor

What if I have passed the MS-100 and MS-101 and have not earned the prerequisite certification?
If I get the prerequisite certifications after July, will I be certified as a
"Microsoft 365 Certified Administrator Expert"?

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